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Cirteret Bw9ig_ PRICE THREE CENT* Wfoan'sCW Notes Police Raid Two places F«r_ ., ..... jotor. Fined $80 and$15 ,„,,. Eacfc-Twa p*Bf , .,,,., l_aid OVOT^ 1111)r( , raids in the polfce war . n.n.or were staged Sunday "" i,; Ohief of Polk* Henry * - ••--»" •-«"- Andres Michael School Notes m^, Sen iinu Desk The arrest* ,,p to six, f brings i.f u p 1 1 a fawner teries of arrested Sunda* are: \ i) tonic :am, Frank M of 62 Hudson [ushullk, of 53 f TflnK JBUBiiUiiHivi w«# street. 16 the TOdson ,•(. several men were found Twelve , wi ifl a back room. T t i t l e s wmtainjtw alleged were f w n d t o t h i room l jug I'. 1 . th two qu«t Iiflttl-a full f . liquor. Oh an upper onc-g*Hon Jut« «nd fifteen > bottles were found wl» , |llfl ntities of th* Ufmtr in I,,, Randolph s t w t tlMM * ug full of alleged illegal „_ found. OWef of Polk* ,„,,„„ has evidence o< sal« M, each place in addition to !M .:r found Sunday. The men h,i,l in *25O b^il each for a r ,,r Tuesday •i, lied fined when they ___ _. and |16 costs, from a former raid i,,ifi over to Ttmdaj atifct of , u ,.k, They we II"- Wl*»beth ,,r 25 Edwin street, and John ii >f 18 Bergen street Andrew f 19 Mercer street pleaded Ity and was held in 1(00 bail „. action of ft* grand Jury. k was lisWd amenff thpM i in thefirst raid but at that h,. police did not obtain reffl- . vidence. Oprjortunlty has been given in both Chemistry and Physic* labora- tory worjc this year for pupili to use 0|eir own initiative in addition' to the routine experiments required in both couitnes. Due to the laboratory sections in each subject it is possible to have Student assistants in each section who are representatives of the other map. The daily of these assistants is to artist the pupils performing the experiment* in any way in which they ean and to keep the equipment in order. The teacher oversees this work and her approval Is necessary before tlhe work of the period hi completed. During the year each pupil has an opportunity to learn some of the routine work which is necessary before smooth running laboratory period may be conducted. "LmuUpukar" Tike. Second PUe. Eleven delegates from Carteret High School were sent to represent the "Loudspeaker" at the tenth an- nual convention held at the Colum- bia University by the Columbia Scho- lastic Press Association on March 8, 9, and 10. The opening session of the conven- tion at the McMiilin Theatre at 1:30 Name Rock For Forester Head Emerson Street Man Nominat- ed For Office Of Chief Rang- er MemWahip D rive Planned By Court Carteret. Harry .Rock, of Emerson street, was nominated for the office of Chief Rangtsr at a meeting of Court Carteret, No. 48, Tuesday night in Odd Fellows Hall, There WaB no other nomination for the Odd office. Nominations for other officers were: Sub-chief ranger, Jacob Berardi; Sr. Woodward, Martin Rock; Jr. Wood- ward, John Herega; Sr. Beadle, Charles Virgo; Jr. Beadle, Stephen Demeter; treasurer, Joseph Shutello; financial secretary, William P. Law- lor and Al. Guyon; recording secr^- James Phillips; lecturer, Edwin uinn; trustee, Thomas Larkin. le election will take place March 27 and the new officers will take their seats in April. A delegation that visited the Rah- way Court last week reported a plan for one or more bowling matches be- tween teams representing the two CARTERET WINS Carteret High School basketball team t defeated Toms River 41to10 in the for the Central Jersey championship. The game was played at Asbury Park The victory enables Carteret to enter the finals at Asbury tomorrow. Dear Editor: Maybe it's advancing years, like they say in the hooka or maybe it's EeO's eflxer but anyways I think Scroggins is gettin' a tfass of nerves. He s got a lady .relation which she reduces ft lot dofti* trick bicycle ridin' and she piles off to Florida takin' Uhe bike along* Then he's got a bootlegger friend visitin' in Florida an' this bootlegger sends Scroggins a case of oranges. Well, IScrogjfhw ibites Into one of the or- anges and finds a bicycle spoke in it. on the afternoon of March 8. Follow- « » £ • . _ , *t M ,l°J *l. b ? J .* n _ n . u ._ i ing the opening session, sectional meetings were held in the various university buildings. At these meet- ings the students listened to many noted speakers, among whom were: Burris sneak Jenki , g ns Jr., noted sports car- di Dl toonis.; Eddie Dooley, caster andreporter; Wil sports car- liam E. H«s of the court were advanced. It wil be held April 14 in Falcon hall at the foot of Pulaski avenue. Al Kalla's orchestra has been engaged furnish music. The ported membership committee two drives about to Te- be Pro*pfctiv» Bl-id* U Hoenored At Shower In Clirome Ave- nue — Many Gimt*. \ pleasing social went took place j u> Mlay night when Hist Irene Som- (: . ,.f Woodbridge, was fiven a sttr- pr,-, kitchen and bathroom shower in the home at 83 Chrome avenue if Miss Ann Reilly who sponsored the ,,ifair. Miss Sown* wUl necome the Wide of Jack Reilly In Bt James' < i,,,i, h. Woodbridge, April 4. ih> living room waa beautifully dtv.n.ird in St. Fatridt colon. A - i* ' _____i _ .___ a _;. _____ __. K.-.M! umbrella 4-entiT of U l* with streai M to trivo the Ai the bottom _ _ 1 MUMV Kifto Miss S t o e w t e a m e d . . A-upper was serrad and th* fav- ii >mi table decorations were In k.•;,':>; with the Si Patrick season. lii:di:i ami fan tan were played and •M. .. .-•• were made by Miss Mar- .' hni^an, of Woodbridm; Miss 11! .inSoundly, Joseph Paulin, Miss < i. M i < Somers and Miss Helen V,, '.'••• v - present were: Miss Sqmers, IM i i.r Mrs. Thomas Somers, Somers, Miss Josephine keil, assistant to the president of The New York Herald Tribune; and other noted editors and professor* In the evening the delegates wer« conduct- ed on a tour through the Mew York Hearld Tribune building-. On the second day a general ses- sion was held at the McMiilin Thea- tre followed bythe convention pic- ture on the library step*. In the af- ternoon the delegates attendedsec- tional meetings and a special feature lecture was held in the McMiilin Theatre, at which Robert L. Ripley, creator of "Believe it or Not" ad- dressed the students. The last day of the convention proved to be the most interesting. After a general session and sectional meetings, the delegates attended round table meetings at which they discussed their problems with stu- dent leaders of other schools. Lou Little, head football coach of Col- umbia University and writer for In- ternational News Service addressed the delegates at a feature lecture. The convention was brought to a dose by the convention luncheon at the Hotel Commodore during which the awards were announced and Sir Wlllmott Lewie, Washington Corres- ndent of "The London Times" and p launched: one to get new members and the other to collect delinquent dues. The meeting was well at- tended. Hall Is Packed At Democrat Card Party More Than Seventy Table* In Play At Biggest Event Of The Kind This Season. The Lutheran hall was packed to capacity Wednesday night at the card party held under the auspice of the combined Democratic units of Bradley"' Mrs! P7 B.' Garber i.L 1_ __.____. __. - ¥ 1 _>•__. \ __.__• _ n _• p _M _*Aw__r_T _*___ _•»* «^ - _ _ __ By Isabel Lrfkowtti 'This is the way we wash our clothes, Wnnh our clothes, o early Monday morntne." A knowledge of fabric* aa to their washability and durability will be the them« of .the meeting to be held Thursday, March 22, at 2:00 p. m., in the American Leginn rooms at the Borough Hall. Ida Mai Lee, of New- tp-k, teacher and lecturer, will give a talk and an exhibit on "Launch-y Craft". The domestic science class o the high school has ibeen invited to attend this meeting. At this time, too, Mrs. Henry Har- rington, chairman of the nominating committee, will present a slate of candidates for the coming spring election. The seniors entertained the jun- iors Monday evening at the Ameri- can Legion room, with a one-act comedy skit on radio broadcasting entitled "Station WHY". In the cast were Mrs. T. J. Nevill, Mrs. Henry Harrington, Mrs. C.A. Sheridan, Mrs. Cynthia Jones, Mrs. C. A. PMUPTOCNMI Board Pat** ReaolutiM Te Paaa MOIWT QuNttos Aim* To Borough May FfaiiHy B« Decided By State Ott- dal. At ameeting Wednesday night the Board of Education took formal ac- tion In regard to the school budget which was twke defeated by votera at school elections, andtamed the solution of the impasse over to the Borough Council by resolution. Aft the regular school election a budget which provided for a slight increase in renumeration for school woployea as compared with the dl_**t twenty cent cut f l t the borough. Tables were crowded Now he's worryin' cause he thinks j nto every available sjMwe on the maybe they's been a accident. main floor ,in the cloak rooirt and He worries about a lotta other i n t h e basement. In all there were things, too. Yesterday he says: seventy-two tables. Many arrived too "Huck, we must he careful about i ate to obtain places at the tables. A ...e JTink we puts In the paper." f ew i e f t but mo_t of them remained Oh, yeah, 1 I say,. ^ nO n-players. More than, 200 prizes "Sure," he says, "lookut: last were awarded, week we haa somethin' about my cat There ,were several cash pri.es, JJ^^^J^J. _ _ . . __i_ _ ii. _ __JI_ _ • . _ii_ _r J * - lawin' a guy that's cribbm on the antl ot nif special awards. Mayor :WA. Well, right away I gets ijues- j 0S eph A. Hermann andCounty Pur- loned. About fifty guys auks dlffe^ ehasrhg Agent Bdward J. Heil each VOWalmw Stefan-on, «1*or liSKi O«(__H__--f * __._.! Vets Will Ron Show In Ritz Theatre Soon Star Landing Post Will Sell Poppies Get Ready For Memorial Day. Star Landing Post No. 2314 Vete- rans of Foreign Wars at a meeting Monday night made plans for a- mo- tion picture to be given late in April in the Ritz Theatre. The film will be selected after a conference with the owner of the local theatre. The post will observe poppy week from May 19 to 26 inclusive when members and members of the auxi- liary will sell poppies. Preliminary plans were made for the post's Mem- orial Day program. Regular meet- ings of tine post will be held on Mon- day nights in the future instead of Friday nights. They will meet as usual inthe War Veterans' room in the borough hall, exeept the n u t arch m tioned ent times 'doea you'mean me'7" "What did ye tell "em?" Asked 'em did they have ( won. $5 and each turned it back to the organization. Ca_h (prizes of . 12.SO each were awarded to John 0'- cat scratches, but that don't get me Donnell, Mrs. Morris Goodman and off. Some of 'emsays that cat of Adolph Nering. Mrs. Henry J. H&r- mine leaves scratches you can't see rinirton Jr., won «. quarter ton of but they hurt just the same. Another coa l. Mrs. Laura Crane won an elee- guy says the cat should learn to trie table lamo. scratch some of these dames with other winners of special prizes money in the bank and frettin' re- were: Mrs. John Fee, ba« o<f pot*- ''"'" toes; Mrs. Thomas Kennelly, glass Thomas Burke and. Mrs. Julius Kloss. The silly antics and the outlandish comical costumes of the actors evok- ed much laughter among the guests. Gertrude Bradley and Helen Carl- ton did specialty numbers Ger- trude, a monologue, andHelen a tap dance. Sandwiches, cake and coffee were served, Mombers may be glad to hear that Miss Ruth Brown, who has dtlighted the Woman's Club several times with her singing, will give a recital in Elisabeth Sunday afternoon. p per cent cut of last was de- r-" wan* *_«• v vi uuii, j n u A w«M Uf teated by organized opposition at heavy taxpayers. Then a special election was held and a budget re- vised downward about 140,000 wa* defeated by organized aeMon <rf school employes who took advantage of the fact that an election that does not involve the election on de- feat of individuals does not attradt attention and brings out a smaB vote. That was as far as the school iboard could fro in * _ matter. Bat the schools must go on and the legi- timate expense of operation must be met State school lawrecognises the possibility <a such « deadlock aa oc- cured in Carteret and provides for it Theboard may refer the matter to the Borough oouncil. It also pro- vides an alternative by making, action The club Will hold its annual card I in * ucn caBes optional with the coon- party Monday, evening, Mardi 26 atl c "' ^^^ ' ^ il t I ?,. . .. i» .. _. . ... y. e "They kind 'o tried to hush that 8e t- Mrs. C: A. SJieridan, fern; Mrs. up about that dame, didn't they?" p. x Caaaidy, basket, of groceries; "Sure, they try to hush up all the Mrs. Fred Colton, set of dishes; Mrs. real newn," Scrogyins said. ' James Irving, bag of flour; JVeida, "I know it some g-ood news, al- Green ,Iamp; Mrs. Philip Turk, towel ready," says Izzy whidh he'denook se t, up behind us and is listening. I ' "Spill it/' say. Scroggins. I "Willie Brown has a case is sliv- ovitz," Iuy said. ( "Can it be cured?" Scroggins asks, thinkin' its a disease. "Sure, I cured some," Iz»y says, en' goes on totell us its a kind of drink that would reform Hitler. We stand gabbin' about whether we'd try a shot of theslivovitz when the cat which he's trail in' Scroggins, begins moanin' and yowlin*. He's lookin' at horse doctor comln' along 1 leadin.' a sick goat. hall, ex ___ttl L 1Will U Large Attendance At Communion Breakfast Holy Name Group Hears Elo- quent Speakers — 1 Priett At- Obscene Literature. The "What the . . ." begins Scroggins of the Holy Name \li-s Marion Hibbitts, Miss ui! J'-.::- : ~a.-, Mrs. Mary Kathe . __, -..I Mrs. Carrie Kathe, all of Jan0 ' fsky \<uv second place among the mimeo- graphed publications entered in the annual contest The delegates are most gTateful to the staff member* and the advicers for making this trip possible. They hope that the constructive criticism received at the convention will help the "Loudspeaker" to attain a high- er rating neqt year. Those who represented the "Loud-1 apeaker" were: Gladys Huber, edi-1 " _ _...-- - - ^ 4 Fir* t * _______ ___ __ _ f A committee that visited Alex MurkowiU at the Rahway Memorial Hospital reported he is n_a__i«g a normal recovery. His leg was am- putated after an accident tq a local plant. wrong with the goat." rill was the c "What's new in oolities?" I asks tee in charge i Willi J St. JoBeph's Hall. The proceeds will be used for the club's conservation sight and hearing project. The club's Woman's Exchange carries on each Friday from 10:5o a. m. to as long as supplies last. Homemade food and cakes and fancy articles are for sale. The exchange is open to the public. There will be a meeting of the ex- ecutive Board at the home of the president, Mrs. T. J. Nevill, 113 Lo- well street, on Monday, Man* 19, at 2:00 p. m. Your correspondent is glad to re- port that she was one of the twelve winners in a news reporting contest sponsored by the New York Herald- Tribune on March 5 at its auditor- ium, 230 West 41st street, New York. Amor_g the four staff judges were Mr. Grafton 3. Wilcox, manag- ing editor, and Mr. Howard White, society editor. There were approxi- mately 160contestants all Dress chairmen pi Women's Cluba in New Jersey aqd Westchester County, N. n ' s: ^ c council may act In In the latter case the problem Is passed along to the State Commis- sioner of Education. There were fifteen applications for the position of janitor in the Cleve- land school made vacant by the death of the late Jeremiah Donoghue. Some of the applicants were backed by the local post of the Legion, one was backed by the V. F. W. and others by various societies. The ap- plications were filed. There were al- so eleven applications for positions as teacher. When money matters were being discussed Commissioner Jakeway «aked if the February payroll could be met. President Conrad said no salaries or bills wilt be paid until the budg«t is approved. Commissioner Haury objected to bill for printing, ballots for the spe- cial election. It was decided to hold the organ- ization meeting of the bowd on March 2Bwhen the newboard tot t»84-86 will take over the aflatrs ot the schools. Mra. Robert Scroggins. "Oh of the eommit- Mrs. Robert Chodosh, of toallroad former Council- avenue, waa hostess Monday night to "Oh, not much except a breeze up master. The breakfast waa prepared at the cave of the winds," he says, and served by the Rosaxy Society "M-uifiin' _rk_(-v through a special committee includ- _.__ former Co , nday night t man William J. Lawlor was the toast- the auxiliary unit of the Brotherhood "Meanin' what? of Israel. Cards were played and re- freshments were served. Those pre- N e w Enterprise In Washington sehc were: Mrs. Harry Ohodos_i, Mrs. T _. * 11 * _"_ ^J- * f J -, _ * _ hope7that>e constVuctive critkUra ! J^J J^ujjgj JQ Be Married Sunday Km Mrs. Kathleen Mrs. Oaniel McDonnell, of •ilnitf; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph .1 Iselin; Mr. and Mrs. Wil- muHy, of Ossining; Mr. and •iiond Reilly, of Jersey City; Brady. Miss Lillian Don- Mi».s Adeline Donovan, Mrs. H;'-mian, the Misses .Catherine t'liyllU Brennan, Mrs. Thomas Hv the Misses Edna. Quinn and Wachter, Mr. and Mrs. John literary department, Elgie Rockman, and i CFlara Louis Nagy of the business depart- ment, and Marie Rapp and Dorothy Fisher from tJie typing section. One of the advisers, Miss E. C. Monaban, Miss L.F. Powers andMrs. F. Tho- burn accompanied the group each day. Franc). Pro<r»m The first part of this morning's program by the French Conversa- Dr. P. Richard Wexler To Wed New York Girl Will Live In Pershing Avenue. Dr. P. Richard Wexler, well- known local dentist with offices in the RiU Building will *>e absent "School board meetin' when that ing: Mrs. J. H. Nevill, chairman; | William Brown, Mrs. Nate Chodosh, bunch of economisters pets to ravin'. Mrs. Cynthia Jones, Mrs. Loretta Ne- Mrs. Neil Ohodos'h, Mrs. Sam Wex-1 One wants the budget shouldl be for- vill, Mrs. Catherine Sexton, Mrs. J ler, Mrs. & B. Brown, Mrs. Dora ty thousand bucks bigger but kicks George Gaudet, and Mrs. Arthur Me about a newspaper bill of some thir- Nally. ty odd bucks." "Sore at the paper?" | There were several fjuest speakers, . . the principal one being Deputy "Sure, it's been tellin' the truth Mayor Bert Boyle, of Bayonne. He about 'im." spoke of President Roosevelt's rc- "Whose in line for mayor in the covery program and his general G-0.P. camp?" I asks. po ij cjr| likening it to the Pope's en- "The regular Republicans is linin 1 cyclical letter. Anthony Gadok, up behind Frank Andres, one of p ert h Amboy lawyer, spoke of "Pre- their old stand-bys." paredness." Timothy Hag-erty, of "There ought to be fun," I says. Bayonne, spoke of the duties of men "Plenty", says Scroggins. - •' •- • " • - 1 - : -• HUCKLEBERRY HESS. Ru!!v Ja,k Reilly and Mi» Ann ^ , club was given in French. The French Conversational Clufo is hold- ing its regular meeting in charge of its officers. The President calls the to order, after which the Stolen Auto Abandooad Ih Field '•>>• ! Krskine sedan that waa stolen h Amboy Monday night, waa '•;•• •••..•,•,.,[ in a field off Blair road l d . Prank Tiemeyj of Blair to Miss Helen Suderov, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Morris Suderov, of New York. After the wedding Dr. and Mrs. Wexler will leave! for the South and will return to Carteret March 28. They will reside »t 178 Perahing ave- Dr. Wexler said the CWA dental ru *'i. reported the wi* 'nad been k' in the field all dajr Tuesday, n•.•,-:,,>. night and Wednatdagr until ; 1 ptd it P l i h ti Ml 1, IIUll g d tg ported it. Police here atcertain- the registration that tke car u.'i, stolen but did not gat the 1 of the owner. * tar was stock in d e w mud '•* "•* removed with difficulty. to member gives a French trip. The project has been complet- Relnrns Funds To Relief Officials the organization. Mayor Joseph A. Hermann commented upon tine large i number of men present and hoped that other communion l)reatcfasts will be held soon and be equally suc- cessful. Rev, Father Joseph Mulligan, pastor of the church, spoke of the —. obscene literature exposed on news- Randolph Street Wotaan Had s n fs * n * M \ d . , 8Uch newsstands •" , , should bo boycotted. 2,000 In Bank, Also Month- Other speakers included former __. . i wh. v * •*•* 1 _~1 _ _ who before being «dmjtted club must demonstrate his ability to recite, sing, and mock animals. The remainder of the meeting b in charge of the program committee who entertained with music and ^ Polk ^oKo^fcpontdAvigj noir, sung JVench classes1 and dwdby Luoille Staub^h, Dorfa night inFakon hall wi* 1[ sixty membera i '•nt. The speaker waa '•.I ar andKttore •••I'- ut present Is doi •• •''• Columbia U ' 1! '""ity on co i' sent economic t r., lme and proWM* .i-nt tfc«f«. The fd k Luollle Sh>ub#ch, Doris "touiw FUDP, Itene Kutay, , Ksher. The d*ncem were in Provincial «ostun-$; Vocal Solo, Mon Homme, GatS.rineH.msel.'v%So Ad>»s - Le P»yi de Dixie, Clark. JV. Harmonica ftufta. nambers. Victor VI. Vocal Solo. CUir de la t f t of U M-rseU- French Classes, Hebrew Federatkw ly Income. Complaint was made by Mi« C. C. Clausing, Municipal director of re- lief in^Carteret/TueBday night in IS^f C SS rt fiffihf^Jt 3 Councilman Edward Dolan, Francis A. Monag^ian and Dr. Louis Downs. Those present Dan Sullivan, Hrivnak, Jacaby, Mrs. Isadore Brown, Mrs. Isadore Raibinowitz, Mrs. Leo Kock- man, Mrs. Aaron Rabinowitz, Mrs. Joseph Blaukapf, Mrs. David Ven- ook, Mrs, David Sealteil, Mrs. Louis Chodosh, Mrs. J. Keider, Mrs. Ab« Weinstein, Mrs. Abe Zucker, Mrs. Morris Katznelson «W_d Mrs, Cho- dosh. Woman's Club Entertains Membera Of Junior Group The Carteret Woman's Club enter- tained the Junior Woman's Club Monday night in the borough hall. The feature Of the program was a comedy based on radio broadcasting and entitled "Station WHY" In the cast were: Cynthia Jones, Mrs. C. A. Sheridan, Mrs. George Bradlel, Mrs. P. B. Garber and Mrs. Thomas Burke. Miss Gertrude Bradley andMiss Helen Carlton put on & specialty number in which Miss Bradleyre- cited a poem and Miss Carlton danced. Refreshments were served. ^ . X a n f p a u U n d Jo^rin Sirthl^och, Harry Ro&, Brotherhood Auxiliary To Have Card Party April 10 The auxiliary unit of the Brother- hood of Israel will hold a card party Tuesday night, April 10, in the Washington auditorium, Washing- ton avenue and Atlantic street. .here will be many prizes Refresh- ments will t>o served after the games. Mother - Teacher* Sponaor ^ St. Patrick Tpa Today The Mother-Teacher Association of the Presbyterian Sunday school ?s holding * * . Patrick's tea this afternoon in the Sunday school room frm 2 to 4 o'clock. It is open totihe . The arrangements are in of MM. William Ellfott. Mrs. Yetman and Mm. Hary A*on. in addition has an income o f > 2 a amount of rener. sue totaled 1-72.94, according to the records of the relief adminbtratjon ana son, nmnni, uw u , f Kennedy! E. J. Skeffington, George o v i j v - p Y Tfn<mfl«r f V i There was a large attendance members of both clubs present. of Avenue Haa Formal Open- ing Saturday Night With More Than 400 Present. Despite the fact that Saturday night was one of the most disagree- able of the winter, the new Wash- ington Grill in the Kahn furniture building in Washington, avenue, was packed to capacity. It was the for- mal opening 1 of tho new enterprise and the proprietors celebrated the event by giving free chicken dinners to the guests. Four hundred seven dinners Were Berved. Then the sup- ply of ohickens ran out. Many other guests arrived too late for the chick- ens but there are other good things to eat in the larder of the Washing- ton Grill; good things to drink, too. The main dining room is on the first floor while the second floor is an auditorium with tables along the walls. Dumb waiters carry the food from the kitchen in the basement. The service was prompt and pleasing despite the, big crowd. Ona stage at the front end of the auditorium an orchestra played all evening. Of the large numSer of guests .resent at the opening more than ialf were from out-of-town. here. Mrs, Barlik , dxeu-ed and Foxe, Sr., and Jr., Floyd Owens, Pt MC Jh Kndy Ed in court WHII Peter McCann, John Kennedy, in court Well wju-d u , y amfig Dll _. n _ Th,,-^ agreed to make ree amount she had received and the charges against dropped. Alliance Group Studies Rules Of Contract Bridge Miss Evelyn Weiss, of Roosevelt avenue, vias hostess Tuesday night to the Contract Bridge group Of the Hebrew Social Alliance. Harry Hel- ler was tho instructor and the mem- bers studied the problems of the game. After the study refreshments were served. Thoee present wer«: Mr. andMrs. Heller, Mrs. Sam ftfc M M L M S Pole Falls OnTruck AhiW T 1 Thomas Jakeway, J. J. Dowling, Frank and Tom DowUng, John H«t> rington, Jr.^ John MflDonneell, Vin- ceirt, Robert and Dan McDonnell, Jo- h Shll F k B Th SESSION. OF ORUIDS A regular roe-tin* fit * Grove Ko, M AMientJJnitod O of Draids was held Wednesday night £ Firebouse No. 1. The b^*-*™ diiposed of qtttekljr and the meet- ing adjourned early as may of ft* Z n b M i huwied away U> aj*en| ft Demoeratie gKti party. In the l>»th- hU _ . _ _ „, ceirt, Robert and Dan McDonnell, Jo Dnver Cut By GUM 8ep h Shuttello, Frank Bom, Thomas Coon6y, J. B. O'Donnell, William Paul Gatteson, of Townley, N. J., Conimn, Jurvase Nevill, John Gon- a driver for the Borden Dairy Com- no ly, Fred Allen, William Lawlor, pany, was eutf about the face Wed- J r , ( Jo« UcHale, Fjrancis, Leo, Bd- nesday when « Public Service pule W ard Cougblin, Nicholas Sullivan, in Carteret awnue fell and ^raahad William Day, V«o Rocky, Casper into the milk truck. One of Ifceerpea- Herrta, J«t»ea Bajpn, Floyd Gwdet M. a n d M r . H r , M Sm ftofc, Mrs. Moe LiBrenson, Mrs. Sand or Lehrer, Mrs. Louis L.hrer, Miss Ger- trude Zusaman, Miss Ann Daniel* Mrs. Pbjlip Drourr, Miss Anne Ros- enlblum,' Mr. and Mrs, Bernard Weiss, the Misses Anne and Mollie Schwartz and Miss Weiss. to the driver. of the truck # awldent happewd inaa# t*e t eratt oftWith Mr*. Eudie MoftWith All Arrangements Made For Hibernian Bal Divisiion No, 7 A. 0. H. members will celebrate ther thtrty-lhrrd andual " " of the division tomorrow night ; Ratriek's Night) inthe Germa t ball, program, o>»e of lb .._,. tieraa ball, w p the moit elaborate in ilU I i h d __. Irish dtncea a»4 music in- terspersed with a program of modern dance*. There «r« eW special enter- ttfunenfa features. TheliaU wllj >e d In St P»trick colors. Ill -i« nlantv nt rafreshmeets. PRESBYTERIAN NOTES The Traims are ho.ta tonight to the Young People of the Methodist, Congregational and Presbyterian hurches of Woodbridge and the' Presbyterian of Avenel, and the Episcopal of Sewaren and Cat-tent. Supper will be served At 7:80 fol- owed by a program of entertain- ment and short talks. The Settlor Christian Endeavor will also be in- luded in the gumta of the Traims. The Sunday school basketball team will meet the teaip from the r First Presbyterian Church of Ra»- way on the local court on Saturday taorntrur at 10:84, Sunday will be observed as "Com- munity Day" in the Loyalty Cruiade at the Pre-byterian church. The ser- mon topic will be "The Christian Mijjta?e for the Community". The pB_rtor will speak to the Juniora on "False or True". One week from Sunday will be "DefMon Day". "WhAt Wilt Thou Do With Jesus which ia Called Christ/*" The Mofeher-Teacher AsBOclattop held*. Sewing Tea In the Sunday school room* ails afternoon. Ail to- dies of the church were invited to brine the utwing or other work and spend a sollal time together. Tat rved J sped s m i served. O Td On T , ^nt Tt evening there wfll fle of t & J W o n i , ^nttf»« of t&JWon Trustees at the church I* 7*0. ©RILL

Cirteret Bw9ig Police Raid Two CARTERET WINS … · Police Raid Two Wfoan'sCW Notes places F«r_., ... dtv.n.ird in St. Fatridt colon. A ... lecture was held in the McMiilin

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Cirteret Bw9ig_

PRICE THREE CENT*

Wfoan'sCW NotesPolice Raid Twoplaces F « r _., .....jotor. Fined $80 and $15

,„,, . E a c f c - T w a p*Bf, .,,,., l_aid OVOT

1111)r(, raids in the polfce war. n.n.or were staged Sunday"" i,; Ohief of Polk* Henry

* - ••--»" •-«"- AndresMichael

School Notes

m ^ , Seniinu DeskThe arrest*,,p to six, f

brings

i . f u p 1 1 a fawner teries of

arrested Sunda* are:\ i) tonic:am,

Frank Mof 62 Hudson[ushullk, of 53f TflnK JBUBiiUiiHivi w«#

street. 16 the TOdson,•(. several men were found

Twelve

, wi

ifl a back room. Ttitles wmtainjtw alleged

were fwndtothi rooml

jug

I ' .1 .

th two qu«t Iiflttl-a fullf. liquor. Oh an upper

onc-g*Hon Jut« «nd fifteen> bottles were found w l »,|llflntities of th*Ufmtr in

I,,, Randolph s t w t tlMM *ug full of alleged illegal

„_ found. OWef of Polk*,„,,„„ has evidence o< sal«

M, each place in addition to!M.:r found Sunday. The menh,i,l in *25O b il each for a

r,,r Tuesday•i, lied fined

when they___ _. and | 1 6 costs,from a former raid

i,,ifi over to Ttmdaj atifct of,u,.k, They we II"- Wl*»beth

,,r 25 Edwin street, and Johnii >f 18 Bergen street Andrew

f 19 Mercer street pleadedIty and was held in 1(00 bail

„. action of ft* grand Jury.k was lisWd amenff thpM

i in the first raid but a t thath,. police did not obtain reffl-. vidence.

Oprjortunlty has been given inboth Chemistry and Physic* labora-tory worjc this year for pupili to use0|eir own initiative in addition' tothe routine experiments required inboth couitnes.

Due to the laboratory sections ineach subject it is possible to haveStudent assistants in each sectionwho are representatives of the otherm a p . The daily of these assistants isto artist the pupils performing theexperiment* in any way in whichthey ean and to keep the equipmentin order. The teacher oversees thiswork and her approval Is necessarybefore tlhe work of the period hicompleted. During the year eachpupil has an opportunity to learnsome of the routine work which isnecessary before smooth runninglaboratory period may be conducted.

"LmuUpukar" Tike. Second PUe.Eleven delegates from Carteret

High School were sent to representthe "Loudspeaker" at the tenth an-nual convention held at the Colum-bia University by the Columbia Scho-lastic Press Association on March 8,9, and 10.

The opening session of the conven-tion at the McMiilin Theatre at 1:30

Name Rock ForForester Head

Emerson Street Man Nominat-ed For Office Of Chief Rang-er — MemWahip D r i v ePlanned By Court Carteret.

Harry .Rock, of Emerson street,was nominated for the office ofChief Rangtsr at a meeting of CourtCarteret, No. 48, Tuesday night inOdd Fellows Hall, There WaB noother nomination for the Odd office.Nominations for other officers were:Sub-chief ranger, Jacob Berardi; Sr.Woodward, Martin Rock; Jr. Wood-ward, John Herega; Sr. Beadle,Charles Virgo; Jr. Beadle, StephenDemeter; treasurer, Joseph Shutello;financial secretary, William P. Law-lor and Al. Guyon; recording secr^-

James Phillips; lecturer, Edwinuinn; trustee, Thomas Larkin.le election will take place March

27 and the new officers will taketheir seats in April.

A delegation that visited the Rah-way Court last week reported a planfor one or more bowling matches be-tween teams representing the two

CARTERET WINSCarteret High School basketball team t

defeated Toms River 41 to 10 in thefor the Central Jersey championship. The gamewas played at Asbury Park The victory enablesCarteret to enter the finals at Asbury tomorrow.

Dear Editor: Maybe it's advancingyears, like they say in the hooka ormaybe it's EeO's eflxer but anywaysI think Scroggins is gettin' a tfassof nerves. He s got a lady .relationwhich she reduces ft lot dofti* trickbicycle ridin' and she piles off toFlorida takin' Uhe bike along* Thenhe's got a bootlegger friend visitin'in Florida an' this bootlegger sendsScroggins a case of oranges. Well,IScrogjfhw ibites Into one of the or-anges and finds a bicycle spoke in it.

on the afternoon of March 8. Follow- « » £ • . _ , *tM,l°J *l.b?J.*n_n.u._ i

ing the opening session, sectionalmeetings were held in the variousuniversity buildings. At these meet-ings the students listened to manynoted speakers, among whom were:Burris

sneakJenki

, gns Jr., noted sports car-di D ltoonis.; Eddie Dooley,

caster and reporter; Wilsports car-

liam E. H«s

of the court were advanced.It wil be held April 14 in Falcon hallat the foot of Pulaski avenue. AlKalla's orchestra has been engagedfurnish music.

Theported

membership committeetwo drives about to

Te-be

Pro*pfctiv» Bl-id* U HoenoredAt Shower In Clirome Ave-

nue — Many Gimt*.

\ pleasing social went took placej u> Mlay night when Hist Irene Som-( :. ,.f Woodbridge, was fiven a sttr-pr,-, kitchen and bathroom showerin the home at 83 Chrome avenueif Miss Ann Reilly who sponsored

the ,,ifair. Miss Sown* wUl necomethe Wide of Jack Reilly In B t James'< i,,,i, h. Woodbridge, April 4.

ih> living room waa beautifullydtv.n.ird in St. Fatridt colon. A

- i* ' ____ _i _ .___ a _;. _____ __.

K.-.M! umbrella4-entiT of U l *with streaiM to trivo theAi the bottom _ _

1 MUMV Kifto Miss S t o e w teamed.. A -upper was serrad and th* fav-

ii >mi table decorations were Ink.•;,':>; with the S i Patrick season.lii:di:i ami fan tan were played and•M. .. .-•• were made by Miss Mar-.' • hni^an, of Woodbridm; Miss11! .in Soundly, Joseph Paulin, Miss< i. Mi< Somers and Miss HelenV,, '.'••• v

- present were: Miss Sqmers,IM i i .r Mrs. Thomas Somers,

Somers, Miss Josephine

keil, assistant to the president of TheNew York Herald Tribune; and othernoted editors and professor* In theevening the delegates wer« conduct-ed on a tour through the Mew YorkHearld Tribune building-.

On the second day a general ses-sion was held at the McMiilin Thea-tre followed by the convention pic-ture on the library step*. In the af-ternoon the delegates attended sec-tional meetings and a special featurelecture was held in the McMiilinTheatre, at which Robert L. Ripley,creator of "Believe it or Not" ad-dressed the students.

The last day of the conventionproved to be the most interesting.After a general session and sectionalmeetings, the delegates attendedround table meetings at which theydiscussed their problems with stu-dent leaders of other schools. LouLittle, head football coach of Col-umbia University and writer for In-ternational News Service addressedthe delegates at a feature lecture.

The convention was brought to adose by the convention luncheon atthe Hotel Commodore during whichthe awards were announced and SirWlllmott Lewie, Washington Corres-

ndent of "The London Times" and

plaunched: one to get new membersand the other to collect delinquentdues. The meeting was well at-tended.

Hall Is Packed AtDemocrat Card Party

More Than Seventy Table* InPlay At Biggest Event OfThe Kind This Season.

The Lutheran hall was packed tocapacity Wednesday night at thecard party held under the auspiceof the combined Democratic units of Bradley"' Mrs! P7 B.' Garberi . L 1 _ __.____. __. ™ - ¥ 1 _>•__. \ __.__• — _ n _• p _M _* A w__r_T _*___ _ • » * « ^ - _ _ _ _

By Isabel Lrfkowtti

'This is the way we wash ourclothes,

Wnnh our clothes,o early Monday morntne."

A knowledge of fabric* aa to theirwashability and durability will be thethem« of .the meeting to be heldThursday, March 22, at 2:00 p. m.,in the American Leginn rooms at theBorough Hall. Ida Mai Lee, of New-tp-k, teacher and lecturer, will give atalk and an exhibit on "Launch-yCraft". The domestic science class othe high school has ibeen invited toattend this meeting.

At this time, too, Mrs. Henry Har-rington, chairman of the nominatingcommittee, will present a slate ofcandidates for the coming springelection.

The seniors entertained the jun-iors Monday evening at the Ameri-can Legion room, with a one-actcomedy skit on radio broadcastingentitled "Station WHY". In the castwere Mrs. T. J. Nevill, Mrs. HenryHarrington, Mrs. C. A. Sheridan,Mrs. Cynthia Jones, Mrs. C. A.

PMUPTOCNMIBoard Pat** ReaolutiM Te

Paaa MOIWT QuNttos Aim*To Borough — May FfaiiHyB« Decided By State Ott-dal.

At a meeting Wednesday night theBoard of Education took formal ac-tion In regard to the school budgetwhich was twke defeated by voteraat school elections, and tamed thesolution of the impasse over to theBorough Council by resolution. Aftthe regular school election a budgetwhich provided for a slight increasein renumeration for school woployeaas compared with the dl_**t twenty

cent cut f l t

the borough. Tables were crowdedNow he's worryin' cause he thinks j n t o e v e r y available sjMwe on themaybe they's been a accident. main floor ,in the cloak rooirt and

He worries about a lotta other in t h e basement. In all there werethings, too. Yesterday he says: seventy-two tables. Many arrived too

"Huck, we must he careful about i a t e to obtain places at the tables. A...e JTink we puts In the paper." few ieft but mo_t of them remained

Oh, yeah,1 I say,. ^ nOn-players. More than, 200 prizes"Sure," he says, "lookut: last w e r e awarded,

week we haa somethin' about my cat There ,were several cash pri.es,JJ^^^J^J. _ _ . . __i_ _ i i . _ __JI_ _ • . _ii_ _r J * -lawin' a guy that's cribbm on the a n t l o t nif special awards. Mayor:WA. Well, right away I gets ijues- j0Seph A. Hermann and County Pur-loned. About fifty guys auks dlffe^ ehasrhg Agent Bdward J. Heil each

VOWalmw Stefan-on, «1*or

liSKiO«(__H__--f * __._.!

Vets Will Ron ShowIn Ritz Theatre Soon

Star Landing Post Will SellPoppies — Get Ready ForMemorial Day.

Star Landing Post No. 2314 Vete-rans of Foreign Wars at a meetingMonday night made plans for a- mo-tion picture to be given late in Aprilin the Ritz Theatre. The film will beselected after a conference with theowner of the local theatre.

The post will observe poppy weekfrom May 19 to 26 inclusive whenmembers and members of the auxi-liary will sell poppies. Preliminaryplans were made for the post's Mem-orial Day program. Regular meet-ings of tine post will be held on Mon-day nights in the future instead ofFriday nights. They will meet asusual in the War Veterans' room inthe borough hall, exeept the n u t

arch m

tionedent times 'doea you'mean me'7"

"What did ye tell "em?"Asked 'em did they have

( won. $5 and each turned it back tothe organization. Ca_h (prizes of

. 12.SO each were awarded to John 0'-cat scratches, but that don't get me Donnell, Mrs. Morris Goodman andoff. Some of 'em says that cat of Adolph Nering. Mrs. Henry J. H&r-mine leaves scratches you can't see rinirton Jr., won «. quarter ton ofbut they hurt just the same. Another c o a l . Mrs. Laura Crane won an elee-guy says the cat should learn to trie table lamo.scratch some of these dames with other winners of special prizesmoney in the bank and frettin' re- were: Mrs. John Fee, ba« o<f pot*-''"'" toes; Mrs. Thomas Kennelly, glass

Thomas Burke and. Mrs. Julius Kloss.The silly antics and the outlandishcomical costumes of the actors evok-ed much laughter among the guests.Gertrude Bradley and Helen Carl-ton did specialty numbers — Ger-trude, a monologue, and Helen a tapdance. Sandwiches, cake and coffeewere served,

Mombers may be glad to hear thatMiss Ruth Brown, who has dtlightedthe Woman's Club several times withher singing, will give a recital inElisabeth Sunday afternoon.

pper cent cut of last was de-r-" wan* *_ «• v vi uuii, j n u A w«M U f

teated by organized opposition atheavy taxpayers. Then a specialelection was held and a budget re-vised downward about 140,000 wa*defeated by organized aeMon <rfschool employes who took advantageof the fact that an election thatdoes not involve the election on de-feat of individuals does not attradtattention and brings out a smaBvote.

That was as far as the schooliboard could fro in * _ matter. Batthe schools must go on and the legi-timate expense of operation must bemet State school law recognises thepossibility <a such « deadlock aa oc-cured in Carteret and provides forit The board may refer the matterto the Borough oouncil. It also pro-vides an alternative by making, action

The club Will hold its annual card I i n *u c n c a B e s optional with the coon-party Monday, evening, Mardi 26 atl c"' ^^^ ' ^ il t I?,. . . . i» .. _. . ... y.e

"They kind 'o tried to hush that 8et- Mrs. C: A. SJieridan, fern; Mrs.up about that dame, didn't they?" p. x Caaaidy, basket, of groceries;

"Sure, they try to hush up all the Mrs. Fred Colton, set of dishes; Mrs.real newn," Scrogyins said. ' James Irving, bag of flour; JVeida,

"I know it some g-ood news, al- Green ,Iamp; Mrs. Philip Turk, towelready," says Izzy whidh he'd enook s et ,up behind us and is listening. I '

"Spill it/' say. Scroggins. I"Willie Brown has a case is sliv-

ovitz," I u y said. (

"Can it be cured?" Scrogginsasks, thinkin' its a disease.

"Sure, I cured some," Iz»y says,en' goes on to tell us its a kind ofdrink that would reform Hitler.

We stand gabbin' about whetherwe'd try a shot of the slivovitz whenthe cat which he's trail in' Scroggins,begins moanin' and yowlin*. He'slookin' at horse doctor comln' along1

leadin.' a sick goat.hall, ex

___ttl L

1 Will U

Large Attendance AtCommunion Breakfast

Holy Name Group Hears Elo-quent Speakers —1 Priett At-

Obscene Literature.

The"What the . . ." begins Scroggins of the Holy Name

\li-s Marion Hibbitts, Missui! J'-.::-:~a.-, Mrs. Mary Kathe . __,-..I Mrs. Carrie Kathe, all of J a n 0 ' f s k y

\ < u v

second place among the mimeo-graphed publications entered in theannual contest

The delegates are most gTatefulto the staff member* and the advicersfor making this trip possible. Theyhope that the constructive criticismreceived at the convention will helpthe "Loudspeaker" to attain a high-er rating neqt year.

Those who represented the "Loud-1apeaker" were: Gladys Huber, edi-1

" _ _ . . . - - - - ^ 4 F i r * t * _______ ___ __ _ f

A committee that visited AlexMurkowiU at the Rahway MemorialHospital reported he is n_a__i«g anormal recovery. His leg was am-putated after an accident tq a localplant.

wrong with the goat." rill was the c"What's new in oolities?" I asks tee in charge

i Willi J

St. JoBeph's Hall. The proceeds willbe used for the club's conservationsight and hearing project.

The club's Woman's Exchangecarries on each Friday from 10:5oa. m. to as long as supplies last.Homemade food and cakes and fancyarticles are for sale. The exchangeis open to the public.

There will be a meeting of the ex-ecutive Board at the home of thepresident, Mrs. T. J. Nevill, 113 Lo-well street, on Monday, Man* 19,at 2:00 p. m.

Your correspondent is glad to re-port that she was one of the twelvewinners in a news reporting contestsponsored by the New York Herald-Tribune on March 5 at its auditor-ium, 230 West 41st street, NewYork. Amor_g the four staff judgeswere Mr. Grafton 3. Wilcox, manag-ing editor, and Mr. Howard White,society editor. There were approxi-mately 160 contestants — all Dresschairmen pi Women's Cluba in NewJersey aqd Westchester County, N.

n' s : ^ c council may act In

In the latter case the problem Ispassed along to the State Commis-sioner of Education.

There were fifteen applications forthe position of janitor in the Cleve-land school made vacant by the deathof the late Jeremiah Donoghue.Some of the applicants were backedby the local post of the Legion, onewas backed by the V. F. W. andothers by various societies. The ap-plications were filed. There were al-so eleven applications for positionsas teacher.

When money matters were beingdiscussed Commissioner Jakeway«aked if the February payroll couldbe met. President Conrad said nosalaries or bills wilt be paid until thebudg«t is approved.

Commissioner Haury objected tobill for printing, ballots for the spe-cial election.

It was decided to hold the organ-ization meeting of the bowd onMarch 2B when the new board tott»84-86 will take over the aflatrs otthe schools.

Mra. Robert

Scroggins."Oh

of the eommit- Mrs. Robert Chodosh, of toallroadformer Council- avenue, waa hostess Monday night to

"Oh, not much except a breeze up master. The breakfast waa preparedat the cave of the winds," he says, and served by the Rosaxy Society

"M-uifiin' _rk_(-v through a special committee includ-

_.__ former Co , nday night tman William J. Lawlor was the toast- the auxiliary unit of the Brotherhood

"Meanin' what?

of Israel. Cards were played and re-freshments were served. Those pre- New Enterprise In Washingtonsehc were: Mrs. Harry Ohodos_i, Mrs.T _. * 11 * _"_ ^ J- * f J -, _ * _

hope7that>e constVuctive critkUra ! J ^ J J^ujjgj J Q

Be Married Sunday

Km

Mrs. KathleenMrs. Oaniel McDonnell, of•ilnitf; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph.1 Iselin; Mr. and Mrs. Wil-

muHy, of Ossining; Mr. and•iiond Reilly, of Jersey City;

Brady. Miss Lillian Don-Mi».s Adeline Donovan, Mrs.

H;'-mian, the Misses .Catherinet'liyllU Brennan, Mrs. Thomas• Hv the Misses Edna. Quinn and

Wachter, Mr. and Mrs. John

literary department,E l g i e Rockman, and

iCFlaraLouis Nagy of the business depart-ment, and Marie Rapp and DorothyFisher from tJie typing section. Oneof the advisers, Miss E. C. Monaban,Miss L. F. Powers and Mrs. F. Tho-burn accompanied the group eachday.

Franc). Pro<r»mThe first part of this morning's

program by the French Conversa-

Dr. P. Richard Wexler To WedNew York Girl — Will LiveIn Pershing Avenue.

Dr. P. Richard Wexler, well-known local dentist with offices inthe RiU Building will *>e absent

"School board meetin' when that ing: Mrs. J. H. Nevill, chairman; | William Brown, Mrs. Nate Chodosh,bunch of economisters pets to ravin'. Mrs. Cynthia Jones, Mrs. Loretta Ne- Mrs. Neil Ohodos'h, Mrs. Sam Wex-1One wants the budget shouldl be for- vill, Mrs. Catherine Sexton, Mrs. J ler, Mrs. & B. Brown, Mrs. Doraty thousand bucks bigger but kicks George Gaudet, and Mrs. Arthur Meabout a newspaper bill of some thir- Nally.ty odd bucks."

"Sore at the paper?"| There were several fjuest speakers,

. . the principal one being Deputy"Sure, it's been tellin' the truth Mayor Bert Boyle, of Bayonne. He

about 'im." spoke of President Roosevelt's rc-"Whose in line for mayor in the covery program and his general

G-0.P. camp?" I asks. p o i j c j r | likening it to the Pope's en-"The regular Republicans is linin1 cyclical letter. Anthony Gadok,

up behind Frank Andres, one of p e r t h Amboy lawyer, spoke of "Pre-their old stand-bys." paredness." Timothy Hag-erty, of

"There ought to be fun," I says. Bayonne, spoke of the duties of men"Plenty", says Scroggins. - •' •- • " • -1 - : -•

HUCKLEBERRY HESS.

Ru! !vJa,k Reilly and Mi» Ann , club was given in French. The

French Conversational Clufo is hold-ing its regular meeting in charge ofits officers. The President calls the

to order, after which theStolen AutoAbandooad Ih Field

'•>>• !

Krskine sedan that waa stolenh Amboy Monday night, waa

'•;•• •••..•,•,.,[ in a field off Blair roadl d . Prank Tiemeyj of Blair

to Miss Helen Suderov, daughter ofMr and Mrs. Morris Suderov, ofNew York.

After the wedding Dr. and Mrs.Wexler will leave! for the South andwill return to Carteret March 28.They will reside »t 178 Perahing ave-

Dr. Wexler said the CWA dental

ru*'i. reported the wi*'nad beenk' in the field all dajr Tuesday,

n•.•,-:,,>. night and Wednatdagr until; 1 p t d it P l i h ti

Ml 1,

I I U l l

g d tgported it. Police here atcertain-

the registration that tke caru.'i, stolen but did not gat the1 of the owner.* tar was stock in d e w mud'•* "••* removed with difficulty.

to member gives a Frenchtrip. The project has been complet-

Relnrns Funds ToRelief Officials

the organization. Mayor Joseph A.Hermann commented upon tine large

i number of men present and hopedthat other communion l)reatcfastswill be held soon and be equally suc-cessful.

Rev, Father Joseph Mulligan,pastor of the church, spoke of the

—. obscene literature exposed on news-Randolph Street Wotaan Had sJ«nfs *n* M\d. ,8Uch newsstands

•" , , should bo boycotted.2,000 In Bank, Also Month- Other speakers included former

__. . i wh. v * •*•* 1 _~1 _ _

who before being «dmjttedclub must demonstrate his ability torecite, sing, and mock animals.

The remainder of the meeting bin charge of the program committeewho entertained with music and

^ P o l k

^oKo^fcpontdAvigjnoir, sung b» JVench classes1 andd w d b y Luoille Staub^h, Dorfa

night in Fakon hall w i *1[ sixty membera i'•nt. The speaker waa

' • . I

ar andKttore•••I'- ut present Is doi

•• •''• Columbia U' 1!'""ity on c oi' sent economic tr.,lme and proWM*.i-nt tfc«f«. The

fd k

Luollle Sh>ub#ch, Doris"touiw FUDP, Itene Kutay,

, Ksher. The d*ncem werein Provincial «ostun-$;

Vocal Solo, Mon Homme,GatS.rineH.msel . 'v%SoAd>»s - Le P»yi de Dixie,Clark.

JV. Harmonicaftufta.

nambers. Victor

VI. Vocal Solo. A« CUir de la

t f t of U M-rseU-

French Classes,

Hebrew Federatkw

ly Income.

Complaint was made by Mi« C. C.Clausing, Municipal director of re-lief in^Carteret/TueBday night in

IS^fCSSrtfiffih f ^ J t3

Councilman Edward Dolan, FrancisA. Monag ian and Dr. Louis Downs.

Those present Dan Sullivan,Hrivnak,

Jacaby, Mrs. Isadore Brown, Mrs.Isadore Raibinowitz, Mrs. Leo Kock-man, Mrs. Aaron Rabinowitz, Mrs.Joseph Blaukapf, Mrs. David Ven-ook, Mrs, David Sealteil, Mrs. LouisChodosh, Mrs. J. Keider, Mrs. Ab«Weinstein, Mrs. Abe Zucker, Mrs.Morris Katznelson «W_d Mrs, Cho-dosh.

Woman's Club EntertainsMembera Of Junior Group

The Carteret Woman's Club enter-tained the Junior Woman's ClubMonday night in the borough hall.The feature Of the program was acomedy based on radio broadcastingand entitled "Station WHY" In thecast were: Cynthia Jones, Mrs. C. A.Sheridan, Mrs. George Bradlel, Mrs.P. B. Garber and Mrs. ThomasBurke.

Miss Gertrude Bradley and MissHelen Carlton put on & specialtynumber in which Miss Bradley re-cited a poem and Miss Carltondanced. Refreshments were served.

^ . X a n f p a u U n d Jo rinSirthl^och, Harry Ro&,

Brotherhood Auxiliary ToHave Card Party April 10

The auxiliary unit of the Brother-hood of Israel will hold a card partyTuesday night, April 10, in theWashington auditorium, Washing-ton avenue and Atlantic street..here will be many prizes Refresh-

ments will t>o served after the games.

Mother - Teacher* Sponaor ^St. Patrick Tpa Today

The Mother-Teacher Associationof the Presbyterian Sunday school?s holding * * . Patrick's tea thisafternoon in the Sunday school roomf r m 2 to 4 o'clock. It is open to tihe

. The arrangements are inof MM. William Ellfott. Mrs.

Yetman and Mm. Hary A*on.

in addition has an income o f > 2 a

amount of rener. suetotaled 1-72.94, according to therecords of the relief adminbtratjon

ana son, nmnni, u w u , fKennedy! E. J. Skeffington, Georgeo v i j v - p Y T f n < m f l « r f V i

There was a large attendancemembers of both clubs present.

of

Avenue Haa Formal Open-ing Saturday Night WithMore Than 400 Present.

Despite the fact that Saturdaynight was one of the most disagree-able of the winter, the new Wash-ington Grill in the Kahn furniturebuilding in Washington, avenue, waspacked to capacity. It was the for-mal opening1 of tho new enterpriseand the proprietors celebrated theevent by giving free chicken dinnersto the guests. Four hundred sevendinners Were Berved. Then the sup-ply of ohickens ran out. Many otherguests arrived too late for the chick-ens but there are other good thingsto eat in the larder of the Washing-ton Grill; good things to drink, too.

The main dining room is on thefirst floor while the second floor isan auditorium with tables along thewalls. Dumb waiters carry the foodfrom the kitchen in the basement.The service was prompt and pleasingdespite the, big crowd. On a stage atthe front end of the auditorium anorchestra played all evening.

Of the large numSer of guests.resent at the opening more thanialf were from out-of-town.

here.Mrs, Barlik ,

dxeu-ed and

Foxe, Sr., and Jr., Floyd Owens,P t M C J h K n d y Edin court WHII P e t e r McCann, John Kennedy,

in court Well w ju -d u , y a m f i g Dll_.n_ T h , , - ^agreed to make reeamount she had receivedand the charges againstdropped.

Alliance Group StudiesRules Of Contract Bridge

Miss Evelyn Weiss, of Rooseveltavenue, vias hostess Tuesday nightto the Contract Bridge group Of theHebrew Social Alliance. Harry Hel-ler was tho instructor and the mem-bers studied the problems of thegame. After the study refreshmentswere served. Thoee present wer«:Mr. and Mrs. Heller, Mrs. Sam ftfcM M L M S

Pole Falls On Truck

AhiW T1 Thomas Jakeway, J. J. Dowling,Frank and Tom DowUng, John H«t>rington, Jr.^ John MflDonneell, Vin-ceirt, Robert and Dan McDonnell, Jo-

h S h l l F k B Th

SESSION. OF ORUIDSA regular roe-tin* fit *

Grove Ko, M AMientJJnitod Oof Draids was held Wednesday night£ Firebouse No. 1. The b ^ * - * ™diiposed of qtttekljr and the meet-ing adjourned early as may of ft*ZnbMi huwied away U> aj*en| ftDemoeratie gKti party. In the l>»th-

hU

_ . _ _ „, ceirt, Robert and Dan McDonnell, JoDnver Cut By G U M 8eph Shuttello, Frank Bom, Thomas— — Coon6y, J. B. O'Donnell, William

Paul Gatteson, of Townley, N. J., Conimn, Jurvase Nevill, John Gon-a driver for the Borden Dairy Com- n o ly, Fred Allen, William Lawlor,pany, was eutf about the face Wed- Jr,( Jo« UcHale, Fjrancis, Leo, Bd-nesday when « Public Service pule Ward Cougblin, Nicholas Sullivan,in Carteret awnue fell and ^raahad William Day, V«o Rocky, Casperinto the milk truck. One of Ifceerpea- Herrta, J«t»ea Bajpn, Floyd Gwdet

M . and M r . H r , M S m ftofc,Mrs. Moe LiBrenson, Mrs. Sand orLehrer, Mrs. Louis L.hrer, Miss Ger-trude Zusaman, Miss Ann Daniel*Mrs. Pbjlip Drourr, Miss Anne Ros-enlblum,' Mr. and Mrs, BernardWeiss, the Misses Anne and MollieSchwartz and Miss Weiss.

to the driver.d» of the truck #awldent happewd inaa# t*e

t

eratt

oftWith Mr*. EudieMoftWith

All Arrangements MadeFor Hibernian Bal

Divisiion No, 7 A. 0. H. memberswill celebrate ther thtrty-lhrrd andual" " of the division tomorrow night

; Ratriek's Night) in the Germat ball, w© program, o>»e of

l b.._,. tieraa ball, w pthe moit elaborate ini l U I i h d__. Irish dtncea a»4 music in-terspersed with a program of moderndance*. There «r« eW special enter-ttfunenfa features. TheliaU wllj >e

d In St P»trick colors.Ill -i« nlantv nt rafreshmeets.

PRESBYTERIAN NOTES

The Traims are ho.ta tonight tothe Young People of the Methodist,Congregational and Presbyterianhurches of Woodbridge and the'

Presbyterian of Avenel, and theEpiscopal of Sewaren and Cat-tent.Supper will be served At 7:80 fol-owed by a program of entertain-ment and short talks. The SettlorChristian Endeavor will also be in-luded in the gumta of the Traims.

The Sunday school basketballteam will meet the teaip from the rFirst Presbyterian Church of Ra»-way on the local court on Saturdaytaorntrur at 10:84,

Sunday will be observed as "Com-munity Day" in the Loyalty Cruiadeat the Pre-byterian church. The ser-mon topic will be "The ChristianMijjta?e for the Community". ThepB_rtor will speak to the Juniora on"False or True". One week fromSunday will be "DefMon Day"."WhAt Wilt Thou Do With Jesuswhich ia Called Christ/*"

The Mofeher-Teacher AsBOclattopheld*. Sewing Tea In the Sundayschool room* ails afternoon. Ail to-dies of the church were invited tobrine the utwing or other work andspend a sollal time together. Tat

rved Jsped smi served.

O T dOn T, ^ n tTt

evening there wfll fleof t & J W o n i, ^ n t t f » « of t&JWon

Trustees at the church I* 7*0.

© R I L L

PAGE TWO

Fashion Has Habit Of Going GayAnd Even Gayer From Day To Day

FISHMAJTS OUTLAYINGNEW SnUMG CLOTHES

OB* 01 th* ffr>f*t selections of IH-»

tn:4rt of i* f» and

th*

Hg b *arr*n|rprfky TS«r* are a fe»hat« and w?a< of th*el<*h« lk»t do in partanrtaMeaeie «f U»* tWM«. f,la:I"rH thinfi ax* remarkably nnrand fwxMookiac. And whets w* talkafc'i-ji tailored things, we »hno*t in-variably mesa twnd*.Pki. T«w4* imT * » M J Ovatrr—

Plaids wers attracting: eowder-*>J» atteatioo, last faJi. and Ihsprang find* them even

TV *3rm li«*m»f*ri»l T V V n**k nwi 1h» wmiit-1IB*# ar* aer#irt**J by fror iin jtfterw irijk <r*P*. thrwr* *•*>

•a: Six nets rnr» » somewhati"w nee-Mine.

The plaid tweed cwuubU.trated at the upper left, is brown,black and natural rolor The threeqearter length coat is cotlariets, andHM wide lapels are soft firing thataroch dear** easy "floppy" look.

INnrtrated at ttif lower left is *fal! lewrtfc rajrlia «•««, in the casual«tyl«, »ru-clt »• characteristic of thi*fprifnt- Er«y !••• °* **** **•* •*•

MM and fomfort. The esater-it a beig* and brown cheek

The faltaiea aroond thei is important The collar h a mealjUnrtivt feali

b* worn over a BBH or a «wea*er setquite MM easily *M over a dreaw.

Th* ctrk-tiy conventional checkedbdmacican ia, of coorae, one of the

food im the metropoWaanow being di tay^yS atlocated at 80 Broad *!«**,

At thit fine estafchifrmnrt, whicha known as "On* of America's.Smart*** Straps" say *<*»an or mniwill f"md a complete «*!ect!<m efroaU. roits and dltmmt wh-rh wQInot ooly sstisfy her faaer >n clothes,bwt better still, salt her porkrtbook*as Ffekmsn'* garments airModerately priced.

'lips wooers suve nasjoyed a large patronage from Wood-bridge and CartereL And the ma»-agntent ptarfily fispfanred then- ap-preciation for tins bosinnw lastsariag. when Woedhridce tovrIssued baby bonds, for Ffi*mtn«among the first to adrertsv f"r thebonds in this territory. In doing thisthe fine was eadeavurif to

SPECIAL OFFERING

Totnt CHOICE OF couws

WE HAVE HO ACEKT

anxnic courows

WOODBRDGESTUDIO

74 MAIN STREET

CALL tESIDEMCE PHONE

FOB rftourr SERVICEASK R X JAMES LATTAW3O

WOODMUDGE K-1M7-W

coat tr qan exac^eratni halmacxan.CWdkedDay w#u A y

And the more tailorrd checkedsaito are a U>wn as w*B a* a iqwrtgfarortU. A fitted, aeves-cifliU leujrUiroat, wrt)i matehinc slnrt, b «ket<liedat tike lower rifbt. It it afnrie-breM-ted and Mtofta well down &«• frontIt alao it a tw«ed, hi dark brown,boarbon sad aataraJ colored cheek.The lapeU are not wide, whkh krather onoaaaJ this jttr. There ar*four pAeketc

Scarf* are an fanportant matterfor eowideratioB, aa they are inmMt eaata riaaWe. Hie checked n i thas a acarf fn dotted 0* aflk. ItMight he in either brown or boor-

pose of theas. Threufh weh thought-fahieas has tins great store built upita ewrhjAfa repntaUan for serriceasd

Hairy ot the amarteet wiHa makenae of two <ouliiat|jiav fahrka. Along cheeked top eoat often eorara ajacket Mil in a monotofte color. Or

i the idea May be r—r—d a pteiaI top coajt orer * checked n k . Or.•till acaia, we aee checked or pUd

I top eoate and akirtm, with plain «*-

RCVEUHUE CAFESCapes are beJaa; shown every-

where. Sage, green and oeaje wooltwo-piece frocks are awith reversible hjp4engtfc capesptag one aide of fabricaide for, u paather or ragoadia,which resembles b

Unoaddaai qWers front IHI slaajthat tha first Is tfatfr a•f not havtag fomd aHet «Ute tha other It

ored Jacket* The three-«teee «dtis having a b« boom, in New 1as R Is cbaraeteristkaByfeeling, and is wearable allround.

C/^ umdToumdvutBOND CLOTHES

EASTERi A N D

BOND CLOTHESA Combination That's Hard To Beat

A Word To The Wise Is Sufficient

Get That Better "Spring" Suit

or Topcoat Direct from 'Bonds'

Factory at Factory

It'f Much More Economical—and Thousand* of Ganncpt* to• Cboowe from A#turei You lOOt Satiffactfeft In

Pirn

Hmtets (k Mr Liner $ Has ManyPersons To Please; Seldom Fails

Ma* fH^r.1 ofirials. motion fietare tUf. >sun»«B« executtrca, aaJeanen «rd adrentomn!—Ml ASMtilfeJc rsr^'r offcame aartaken "f > f ood.

Bm Bkeab arc at eler«taoniig r to il,*QO feetwild B»oniitajn rwiam, o-f?r

aa, bj storm, foe and nwonlirMeawry earls and mlad* sad aand-

1mm n I M forth n^u of

She * Mias Helen KyaMr, apecialist hi aviation foods. Thoee«ads of

between Newark andoa tnuaspert planes have

ABalr ttnes which employ hostes*-es ahoani their ships serve feed iathe air. Of course, the a w e yaneswith the tiaae of day. An hoar and ahalf fcetere a plane it aebedided tolew* Met Kymer is notified by thetreaW ages* as to the mnaber of per-

lave nude reaerrationj.The asaal policy ia to prepare thataway lam hen in and one to spare.

F««i Smrwd F « *The feed is qakUy pot up inaitinaai far eoasuaiptkia snd rnsh-

ea to Newexk Airport, where it is' ever to the ship's hostess.

ApyiajjawiUly oae hour afterwardit Is anved-The bread is still fresh,salade a n crisp, the crackers andcookies wont bend.

Coatrary to general opinion therek ao sttict taboo oa any generalrlaatiHwrtisB «f food. Air sickness isa lafnmr factor in considering »atean. Aheot the only universal bank agaiaat In mart On other pet"donf s" epinioas differ.

Uajted Air LineB-Jwith whichMist Knaer does the bulk of herbaaiaeat—bars oranges and tanger-ines estem out of hand. The odor ofthe sides is penetrating, and theOaVfcda of this line believe it mayprove aaplrassnt to others in thecabin.

American A i r w eys, however,inU lots of oranges, on the theory

they are highly refreshing.Meats, except on special occasions,

a n served only in sandwiches. Thebalk of selection is left to Miss Ky-BMT. Her own taboo is against roast»»aati, with exception of beef. Sothe passenger may find on his traycjrirffti, tongue', beef, boiled orbaked ham, Ui,-ic;, tsna fish salad,peanut butter, egg, bacon, cheese orvarious combination nandwiches.

One line doesn't want chocolatecake or cookies served on board ship.But the others have no objection ••"this flavoring.

Papalar SudwickeiChicken sandwiches are always

popular. And Simple p«anut buttersandwiches, too, get excellent re-

iwnae. Each passenger U served bisr her food on an individual trayith paper napkin and doily bearing

the instgna of the airline.Passengers on sfaipi in the air at

sapper time eat the most food. Al-most invariably they finish every-thing get before them. Luncheon issecond in popularity, breakfastthird.

Meals served in mid-morning, raid-afternoon snd at night are the raoetiBdiffereatly received. At night, how-ever eoffee-je always welcomed.

Mia* Kraua- pats' aboard threekinds of meals. The most customaryconsists of three half sandwiches,individually wrapped; fruit salad,varying with the season; olives anapickles In a waxed paper bag-, conee,

or chocolate and cake or other

warn. Therr i« »inif talk of urinespnmoni Irrqnently next Hummer.

Eairh bout*™ who »enrM food ga-ther* th<> rewtionn of the pftM^n^mand r*porUth*m to the BeM ro*J£«er, who in turn, pa»»e« them to MIIWKyrner. In that way a ronitorit indi-cation of average like* and dWike*if available , ,

By tbf way her w v w l rntiot,whether Mint Kymer know» it or not,are the pilots snd co-pilot*, Tlw hott-<*s serves the passenger* ftr»t—thoo-retieally—«nd thm the pilot*. Themen in t*« "front office" of theplanes eat the airline diet day in andday out They are not shy abont pre-tenting their views to the ho*tew.' Miss Kymer, who is a former resi-dent of Bloomfleld, became inUrest-ed in dietetic* never*! yean affo. Sheworked as an airplane and groundhosteas for Eastern Air TrampoTtand began to fuggest several changesin the fare which was then offeredaboard ritipi of that line.

Miss Kymer is a grmdusU ofBloomfleld High and a private secre-tarial school. She has also t*k«n uni-versity courses in dietetics. She re-signed from her position in EasternAh- to take over her present work.

ELIZABETH ROAD CHANGEDEEMED IMPOSSIBLE NOW

Installation of « traffic barrier inthe center of Spring Street, Route26, fat EKzabedi, instead of the pre-sent marginal islands hi requested ofthe State Highway Commission bythe Lions C\vi> of Elizabeth and theBroad Street Improvement Associa-tion of His* same municipality.

Major William O. Sloan, SUteHighway Bngineer, during s discus-sion of tha sabjeet wifli the membersof the board stated that no money isavailable for snch a change and thatthe reservation of the' central lanesas at present laid oat for throughtraffic was deemed the more desir-able arrangement This informationwill be convey«d> to the Elizabethorganizations.

LOANSLocal Representative

STOCKS AND BONDS6% per Annum. Confidential,

Eatpirv Finaae* ft Faadiag Co.

! D. P. De YOUNG• AVENEL, N. J.

| Phone Woodhridare S-2149-J

OLD BVUHMIX TKAMT K X r C l K

K. * K. BAJMO, SUUrWAT. IM Inrtac St.TKU RAHVTAIT 1-1M»

SATURDAYTHRIFTMONEY SHOPoffers an

EASTERSALE

$12 or $15expect to pay for tktt. irmtn. W»

to cone in and see them, and jod»* for

self, dorified print*, fa«cin«tlnff pMldb aai

nawi«s. Some are detailed with linferie te*eWa,

other* with white piqne. All the BOW imillhn

modes and sleeve treatments.

MISSES' SIZES, 12 to 20WOMEN'S SIZES1 36 to 44

ALSO HALF SIZES

These Dresses Again MakeFishman's the Talk of the Town

FISHMAN'S, be.Sixty Broad Street

ELIZABETH

The other meals, eaten at the oddhoars, are lighter.

While sandwiches may contain anyA a wide variety of fillings, regularcommuters—and they are surpris-ingly many in number—find that thegeneral makeup of the meals be-comes monotonous. There are manywho fly from Newark to Chicago,for example, once, twice and eventhree times a we«i. j

For this reason United Air Lines \ias decreed that each menu special-!

ist along the main stop may haveone day a week in which to "runwild." Tuesday is Newark's day,Thursday is Cleveland's day and Sat-urday is Chicago's day. The choiceof food on such an occasion is leftentirely to the discretion of the per-son in charge of its preparation.

A "WWkiy S»»«" |Miss Kymer has pat up special

salads, tarte, soaps and bouillons,Sroten desserts and whips for herFuesdsy meals. While they are more j

troublesome, she looks ahead to herweekly "spree".

The most popular of her "own"dishes she believes, is cream of mush-room soup. And on two special trip*sent oat by United Air lines sheplaced aboard fried chicken and ice

AIDS IM LAUNDERING

FsU ywar hath fanreU, kaadtowels mml p o t towel* iathirsV bawtfcwi** M that thaya W «•* * . t*fal4«d wh«»raMhr te ha hang vnr the rodim th. hwlaTnm

With lbs bwtto*** thlrtbasons fa«a 4 m , foU ikirUto o n t o hack, layiag tha•liwil IsSjglhwIll. DonUa thaallrt U M » M L

Tw# feUaJastoad of (h* b»-clttsMd awai f*U for kudbr-•hiefs asak* th«. atfcmcUva

«asri3ti.ai«• • * > tfcras ar fur toa«ta-wfae fslla. If la fow, th*•CMSB) fsM s»sy h« >MJ. Th*

*f tha su*»«raaiM I IU IMiut .f

wnag

Wear a Fishman Coatand Know That Youare Smartly Dressed

Saturday is theBIG Day

• • • • . > ; • ' • > •

' - . >•••*<*,

EASTER . . . is a short time off-so we invite you to oomejour new spring Fashion Showing— Saturday. Select a newE&tor Suit-Coat-or Frock-and include yourscjliin the big Easter putAe. Sbouklyou wear a size 11 or any size to 46, we can clothe you beautifully *'•.at prices you can afford to pay.

!CLAStf [ED ADS

2 PIECE SWAGGER g \J T f f gI.Tweeds, and more tweeda, with soft, drew*cre|tet. Swagferf . . . . windblown*mannish tailored . . . loose, full bo* jack-ets. Bfatelc, w r y and other colors. Finger-tip, tkr***qaarter and *ere«hei«hth coal*.Sixes 12 to 20.

HARKI5 TWEED SUITSIn two pieces, munniehly tailored

NEW SPRING TOPCOAtS

If1 -* 4's

*u

l h p r 01 their ;,,.,.., today ananit-ifty

aay •»« ">-»shoppers from

t will no

W M 1

'^jTaZT^l M do'ijrtSKSS1 ' event as the store has al-

popuiai' inthto—'*-•—

ORR9MUtdlR»,

. Price* arc always lower at 3«hte-*8l R because of the firm's large buy-ing power. Th«y operate many other•tores In New York and. New Jer-loy

SEEB I S OVER STATE PWT1CAL POT

Senate Reject* Gorernor'* ReappoSnbnaat Of Paaaaic JuristAfter Claim He Paid State Official $15,000 For Portion

Fite Year* Afoj Broad Query Under Way

ACCUSED STILLSEEKS SECOND TERM AS COMPTROLLER

Confronted and

Tk STRIPPED SILVER CHASSISOf The New 1934

counter-charges of alleged purchas-ing oi the Common Pleas Judgeahlpin Passaie Countyt five years ago- byJudge William. B, Harlay, th» JointConference Committee of the Legis-lature Is considering plans tOi in-vestigate the whole affair.

Appointment of the Joint legisla-tive Judiciary Committee as a bodyto gift the various charges, is con-templated, Subpoena power will be

complete picture of the allowed|25,0<10 tranaactif V "We can wait alittle while at least and find out whatthe others in the alleged transactionhave to say," he said.

Senator Barbour offered no ex-planation of the utrange pomtinn hnplaced himself in by nominating Me-Cutcheon after refuging to vnt« forthe confirmation of Harley,

a. auDpoen* power will oe » « • } A t im fi

2%f^ntXtoJd°Xot Weann 0 The GreenCan Extend Into Your

Dining Room Tomorrow

Now On Exhibit At TheJefferson Motors ShowroomsTHIS MrH»IT—Open to the public of the RaritanBay Dtrttkit r - Come, to Perth Amboy direct fromthe N*tfc*al Automobile Show* in New York City

'Hi

NEW ilTRONGER FRAMESEC T»E MA5STVE CONSTRUCTION OF THE

'.?«ipiRAME THAT PROVIDES GREATER

J STRENGTH THAN ANY OTHER

-TYPE OF CONSTRUCTION

Many Other Novel andInteresting Exhibits

Jefferson Motors, lnc.$60-166 New Brunswick Avenue

PERTH AMBOY

attendance . . __ .... ,so that charges of alleged briberymay be delved into thoroughly.

I The Senate in executive sessionlast night rejected the re-appoint-ment of Judge Hftriey after Senator

1 John C Barbour VigourQUisly op-posed his confirmation for anotherterm. Judge Harley yesterday is al-leged to have declared that he paid116,000 to Comptroller John Mc-

, Cutcheon for the position five years

I Governor Moore refused to with-draw the nomination of Judge Har-ley from the Senate attar,SenatorBarbour announced early yesterdaythat he would not go along with theappointment. The GOTOTUOT claimed

I that the leading citizens of Patersonwho recommended his reappointmentwere aware of the alleged bribery atthe time Harley was suggested foranother itenn.

At a caucus here yesterday atten-ded by 42 of the 47 Republicanmembers of the Legislature, it wasvoted to hold a joint session o i the

; Legislature at 3 P. M. on Tuesday,MarcJi 27 for the purpose of select-ing a successor to State ComptrollerJohn MeCutcheon, Republican leaderof Passaic County,'whowith having received $15,000 for "theappointment of Common Pleas Judge

, William B. Harley five years ago.The joint session will also elect

Harold G, Hoffman, aa State MotorVehicle Commissioner for anotherterm, a State Treasurer, Superinten-dents of Election in Hudson andEssex Counties, a State Director ofBaitroads, and numerous Commission-ers of Deeds. A joint conference oflegislative Republicans will be heldon the proceeding day to draftslate of candidates for the variopositions.

'Senator Barbour, who declared hewould not Tote for the confirmationof Judge Hartey because he admitted paying $25,000 five years ago tot>e named to the bench, made anabout lace st the caucus by nominat-ing Comptroller McCutcJieon for an-ouiar term. He made no mention ofthe charges of Judge Harley thothe $25,000 went to MeCutcheon aiRepublican boss of Pasaaic County.

Harbour is reported by SenatoiAlbright as hiring said "let's" warlor * week or two. Don't jump atconclusions in the heat of thesecharges. Let us wait and see if mat-ters in Passaic County will straighten themselves out"

Later on the Passak Senator explained that what he desired is

Only On© St. Patrick's DayEvery Year So Why No*

Make The Moat Of It?

HERE IS HOW TO DO IT

It wss Cfarfet Wok™, accordingto Modern Science Institute at ToT-•*>, O., tfcat gfcv» Portorhow steakits name.

The legend is that in 1-847 Dickon*stopped at the Porter House, a smallhotel in Sandusky and was so pleasedwith s st«ak dinner that he describedit when ordering meals in otherhotels and referred to it as PorterHouse steak.

Claim DUp«t«iThis disputes the claim of New

Yorkers who give the credit to adowntown saloon or "porter house'of 100 year ago. The claim is alsomade for Porter's roatfhouse s tCambridge, Mass.

Anyway, this is a good way tocook the tender loin cut from thesirloin strip.

Portarhout* StsakPut three tablespoons of olive oil

and one of vinegar in a fiat dish asbroad as the steak and soak it in thisfor half an hour, giving ea*h side anequa.1 share of the oil. Place the meaton a hot broiler, leavei the oven dooropen and broil su-ven minutes oneach side. The steak should bo twoinches thick.

Rub ft hot tin plate with a cloveof garlic, add a tablespoon of butter,a Scant teaspoon of salt and a littlepaprika or pepper. Place the hotsteak on this. Turn i t Baste withmore melted butter, bhen serve.Garnish with wedges of lemon rolledin chopped parsley.

• <&,'•

Top o' the mornin' to you, and•hether you're as Irish ns Paddy's

pig or a dyed-in-the-wool Yankee,you really must do something abouthe seventeenth of March! Although'» a day dear to the hearts of all

m e sons of old Erin, the rest of therorld can enjoy the legends and tra-IHions and the wealth of picturesqueuatoms associated for centuries witht. Patrick's Day, too, and since this

a a foods column (with a bit ofweakness for wandering afield at

.imes, to be sure) we propose to dis-IUSS a few ideas on the wearin' o';he green an it pertains to the kitch-sn.

Here's to the sham rock mid themerald I«!e, then, and to all the

jolly possibilities that they suggestn the way of interesting menus forhis seventeenth of March. After all

there's only one St. Patrick's Daysach year, BO let's make the best oft while it is here. If the young

people of the household are not al-ready familiar with the story of floodSt. Patrick they will enjoy looking itup, perhaps relating some of the in-teresting tales they have found dur-ing the family hour. An excellenttime, too, incidentally, for them tolearn something about»the magicallylovely fairy-lore and myths in whichIrish literature abounds.

Setting

To provide the proper setting forthe occasion, the background mustbe unmistakably but pleasinglygreen. Entrancing things can bedone to the dinner table at little orno expense, the degree of elaborate-ness being determined of coures, bythe amount that the budget will per-mit spending for decorations. A w l lof green crepe paper will make awealth of shamrocks and sturdy little"toppers" and if small dolls can bebegged or borrowed from the nurs-ery and dressed as an Irish lad andhis saucy colleen they will providean amusing effective centerpiece.

The color scheme of the familySt. Patrick's Day dinner must be j w ttfc carefully carried out in the menuas in the decorations. Pineapple thathas been tinted green may be obtain-ed at almost any fancy grocery shopor at the delicatessen. Green cher-ries, and gTeen coloring that may be

FROM THE

FACTORYAND

SAVE ON YOUR

EASTER HAf!See our large variety of styles: BRIMMED FELTS,

SIDE FLARE BRIMS, BRETON SAILORS, STRAW. TO-RAS and HALOS and many others that, will make selec-tion easy. And the best part of all is the price—WHICHIS EASY ON THE POCKETBOOK.

• NEWCftLCRS• NEW STYLESVALUES

TO $3FOR

$

used to give mayonnaise, whippedcream or icing a delicate tint areother helpful aids. Now for tfhe menuitself. r

Pineapple Juice (garnished withgreen cherries)

Irish Stew Buttered BroccoliBiscuitn Butter

Jellied Cucumiber" SaladShamrock Cookies

Milk Coffee

CompanyIf a "company" dinner is planned,

a more elaborate menu may be de-sirable. Green candles in crystal hold-ers and low bowl of gTeen. tintedcarnations or your favorite whiteflower make a simple but charmingcenterpiece that requires only, im-maculate linen, sparkling glasswareand silver polished to a state ofg m i n f f perfection to complete thepicture, line following menu mayprove helpful in planning the meal.

Cream of Spinach SoupBroiled Lamb Chops

New Potatoes Parsley ButterGreen Asparagus

Cloverleaf Rolls ButterAvocado Pear Salad French Dressing

Pistachio Ice CreamCoffee

COME DOWN TO OUR FACTORYAND SEE THESE HATS MADE

RITZ HAT CO.275 HOBART ST. PERTH AMBOY

Next door to/ Sears-Roebuck

FUEL AND FURNACE OILHIGHEST QUAUTY FOR EVERY

MAKE OF BURNER

PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE

OIL & GASOLINE SUPPLYNew Brunswick Ave.

PHONE RAH. 7-1263

COMPANY RAHWAY, N. J.

NIGHT PHONE WBDG. 8-0258

IS YOUR BIG CHANCETO SAVE AND F I L L -

DON'TBUY

DELAYALL

YOUR.NEEDS TODAY

•N men QUALITY

Floor Covering BIG SAVINGSMAY BE

HAD DURINGTHIS SALE

DUKIN6 CUR S17<S,CCC

STOCK DISPOSAL SALE!Yes. this sale come* just at the right time for many thrifty people. They're not wait-

ing 'till house-cleaniivg time to buy their floor covering but are taking advantage of theselow prices. Why not do likewise.

GENUINEINLAID

UN OLEUMH e a v y -

w e i g h tq iu a 1 i U y,large var-iety of pat-terns f o re v e r y ,r o o m inthe house.

Square

Yard

9*12 or 9x10.6SLIGHTLY IRREGULAR

Gold Seal Congoleum RUGSSpecial at C S

Reg. $7.95

9x12

Vdvette Rugs $10.98Oriental Patterns

Many otherstyles, tool

7V2 x 9 HeavyFELT BASE RUGS

9x12 and 8.3x10.6 $ O O

AXMINSTER RUGS * " "

SUPERIOR

R...59, FELT BASEPer Yard O > A ^ YD.Now From 39c

ALL Silk KapokMATTRESSES

IMPERIAL EDGEALL

EACH

Large Size RagTHROW RUGS

Special \t 19"

i • -

27 INCH

VELVETTg

HALL AND

STAIR

CARPETi r ^ i ;..!,•-. •••

X**-

M

STAIR CARPETValue* to $8.00Now From 79'

Wilton Velvet RUGS22yg » 45

35NOWFROM $1 AND

UPGen4»* GULBENKAIN

Oriental Sample RUGS18x36NOW. AT 95c

Silk Floss PILLOWS

L A R G E

16

American MadeOriental RugsIn many in-stances belowm i l l cost!S e a m l e s aweave, h i g hp i l e , l o n gwearing rugs.

REG.129.50

Linen

Window Shades28c32 inch

widthHeavy Weight

Stair-Felt Runner2 5 cYard

METAL BEDLINK. SPRINGCOTTON MATTRESS

Mammae. ; ,.

ALL THREECOMPLETE

BEAUTIFUL

SPRING FLOWERSITS SPRINGTIME

AT BAUMANN'St not bring the season's Joy into

your hortie and the home* of your friend*with BauiMnn'a FlowtrsT

And dorft forfrt—we make a apetialtyof appropriate flowers for birthday*, an-ntrenariea, *prhi» wedding* and tot thetick.

BEAUTIFUL CAMELLIASOur display of Beautiful (JamelHB* to attracting per»on» from

many miles around. We hare frown theee ertraordlnary flower*

ninri" 1&«7, and thli year1* display U reeofniw>d «» on« of the finest

in the Bert.

John R. BaumannFLORIST

S33 ST. GEORGE AVENUEPHONES: RAHWAY 7-0711

RAHWAY, N. J.- 7 - 0 7 1 2

We have confidence in Woodbridfre. We accept BabyBonds *nd have done so since the first issue!

nnnmnns i I" iW;l • • « * • ;

Big OSCQ Food SaleThis week we are specializing1 on Foods packed un-der our own ASCO Brand—We want you to becomeacquainted with the excellence of this brand—tx>really know and une the Highest Quality Foods pro-curable, packed under our own strict supervision.Every item is tested in our own laboratories andmust measure up to our Standard of Quality beforebeing placed in our Stores. You are Sure of Com-plete Satisfaction—

Where Quality Count* Your Money Go«* Furthest

Peaches ASCO Fin*»t OCalifornia etaf

bigcans 29/

Luscioun fruit in rich ayrup—delifiouR—try some.

Re#. 10c Glenwood ^^

Apple Sauce oppReady to Serve—Sweetened, just right—It is good for you.

ASCO Fancy Bartlett PearsASCO Tomato CataupASCO Pure Fruit PreservesASCO BeanB with Pork33c ASCO Evap. Fruit Compote13c Princess Cocoa

big can 19c2 10-oz bots 25c

16-oz jar 17c4 cans 19c

2-lb pkg 29clb can 10c

Tomatoes ASCO 2"™ 2 3 /ASCO Tomato SoupASCO Crushed CornASCO Peanut ButterASCO Gelatine DessertsASCO Golden Bantam CornASCO Royal Anne Cherries

can 6c2 no. 2 cans 25c

13-oz jar 19c3 pkgs 17c

2 No. 2 cans 26cbig can 25c

Headquarter* for Butter and Egg*sweetcream

Butter ib 31cThe Fineat Butt«r in

America.

RichLmnd Butter lb 29cRich, quality print butter.

Eggs 3 ! SoFor poaching, boiling,

sick room uae.

Fresh Eggs dox 21cEvery Egg Guaranteed

Lenten Food* That Save You MoneyASCO Chili Sauce jar 19cRich, Creamy Cheese lb 23cGeisha Brand Crab Meat can 25cHom-de-Lite Mayonnaise pt jar 17cGlen Cove Clam Chowder can 12cASCO White Meat Tune Fifth 7-oz can 20c

Macaroni or SpaghettiPrim. Choice RiceCalifornia SardinesGorton's Pure Bonelese Cod FishFancy Wet Pack ShrimpBest Pink Alaska SalmonBeardaley's Shredded Cod Fish

12-oz pkg 7c2 oval cans 19c

lb pkg 25ccan 12 Vac

2 tall cans 27 cpkg 13c

Boscul Coffee lbtin 31

For Complete Satisfaction—U*c Our Bread—Made of the Finest Ingredient* Obtainable

Rich Milk large20-oe|p«f 11i

Wholesome and Delicious—Rich Milk and- Whet*.

Victor Bread * 6The Economy Loaf—chosen by many.

4

N.B.C. Uneeda Biscuit*N.B.C. Old Fashioned Auortment

2 pkgB 9cibi«c

Our Own Freshly Bakad Special*Gold-N-Sno

Cuke each 59* Cocoanut Marsnmallow

Layer Cuke **»» 2 5 /FINEST PRODUCE • • REASONABLY PRICED

Virginia SUymanWineMp APPLES

3!b*. 2Oc#1 Yellow J.r..y

0weet POTATOES' Ib. 8c

"CAUUFLOWEJt

Large Juicy FloridaORANGESdoxeo 27c

Grwn TenderSWEET PEAS

lb. 10c

Sib. ba«*#1YELLOW ONIONS

bag 23c

New GrM.SW

CABBAGE3 lb.. 10c

TOMATOES2 KM. WU

T* ta. ASCO Oreaaitr* *JM1 tt» A»CO Teaor***t ataUoa WWEW .,mry Fri*»,, 11,90 A. H.

BlizzardSay Current Snows Just Harries

While flakes of thi* year's latestattempt at mow titorm coated thewindows of th»ir meeting-place,

,mor« than 100 •talwart BliiiardMen of 1888 rwapjiod vnnis abouta winter that wan a winter. Their re-

! union—the airth- -WM held «t theI Hotel Pennsylvania, New York, flat-inrday.

New Jersey w*a well representedat the gathering, and many nf thejnew tale*, which each year are addedto the dob's permanent record", <-onearned events whtrh happened inthat *Ut«. One sent In by C. W.Parks of North PiainAeld, who « iunable to attend, illustratod themagnitude nf the drifts.

A Lackawanna train from Srran-ton, bound for Hoboken, wan unableto proceed beyond Port Morrin. Knurlocomotives, with a raboose. full ofworkmen between them were »rntont from Washington to clear a ruthPark* was a fireman on one of them.

Many might never have returned,had not change in the order of ranbeen made. Before the drift* wer*reached, the caboose wan switched tothe end of the train. When the leading locomotive struck the first bighank, ita pilot buckled under thewheels, and the whole train woe rrailed. Had the flimsy caboose beenMnanhed between two locomotivesmany laborers would probably havebeen killed. One engineer, CharlBaker, wa» caught under hi* engine,

janrt a fireman, William Hill, wag

burned, but no onf was fatally In-

Another Jeni«ym»n, Stephen Bellof Clttton, b>ld how the Erie tunnelthrough Jeraey City Heifhta, thencarryftis; that railroad's only track,wa* Sled to th«> tip with snowWhile excavators w«re rlearing it, alarfe boulder fell frran the roof,narrowly minting wnrkmen and fur-th«r trill*; up servicp.

Bell also recalled that the Cliftonrace track wa* due *n open at thetime of the *torm and that brilliantlycolored porter*, showing springtimeracing ecenes, adorned the walk ofstation* Jn P*a«air. A favorite quipof the day w*d "Going to the races?"

The bllssard brough death to someand hardship to many, bat to onerlnb member it wan more than wel-come. Sam J. Kinjf, now of NewYork, wa* a student at Princetonand wa« spending a week-end inNewark. He was unable to return toclafsea for a week.

Uwal men holding office in thedub are James Madden of Pateraon,who relinquished the presidency totake a place on the board of direc-tors; Thomas B. Donaldson of New-ark, a director who in toaatmaater atthe annual meeting*, and D. A.Woodhouse of South Orange, secre-tary and treasurer.

Henry Taft, brother of the lateChief Justice and President, andtwelve "bliziard ladies" who recallthe storm were among the guests.

Creation of a motorcycle patrol ofwelve member* ajwigned to the en-

forcement "f traflV laws nnder theState Motor Vehicle Department, i«being eomrfdered hy Harold G. Hoffman, the coot of the patrol, will berwqneated from the Joint Appropri

'are And AttentionRemoves All Problems

Of House LaunderingSimple Suggestions Follow For

Working Wondor* On AllClothing Articles.

SAVES LIFE OF FABRICS

Whether Hie family numbers five,.wo or one, this business of launder-ng is apt to present a problem! How

to launder her stockings and under-wear to the bent advantage and withhe minimum expenditure of time is

quite important to the busineM girlliving in a two-by-four apartment ashow to g-et the bent results frdta her'lectric washing machine is to the

woman with a lar^e family. Hereare a few suggestions that mayprove helpful to anyone interestedin seeing what Boap and water cando for galoshes, woolens, and evenumbrellas.

Galoshes and overshoes as well aremade today are snug fitting andsmart, and look well with any out-doorg costume as long as they arekept free of mud and grime. Toclean them, dip a small, stiff brushnto a thick lather of aoap suds,

shake out aa much water a* possibleand scrub the surface, using a rotarymotion. When the spots nave beenremoved, rinse with a, cloth rung ontn clear warm waUr, and stand

galoshes in a warm place, not neara stove or radiator, to dry.

If the right methods are used,laundering doe* not detract from thebeauty of rayon. Lots of soap soda,and water of an even lukewarm tem-perature, are essential. The fabricshould never be wrung or squeezed,but should be plunged in and out ofthe lather until all sign* of soil havedisappeared. After thoroughly rins-ing:, the water should be pressed outgently, and the article rolled in atowel to dry. Care should be takenin ironing to keep the iron from be-coming too hot. It is advisable topress the garment on. the wrong sidewhile it is still damp.

Woolen* Require CareNever permit woolens to become

badly soiled, for rubbing, twisting or»ny other form of atrenous handlingis likely to stretch and injure thefabric. A lukewarm temperature isnecessary in laundering woolens.They ahould not be placed in a tubwith other fabrics. Dissolve a mildsoap in hot water, add cold wateruntil you have the right temperature.Press the suds through the fabrics,UBing fresh suds, when necessary. Besure hhat the. rinsing water is of thesame lukewarm temperature. Drybetween Turkish towels on a flatsurface.

Silk stockings will wear remarkably long, if properly handled. Per-spiration is their .chief enemy, forthe acid will attack the silk if al-owed to remain. Hosiery should be

washed every day after wearing. Usethick suds of mild soap and luke-warm water, and wash the stockingsby squeeting the sud« through themjently. Rubbing- may atart rung.Rinse in water of the same tempera-ture and gently squeeze the waterout. Never iron stockings. I*t dryin moderate room temperature.

In cleaning an umbrella, dry itthoroughly and dust off all the dirtthat can be removed in this way.Prepare a solution of uoapauds andlukewarm water and apply suds witha soft brush to the stained places onthe open umbrella. Scrub thoroughly,and rinse by pouring warm waterover the top. Leave the umbrellaop«n until it is dry.

tp^ctirrbTtta m.mb*r. Th«.-tim , t ed oottay for «>*rie. and equip-ment is placed between »30,000 and»3F.,ooo. if th* «taff '«crMff_.|8J?l

pipit wmm* W»»W-TW »fee (xlrtlng fgM«motoreyel**. Th* «— -~would not. «w«*d fR.OM,to the Commls*lon«r.

March

GrancTcentral Palace <—«»-"«

F»U» »cr« of f r»r«« blo«om«-do«M offutl-riKPnJ mlnUhif* |«rden« -hModred»ot

kw-ln*Hrinf (lor.l iiTin«rm*nM ih« wl I lejvtiwnt m«moi1«« for month, to fomtl Color, fr*-tr»nce,b«»>rty evtrywh*'* — ""d • " l n l u c h l o o t n '(nf htrmonv—fo»d for fh« tnu\ I

$tt ihe \*m In «ir<J*ri furniture, ffulpiur*,tllf poott. outdoor livlof roomi, rock lifd«n«.fonml Dlinilnf. tMt drcorHfotM, Horil icc**o-nn, furdenlnf «rulprnent.

OPENS MONDAY AT 2 P. M.Daily Thereafter 10 A. M. to 10f30 P. M.

Me Campbell PledgesNew Taxation Plan If

Elected As GovernorMonmouth County Fanner I*

Candidate For DemocraticNomination In Primary

WOULD END FACTORY TAX

Assemblyman Theron McCampbell,farmer, grape-grower and tan re-ormer of Holmdel, Monmouth Coun-

ty, who is also a candidate for Gov-ernor on the Democratic ticket, an-nounces that he will concentrate onthe collection of votes in Huilt.onbounty during the coming campaign.

For this reason, the firey Demo-cratic As8emhlvmnn has drafted a.platform which he thinks will appealto Democrats and Republicans alikeand expressed the hope that it willcarry him to the gubernatorial chair.

Tax exempt and judgment freehomes on the theory that a man'shome in his castle and should be pro-tected against loss by the ownerthrough the exactions of Govern-ment, is the first plank in the Mc-Campbell platform.

Tax free factories that employlabor is the second plank.

Pure beer and light wine*, taxfree and license free, in order that

very citizen may secure "a three-masted schooner and a sandwich"for a nickel, is the third plank. Mc-Campbell beliayes this plank if put ineffect wouldPreduce demands forhard liquor throughout the State andstop bootlegging.

The Democratic tax reform can-didate also promises to call a con-stitutional convention to change theState Constitution in order that hisviews on taxes may be incorporatedin the document, if elected Gover-nor,

"Friendships are precious. That's why

I'm always telephoning to friends in towns

nearby. I can visit them offerer that way

at less cost, without ever leaving home.''

LUKEWARM WATER, SOAPBRIGHTEN BEADED BAGS

It i* a simple matter to keep ibeaded bag in perfect conditionPlace the bag on a cloth laid on tflat surface and go over the bead*quickly and briskly with a cloth dip-ped in soapy, lukewarm water. Rinseoff the soap with a cloth wrung outin clear, warm water. Try not toallow more mouUir* than is neces-sary to soak into the threads onwhich the beads are strung, or Intothe lining. An electric fan will aidtfce drying process. When the Tg Itdry, polish the beads fcy rubbing wttka frwh cloth, uain* g light, briskmotion.

Call 18 miles for 15 cents; 24 mites for 20 cent* • any-where in New Jersey • NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

NOTES OK STA.RCHBlouses, white shtrta and ottat

clothing which require atamhinf in"boil«d «U«rch" muat not be put outto dry, but folded am} placid Inbasket covered with a elotii to 'tl mm!? moist. The collar*

«fd wbitewr require**tw^twtw$

• • • - * I ' i

When claim-alls boast tfiat this or thatIs done in almost nothing flat,

The wise old owl says with a nudge:"Try Essolene! You & the judge."

record is based on facts, not claims*Try It next time you need motor fuel. We lay

guarantees smoother performancerely on Essolene itself to prove it to you.

AT •IOUIA« m 0A90UNI PKICI

sssss• Es$olubt Motor Oil in the crmkem t -

HF.NK

CI.ANS

.^ , , * ? * JfWy * « Uw da;

* M * will betfn at 8 o'clockcontinue until I o'olock,

F U U J U t T 0 N M A M a > B Y MOORS

ta« forward tottOm2? H W 1 * *• ttOm*fcOwn Pullet-ton, Pwth

Xlddlwn Oonaty C

me*

tha apparatus to #S*t»r a*tpicea and caadtoitsta in Kite.

its a n good foe as, say* ISoi-Serviee, reportlnr mttltg of

- - - - i reliant at Hie Univwtlty ofDebrecen, Hungary.

Condiment* In dilute sotatkmiv «•found fa rather •pkry meals, have an

[important influence on the speed and

w niter

An&» V. i*M4i l / i 5 . ram important influence on the speed, andS _ ^ J H ^ T * - Cwmty Cwn- H1*1***1"" ot food aSaMptton,Btfaatonw of Joriaa. 'these scientists 4ite»w«d. 3fc«f

•me

Movement,,red pep-

non act mi lew effect.

VALUES LIKE THESEALWAYS DRAW CROWDS TO

FOLLOW THE CROWD TO SCHINDEL'S GREAT

FOR CLEANING LEATHERSaddle soap fc-iMai for cleaning,

preserving ltd ypSsMnr leather. Itis useful!*- M m * black or tan•hoes soft and ftoHwe. Protect.* themfrom gettinf dr» a*d brittle Raddle•oap prolong* fw Ufa and improve*the appearance of anitcaseii, travel-' r baga and JWHtfr tfunks

Plan to be b*» tomorrow. Bringyour ndfhbors to thl»

gftmt event.WE CASH C W A CHECKS

of nenben of the StateBoard of Public UUHtr Commlwion-m, instead of •ppotntnent by lh«GoTemor which u ia effect at thepresent time.

"MJHC Utility Cotnmttldoneri ex-ercise judicial fttoetkMu and the poli-cy in New faMf, in which we be-lieve, favon U» appointment ratherthan the election of these commis-sioners," the assoetation today saidin letters mailed the legislators.

SUBURBANITESIT WILL PAY YOU TO TRAVELMANY MILES TO SHARE IN

THESE GREAT BARGAINSOFFERED AT

SCHINDEL'S TOMORROWWE ACCEPT BABY BONDS.

Largely Result Of ExampleShown By Parents, Adults

Table Maniwrs U I M Other Maoanen, Are Caught Not T««fJ*|OUMren Imitate Readily and If Adult. Am CootooM

TWr Conduct WO. Cateh hMgWtiott Of The CVld rj

OWN GUESTS OUGHT TO BE INVITED OFTEN TO MEALS

By C«n May Waltoa-SU4t«Table manners are at one and the same time much over- * -

rated and too often neglected. They ar* over-rated when itcornea to Judging! the child's table manners, and neglected .frequently on the part of parental and other adults themaelvea,Table manners are just an instance.

And so it comes about that even quite young children arefully expected to handle knife, fork and speen adeptly. Andhorror is registered in the eyes of many adults who witness achild calmly taking food with his fingers.

SATURDAY BARGAINS TO ATTRACT CROWDS

Let n* exMn-ine tihif matterof UbU majuienm o r e etosety.Like moet eocimlcoatoma, t a b l emanners y * r yfrom generationto generation Inthe Mine racialfroupinga; theyvery, even, fromk o n s e hold tohousehold

Hundreds of Dollar Day Bargain* Not Advertised

** ItH I

AN OUTSTANDING VALOE SATURDAY1

ONLY SCHINDEL'S CAH OFFE* SUVALUES DUE TO OUft CASH BUY1I'OI.ICY.

800 PairsWomen's SHOES

TO THE FIRST 100 LUCKY WOMEN

BEAUTIFUL SPRING

DRESSES

Look for the Dollar Day Signs—Extra Salespeople to Serve You More Quickly!

TO THE FIRST 200 LUCKY MENSATURDAY

MEN'S WORK AND DRESS

ONLY 1 TO A CUSTOMEROnly Two FT. TO A Caitotner

CHILDREN'S AND BIG

ShoesHIM S1-1 t* U,11 1-1 to I. Bar*1

eifara*. SUM 1t« a. Bhop aarir.

Reg. 79c Women's Taffeta

SLIPSB. Hera Early I

An oatatand-Uur UoUw Dtrvalue,q u »111 r,trlmm«d•hulm. AU nile».

HOUS&H0

DRESSESDVO^TTES

R«f. 69c and79c ralnai

2FOR

BDftBtifolto

Put o • 1 • rprint*. A11rixw. Limitedqua. a t l t y .Shop M(l7.

OownrtalnMm

MEN'S WORK AND DRESS J | B A

SHIRTS^REG. 7>« VALUE

FULL-FASHIONEDSILK HOSE

Reg. 69c pr.Shop Early}

R««. $1 Men's Medium Weight

UNION SUITS2FOR

r lonr lev. Lowe*!|i>ric« In town.fHtecLc ui> tomor-Jrow. ttlzea 36 toH4.

conteml^meou.a**"TWAltM|- |UW*groups in the same country. Theyvary considerably if we go into astudy of distinct racial groups. Brit-ishers and American*, close aa theyare in language and in other re-spects, differ considerably in what igcounted correct at the table. Hindoo*eat with their fingers.

The Chinese eat with chop sticks,using a rather large spoon for soupe.Knives at the table are regarded bythem as utterly barbarous. They arethe most cultivated, perhaps, in theireating habits, and even quite youngchildren learn to use chop sticksadeptly. Royalty used theirand ate quite savagely in a not soremote era if we are to credit thehistorians of English and Frenchsovereigna. We might enlarge thisstudy considerably. But of course abrief article like this cannot do morethan suggest the intensive 'and ex-tensive directions such a study mighttake.

Teaching Our ChildrenWe are concerned here in the

practical, everyday matter of pro-viding satisfactory guidance for theyoung children of ordinary homes intoday's America. What should be in-cluded in our consideration of thissubject, in order to make it possiblefor us parents to furnish acceptableguidance in this matter of table man-ners? In the first place we must un-derstand that table manners, likeother manners, are caught and nottaught. Which .ia to say that example

Ha kr afelvtaM ia a 0tdkCoMkanrteg fc*w to rat!

For UM moat part children's tablemanners should so uneommented up-on. If we want to insure that theywill have acceptable manners In timebe sure to give the very young child—and that means around seTen andeight months of age—access to hi»own spoon and cup. He wit! spill, tobe sure. The mess he make* will b*provoking. But it is In an enselfmtcause, and all education eoeta. Clean

Xthe mess, and at the next mealW him another practise time. By

the time he ia two or two and « halfhe will be feeding himself with •minimum of accidents, if his eatinfconditions are suitable to his sit*Children of three years of age eaanot only eat with very nke tablemanners, but they are able to showcoiuiderabla skill la waiting oktable, removing both food and dMhMwithout a mishap.

Glam l*aS>»4 CanOne very wise instructor of young

ahUdren taalaUd on usinf glaWwmrewith the tote, under her supervision,for the very reason that the handlingof it induced care and a reasonableaaoount of caution. For that

bl

gis 99 44-100%imitate readilyt y a d onsid

y pimportant. Childrennd if there is conr-

CHILDREN'S AND GIRLS I

NEW SPRING WASH IWOMEN'S RAYON

UNDIESCollar

Attached.

2 Collar*to Match.

NOTOT b » -f o r e offeredat till* lowprlco. Ela*broad olothtlull cut, well

Allnuroapan liktrl tailp • a t « Iihadca. Bca*.Ste valaat.

fabrica and comhtnatlwia

B o n MrtMO* tai olium

new model*. All head

Specials for Infant* Dept.Infant*' 3-F«. Be«*i« 'flat* |1Infant*' HM* .«„..-......... T Pr. |1Hand Made Qr*nsi • •• * '°* f •Infant.' Sweater Sets .. |1

Infant*' SWrU ..«.«»..... 4 faf

DOLLAR DAY SPECIALSFOR BOYS — GJRLS

B»y«' Union SniU 2 *<* **Boy'i Broadcloth Shirt* 2 for $1BO7«' All Wool Sweater. J lBoy*' Wa«k Suit. f t

Boy*' Sport H m ....

Boy.' Liaad Kniokert |)J

Girl*' Wool SkirU $l |

GlrU' SwaaUri I)

CkiWran'i FUnael

R«MGtnrsa, Pajamaa ........ 3 U

CUUrw'a Rayo*

. Un»U« 4 for

CUUrM'a SOkDrewes .. $1

CUUrW. % HOM .. 4 pr.

bollar Day SpecialsJ OUR

ADVANCE STYLES REG. $1.49SMART NEW SPRING

REG. $1.50 MEN'S BETTER DRESS

SHIRTS

tesy and consideration shown to eachother among the adult members of ahousehold at table, then the childrenwill eventually show such courtesyand consideration. W« murt be polityto children also at table, if we everexpect tlhem ta show politeness.

To demand in an angry tone thata child sit up and take his arms of!the table, the while the parent him-self may foe leaning half way acrossthe table in order to give the child'aarms a resentful push, is, of course,peculiar. It is very disturbing to thechild's digestive system to be repri-manded constantly at table, for ho wsure, to be aroused emotionally, andit is demonstrable that an upset emo-tional condition affects digestionvory directly, and quite unfavorably,We make our children so self-con-scious, too, on this subject of howthey are eating, that we (Niralyzetheir motor responses completely.

I'm reminded frequently in thisconnection of an old limerick whichillustrates so aptly what happens tochildren in the face of too muchcriticism. It runs something like this:

The centipede « n happy quiteUntil the frog for fun mid:

"Pray, which ley eome» afterwhich?"

Which threw the creature in-to tuch a pitch

reason table linen was always of thedaintiest.

It may be very well for adults inthe privacy of their own bachelorapartments to eat without benefit ofcomplete table appointments, and Iam myself a strong advocate of sim-plicity in household arrangement*,But families with (Trowing childrencan ill-afford ta neglect some of theniceties if they expect their childrento learn to appreciate them and 'liveup' to them.

One wise mother of my acquaint,ance used to make luncheon tinswith her young son 'a visit', duringwhich they treated each other Intheir1 best 'guest' manners. Allowingyoung children then- own guests atmeals is frequently a powerful wayin Which to bring out all of the latentcivility in the youngsters.

If matters of world-wide importare the subject of table conversa-tions in households where there areyoung children who sit at table withtheir elders, there will be less likeli-hood of unpleasant situations over'mannwi'. Whtofc reminds me tosuggest that young children hardlyhave a place with adults, especiallyat the evening meal, in most urbanhomes, Neither the mono nor thehour at which the meal ia served aresuitable. When children are allowedat the table with grown ups theyshould be given the privilege of be-ing excused when tliey axe through.Et is just too much to ask that activelittle legs be made to stay still thruthe length of most ad.ult meals.

RADIO REPAIRING• EXCLUSIVELY '

Complete InspectionOf Your Radio Including

AERIAL — GROUND — TUBESAND SPEAKER WITH

ESTIMATE ONANY NEEDED REPAIRS

SO Centa17 YEARS' EXPERIENCE

ALL WORK GUARANTEEDDAY AND NIGHT SERVICEW. SCULL, 26 Irving St.Oppoaite Library Rah. 7.0O9U

Sample Syrup Sweetening!

DOLLARDAY SPECIALS^* N

Women'* Silk HOM 3 pr. ft

Women'* Porto Rican Gowns .... 3 For $1

Women'* Spring Sweater* 2 for $1

Nur*e.-Maid> Uniform, f l

Corialettea, Girdlto ........ I)

Women'* Garter

Belt* 2

Wnmea'* Brnalare., 2

Womea'i Bandaaux, 4 for

Woman'* Blooiea .... 2 for

Women'* Wool Skirt*

Women'. Silk Undie* '

Women'* Rayon Undie*

2 for

; Woven'* Aproo* < > r . 7 f«r

EXTRA SPECIAL FOR 3ATURJMY

l

Dollar Day Specials MENMen'. Khaki Pant* $>Men'* Blue Denim Overall* $1Man'* Shirt* - Snort* 4 for $1Men'* Fancy Ho*» 8 pr.

Men'* Work HM«, 11 pr. f l

Men'. SUCJUM Shirts .... $1,

Man'* Pajamai

Men'* Sweater*

Men'* Sport Jacket* II

Men'. Wool 3o«k., Bpr.

Men'. Silk Neckwear, 4 fo*|

Man'* SUrU-Drawer*, 2 far

M*V. LeatW 6lovM, pr. t l

Boys' $*.

WINDOKLY1TOACUSTOWER

r W VaJ«eShop Early

Desserts sweetened with pure maple syrup have a taste that can't beimitated. Cake, puddings und frozen desserts good and not hard to make.' Served plain with warm biscuits, pancakes and waffles, maple syrupadds much to these popular and simple foods.

If you have never used maple syrup as a sweetener for certain, cock-tails, try it.

Many delicious candies are made with maple gyrup, Creams, taffy,nougats and carmels are a few of the confections that gain distinction bythe use of this natural sweet.

Maple gelatine in a simple dessert that an invalid or a child may eft-joy as welle as the average adult.

Maple O«UtinaOne and one-half tablespoons granulated galatine, 4 tablespoons- cold

water, % cup hot milk, % cup maple syrup, 2 eggs (whites), H teaspoonsalt.

Soften gelatine in cold water for1 five minutes. Add scalding hot milkand stir until gelatine Is dissolved. Let stand until mixture begins tothicken. Put unbeaten whites into a large bowl and beat until stiff, grad-ually milling maple syrup, Slowly add gelatine mixture, beating congtan-My. Add salt and beat with a dover beater until mixture is tiff. TurnInto a mould first dipped in cold water and let stand on ice until chilledand firm. Serve with boiled custard sauce made with the yolks of theeggs.

Mapla Sjmp CakeThis caku Is Ideal for a party and particularly good served with shred-

ded fresh pineapple or a pineapple ice.One and one-fourth cups mapla syrup, S eggs, 1 cup of pastry floor,

1i teaspoon cream of tartar, % teaspoon BaitSeparate yolks fr«m whites of eggs. Beat whites until stiff, using

a wiro whisk. While beating the whites cook the fcyrup until a firm ballis formed when a few drops are tried in cold water or 2.38 degrees F. oaa candy thermometer.

Slowly add the cooked, syrup to the beaten whites, teating constantly;.Beat yolks of eggs until thick and lemon colored, uaiag: a wheel beater.Beat yolk* Into the whites, using the whisk. Mix and ttft flour, salt andcream of tartar tfx time*.

Fold carefully into flrrt mixture. Turn Into * tube cake pan andbate ona hoar in A *kw oven. Invert p»n to cool _ _ ,

SATURDAYLONG WEARING OAK

Half Soles with Rubber Heels.1 Word dam while you wait orl Good ru«r*at«*>d

L-ll Sboe.

CARTERET PRESSSubMrlptloii, |1.60 Per Yaar

Tolephon* CarUrrt 8-1600

Published by Carteret Press

C. H. BYRN1 — •••• M t o r

MEYER ROMKBLUM - - ftrW* W l t o r

Enters M second eiass matter Jtu» ». 1914, at Cartawt, N. J.,Port Office, under the Act of Mama t, 1I7B. __

Porairn Advertising BsprasmtatlvasNrw Jersey NalghborboM Newspapers, Iae.

DEADLY GREEDThe other day investigators for the Emergency Belief Ad-

ministrtion discovered a woman in Randolph street in comfort-able circumstances on the list of those receiving relief. Shehad $2,000 in the bank and an income of more than $90 amonth. The money was in a bank in Elizabeth but the inves-tigators are hard to fool. Up to the time the discovery wasmade the woman had received about f 870 in relief.

The municipal director of relief in Carteret brought thecase into police court and the woman proposed to return inmoney the value of the relief she had received. Then the charg-es were dropped.

Relatives of the woman objected to any publicity con-cerning the case. That objection was very natural. Publicityis often objectionable and often* unwarranted in casefe of minorinfractions. But publicity is also a powerful influence for good.In canes such as the above publicity is most desirable. It shouldbe remembered the funds for relief purposes are limited andonly necessities can be provided. It is a question whether theavailable cash will hold out until the depression is really over.If it does not hold out the lot of the destitute will be veryhard, indeed.

To take away from that fund when one doesi not need thehelp ia about the meanest form of greed and selfishness wecan think of. It ia such greed not only in regard to ERA andCWA and the other agencies that is defeating the refl,l purposeof those agencies just as it was various forms of greed and sel-fmhnesfl that got the country and the world Into the depressionin the first place.

If publicity will help check some of that greed then it willhave served a useful purpose.

MERRY QUIPS

Wbich travel* faster, heat orHeat, because you can catch cold.

Fall Grow*Bbt—I wish they'd made me a man.He—They did. I'm the man.

B u f l Bang I Bang I"Sir, jour car Is at the door.""Tea, J hear It knocking"

OB* W.y «r OtkarWhy do Little bird* In their nestareelThey have to or they'd fall out

Long and ShortSOD—Dad, what's a monosyUablalDad—A long term for • abort word,

my too.

Kept Going•I pasatd bj your home yet-Blnki

terday.Bank*—Thanks. We appreciate It

OB Tim*BUI—What la the hardeit thing you

erer did?WI1V—Make ten easy payment!.

Sur« EnoughJim—What'i jour Idea of • dean

sport tJack — Swimming.—Answer! Mags-

line.

WORDS OF THE WISEWho

adayiTbeari • teakettle ring now-

Every day la the pa pi) of the daybefore.

A proud mind and111 met

a poor purse are

Bow"never 1"

•ofta "not now" become*

A fault, menderfault finder,

U better than a

Batter three honrai minute too late.

too toon than

A bookmaker1! moat profitable raceIf the human race. . • , <

Ere had the bestworld—at that time.

husband In the

Good on M»th«m»t!c»Boy—I've added those figures

times, sir.Manager1—Good boy."And here'! the ten answers."

ten

Ham* Fir. BurningFlshmouth—I dreamed last night

that I diedPickle—And the heat woke you upT

—Pathfinder Magazine,

His Own Remedy Not GoodEnough for Manufacturer

A strange man was taking a muchneeded rest ID a small village whenhe developed symptoms of having the"flu," and ruined to the local drug*gilt to get a remedy.

"I've got the very thing for you,"exclaimed the druggist with great en-thusiasm. "It's called 'Soper'i SpeedySure-Fire Flu Flit'; It's guaranteedto be from five to 15 times at strong ascompeting cures, and all It costs Is06 cents. Including the tax."

"No, no, no I" gasped the customerenergetically.

"But It's the very thlug for yourcase. It'i boosted on the radio everybight. The doctors are all recom-mending It, and we have a bard timekeejlng enough of it In stuck to sup-ply , the demand." Tliua spoke thedruggist.

The customer went on: "I believetil you say, doc, but still I would pre-fer something else."' "Nonsense, what's your objectionT

"Only that I'm Super."Tbe druggist saw the point—and

tb*u sold him "something else Just asfood."—Pathfinder Magazine.

THKEfc fcOOMS AND

NAP I* T«C HAMMOCK"JACK.one WA*e M€ UP

mt Me*NEVER visiTCD OS

MUSTN'TANYPorts

JVwee?/

5PU>£KW£B?

Tbt a u n t » * * « tw> «•**< * " •ber of hit* •ehools, under negro m-pervlslon, •»« ranfctal edwwinoniinyonfler negro-controlfed projects areNorth Oarollna, T«a> Virginia, Kentucky, Georgia and Alabama.

The counting Mfee, Mf» illrnral districts of fiMste i M 'the abacus, or counting boafd. to n i tform It consists of w*o4ea • vtbqastrung on s row of panIM w M t Usa wooden frame.

It Costs No More to GetAt Albren's

may paya little

W B V » - Y O Ufor themeach week

Where — Credit a n dcash prices are ex-actly the name.

Whw* — You ( r e t *careful scientific ex-amination.

Whare — Frames andlenses ftre fin* qual-ity only.

Where—A sincere ef-fort In m a d e to

you.

If you n**i glasses—•yoa don't no«J e»«h—pay *• yoii wear. Open•n account.

JEWELERS

ALBREN,'-PAY IN EASY

WEEKLYPAYMENTS

& OPTICIANS133 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY

DR. J. J. BROWN, OPTOMETRIST IN ATTENDAWCI

The Men Who Get The News

When there la no love In trouble Itsweight grows doable.

We are often more patient with oth-ers' Ills than our own.

It often shows a fine command of.language to say nothing.

Most friendships am real, bat don'tput too much of a strain on them.

If yon only could know what yourrole to In this world, you could act Itwell

It Is recognized that the matrimo-nial knot Is the most serious tanglsof all.

After yon have had the same doc-tor for ten years he knows you. Stickto him.

So lives* to make your children re-spect yon, snd yon won't have to trainthem much.

A wayward ion says It Is a case oflove's labor lost when he falls to workthe old man.

Large attendance at a public dinnerIs sometimes due to there being noth-ing else going on.

Don't be too deeply Interested Inthe afTulra of others and you wontwant to reform them.

When we grow old enough to havesense we quit wishing and make themost of little joys and comforts.

An egotist thinks he cannot make amistake, so he has no misgivings andgets something done. Blessed beegotism. ,

Greatest achievement of man's leis-ure: To find a kind of entertainmentthat really entertains him Instead ofkilling time.

T.ln Emperor Died 1SI B. COhowalang, empator of China and

fonndt-r of tha Tata dynasty, filed In82 Mam Street

MENTAL and physicalfatigue disappears whenyou drink Beer. It i* rifchin tonic qualities that re-plenish expended enerftiWe represent many fam-ous breweries . . . order.*case of your favorite beertoday — just call Wood-bridge 8-0858 — promptdelivery.

KRUGER'S BEERFEIGENSPAN'S

ALELight or Porter

Dependable Quality I

LICUCC ST< I EWOOOBRIDGE

Phone Wbdg. 8-0858

There probably is no man so much of the world who hasremained quite so naive as Walter Winchell.

There are three waya in which some notion of this =-**«-alous gentleman can be derived—reading his newspaper col-umn, listening to him clip off a few thousand words in a quar-ter hour on the radio, or sitting down to tea with his critics.And if there is anything simpler than sitting, listening or read-ing, it is finding an army of vociferous critics of a man who hasreached the top—and stayed there'.

Walter Winchell has been maligned, blackguarded, in-sulted and betrayed. He has been blasted by some of the betetcontemporary blasters, verbally tarred and feathered too oftento recall, sued, punched, threatened, hissed and hated.

All this has taken place in a few short years when by mo-mentum of his own generation he rocketed himself to the topof the columnistic heap. Hia imitators have made his positionmore, secure until today it seems that he never will relinquish it.

Yet fundamentally, WincheH personally is no differentfront the time he 'was an unknown with an Wea and'an ambi->tion. He still, in the vernacular, is an old "ftofty". He weighsmotives, is proud of his account in the sayings bank and canbe moved to tears by a minor tragedy. Hej adores childrenand the loss of one of hie own was the hardest blow he eversustained.

He has never become jaded or matter-of-fact. His en-thUBiasm is as ready and as genuine, as ever. Practically noth-ing is unimportant to him, but hia sense of values ia keen.

Winchell is, and always has been, honest with himself. Heknows his literary restrictions and the limitation of his abil-ity to appreciate the theatre in ita finer details. He never laidclaim to being a critic of the drama. He merely knows whatthe public likes in the playhouses and what it will pay goodmoney to see.

Just a few years back, the writer worked with Winchellon a New York tabloid, now defunct. He had come up from asong-and-dance team to the staff of the very, very theatricalVaudeville News and from there to the New York EveningGraphic. He wrote a Broadway column, similar but not asgood, (us the one he now does and in addition was the paper'sdramatic critic. Let it be said here, in passing, and to Win-chell's credit that the first string critics on the other news-papers, Hammond and Woollcott' and Atkinson became sofond of him that they extended themselves to help him, Itwas the small fry that heckled.

In those days, after attending a first night, he wouldwrite his criticism and walk briskly down the city room tothe writer's desk.

"Say, young fellow," he eaid, "read this over and see ifthe grammar is O. K., will you?"

His importance, and the demand for his services in thejournalistic world, started to grow in those day*. It has neverstopped, although there have been so many jolts. It all, ex-cept that he is achieving a life-long ambition, of having a sav-ing account worth mentioning, left unaffected his personality.

During all this time, he has been loved and hated bythose with whom he came in contact; he has been worshippedand despisad by men in low and high place* in the newspaperworld; he hw been stormed and ignored. Rut from them all,oven though in a whisper, has come the admtoeion that Win-chell never broke a confidence.

That is the greatest honor that can come to a newspaper

vmdt

1 H«ftf P lg*» KiJ« tk. Rod.Tbert's 'a hobo plgeun in the rail-

way yard! at H«nctou, N. B., ssys abulletin fmp tba Canadian NationalRailways, its fsTorlte roosting placeia tha tender and cab of a switchingeoglns, and upon this mobile roost Itwill ride the (angtb of the yards; buttt supplies Ita own motive power fortha return trip. It flies back to the•taftlog point and awaits the returnOf tha engine. Then ft goes for an-Other rMa. With a pmnber of swltch-fet Mglnsa bojqr Jn tha M M yard tha.#K»M «lnn pi<*s tW urn one forJtTtrfr* ifeirlt H>«*{#to '

TIBT Ilk BecoAlthough one of the smallest pieces

of land In the Torres ptralts, Thurs-day Inland la not content with merelybeing known as "the little whits jewelof tb« Coral 8«a." It la becoming abooster, sod says It bap everythingcivilised man needs. 1 declares Ithas all these: 1 mayor and corpora-tion, a bishop (tha bishop of Carpen-taria), ISO acres of street!, a popula-tion of 4,000. six hotel!, At clergyman,three churches and the baadqaartariof numerous missions, tare* school*, anine-hole golf coarse, three tenniscourts, a chamber of commerce. FreeMasons, Odd Fellows » j Buffaloes, acountry women's association, a geo-graphical society, three feotbsU dabs,flre cricket ria.be, * rifts ejufc »inch*club, a salltoi elab, JapanaM uAMalay dob* a raoa oonrae, a MMMM» dally nuer etUM bj Un

Walter WincheH is one of those persons who is knownas "a handsome young fellow" His height and weight areaverage and his hair, graying in the old Graphic days, is nowpractically white. Whether it wait the Graphic of the vagariesof writing a Broadway column that effected tne[ehange is notclear. Either would do it. l

He is a crusader at heart* but a crusader for those whoneed his good work*. Sometimes his beneficiaries are appre-ciative, sometimes indifferent, and much tot> often they granthim no credit whatsoever* But it is all right with him, so longza he has achieved hit purpose. He'll start i n # w crusade justas aooifi w h*thtok* he should, and on beh:*)^ of. whomever hec h o o s e * . " i - . • • • • '••;:";••. ...:. • A '

Here if.; written A Wlp Mfflm to tbi^uwnds upon1 words tot dtrwB about Wmchamfibi brought a

o-w «r« ta Up hl-tory of wwpapeip. TheJiiwhkh made

OlI know I thought maybe they were be-X ing a little over-enthusiastic when I first

read about these new skyway style Studebakers.

"But now that I'?e had a ride in, one, I giveyou my word they're even better than the•dmtJjttraents claim.

'*You may not think it possible, but six of uscode in that new Studebaker »ed*n . . . withload* of room for everyone.

« "Why, ft was jutt like sitting in a lounge sthome. And wt went over some of the tough-est roads I ever saw—at better than sixty—without |ostUng one another or jouncing upuai down Of pitching forward the way youwmilf do in At best of cars.

Take k from me, anyone who buys a newOf this y«*i without trying a Studebaker firstis nuking a big mistake. Even the prices are a•Bfptiie. They start a» low as $6451'! . -

FINEST OF ALLSTUDEBAKERS

Mmalou»ly mavUskyway stria bod!* of

fofottdblystosliiivjsd.ripolaa MtMMioa tfcai era.dan tt» action ol all wfaasas

h f o f h

FROM THE SPEEDWAY COMES THEIR STAMINAF I O H THE WYWAY COMES THEIR STYLE

•woomlcal atiajiwa • i , waumr "aadwaica! btatos"that Lear* you Uttlso dob*few «i t auebs <fcrt*»4from yaars of trittwfiu bfock cat and TISp««<lwtr

lmontaatrsar.

200 to |700

J. ARTHUR APPLEGATUsion Street

( / • : '

CarteretCar teret Five Sews Up Title

In Carteret Bowling Leaguertnrel **iv« sewed lip the CARTEUET BOWLING LEAGUEhi,> in the Carteret Bowl-, . TEAM STANDING

i th Star in

Central

'.M,,„. by sweeping the Stars in.'rnip-ht games Monday night Carteret Five . . 41

Slovak all«a». In another Blue Eagles „,..,..;_... 05I,,, pastry Boys took two Jednotas :_.._ , 8 8

I,, rarer*. ' . f Partry Boys ..... 86,,n,r by four.-aan one half Stars

wii:hl only three,<#eeks t©(go, Pacers, icrot five bowlswp^e "Jti" in-',.-, first place is

way fight 'or second placeloiima however, between the

i iKlrd," Jednotas, and Pastryiinly »ne and one-half gamed

.,,,. thr throe teems.,„,,„« lenders had little1 diffi-

'„, tnkinc three games from the,Th..v won by scores of 968 to

„,,; „, KIW, and 949 to 871..M.l o.1, Prank Donnelly, andiin/more starred for the winr

, , , , , tpd, the Pastry boys beat, ,, in two games. Then won

,', ( HIMI to 809, and the third„ Jou to 766. The Pacers,1,, MPrond, 911 to 344.

Ooger 18JKatmere 100A. Galvanek 168Donnelly 214M c l W £20

Totals "toij

^ t tW. CTDonnellH l l sy _Al. Arva ..._M. Arva

Odd Fellows Team A

Totals «18 867 871Pailrr Bers (*)

E. O'Donnell . . .170Patocnlg ..._ 106

State League and>, (..miing Champion* Take11,,,.*. Straight From Carter*

i,,,,,i the third] time this sea-, .,,t.-rot Odd Fellows eTam "A"

1 , ,.,!mir champions of the state( , .,,,,k the Carteret "B" team

h, hurdles in three straight.„,.. ,,:,t Wednesday nlgttt at the

Vi,',-,ii. alleys in Wheeler Avenue.,11 1,11: a big score of 1019, tiie

I,..,a.,L• - lenders won We first game,.,.:|i in this game McLeod hit 236:/,.,, :],,;l,l 225.

Wiili Mat Sloan rolling his 1,..,,„! », . hundred score, Team "A"I „ 1 the second game with plenty,,, .'.pun', !K>5 to 799. The last game.,!..,. u,nt to Team A, 9M to 761. aaII •, . M<-I<cod c a m e t h r o u g h w i t h aI,,,, ;,.,[-<• » f 2 + 3 .

.,,• averaging 219 and McLeod::- -innd out prominently for the

-vvi 11 tu-r;=

Tin' score:C.rfret Odd F . I W . "A" ( 3 )

(ho,l..sh 206 168 177Kl.mn M6 114 ..Ihmi.clly 1«B 186 186J Richardson 171 147M.-U-.HI , « • 1*78 1C. Itichardson' l to 147

WulfGfriKVonahStruthersF.itiutt .....

Totals ,

Cartatet " 1 "f <O)151 194

..* 1«8 147

.. 164 1«1... IS* ISO.. 1W> 167

1411521841>7147

The Philippine" • » ycufc-a score Vt n l e H N l umHOf ba-lm Ktlre all the

VeieesJeV

27

The scores:C«rt*r*t Fhra (3)

22 .460K .583242g8*61

.678

.666

.450

.208

168196168178208

19018221819217fc

906 949

147164172

1541701861*7191

167161171170212

„,_, . fl«2Miglecj _ 125

Totals 860Paean (1)

180

186

17118616(1215149

844 8*1

EllisKapucyW. Gelvanek

178

179126

1«6241159196

185187182148

R. Galvanek 126 211- 158

Totals ....' 809 911 755

GARAGE PROPRIETOR 15HELD FOR GRAND JURY

Louts Balint, 64. proprietor of agarage and repair shop in 8 t Georgeavenue, Avener, was held for the ac-tion of the grand Jury in $1,600 ballyesterday on a charge of receivingstolen goods. Michael Koetrinsky, oCarteret, furnished the bail.

Balint was arrested by SergeantsKeating and Parsons on complaint ofWilliam Gardner, a state trooper,who charged Balint repaired an autobelonging to a Woodbridge residentby substitbting the body and chassis>f a stolen car for damaged partsthe car repaired. Balint said he otained the body and chassis fromjunk dealer.

RACING BODY ASKS $10,000

Although the New Jersey RacingCommission is prohibited fromspending more than |5,000 annual!by a 1983 law, the Legislature hatbeen requested to appropriate tlO,000 for expenses so that the bodjmay start work as soon as possible

REDMEN MEETA regular meeting of Quinnipiac

Tribe No. 208 Improved Oder olRednen was field last night in Fire-haavuHo. 1. Routine business wastransacted and dues were collected.

— Pleeae mention this paper whenbaying from

OLD FAMILIAR FACES - - MATT McGRATH - - By Gus Dblmann

«OM<5-OPOP nos

Victory Qualifies Blue AndWhite For State Semi-F'walM

r t High, 1982 State Class Bchampions, OTerean* another ob-stacle iri Its march to the state titlein Group 8,Wgfcjn ««

by defeating•Mtiosft] fin

Princetoninals in the

Perth Ambctr Wt •ehool gymna-lium last Swnda i h t Th

bctr W l gymlast Sawnrday night The «eor«

i was 82 to 84. and the victory gaveCoach Fraak MoCarthy and Ills teamthe Central Jersey baakettwll cham-

lonthip, in Group 2.The triumph was reminiscent of

Cartaret's successful march to thestate championship in IMS. In thatyear Carteret overcame trem«M<rasodds to rise to a place of athleticprominence in the state.

Meeting Keyport in the sectionalinals that Carteret, becauseu year, .he Keys had won two games during

Carteret's favc-r going into thaperiod.

It was in (his last period fls*Barbatttuk, Carteret's huskyfound his shooting range and -two long shots which spelled dfor tti« Princeton team. laquarter, Carteret otitscored Priatavton, 7 to 8.

On the whole the Blues outfiand outguessed their rivalsSouth Jersey. They played a Mgame and were continually onoffensive.

Scoring honors were dividedevenly between the fiv« playsn,9pewa.lt leading wit* nine poinUComb* second with eight

the regular season, went into thagams decidedly the underdo*. Batt flrhtiiigspMt beat the Ktys atmghland Pan that year and sentthe Blue and White into » e statesemi-final* in the huge ConventionBall in Asbury Park.

The Blut and White team findsItself in a similar position tonight.Victorious over Princeton in tie sec-tional finals, the Blues have qualifiedto meet Toms River in the state semi-finals this afternoon at Asbnry Park.

Bat getting back to the Princetongame. Playing a beautiful defensivegame, the Blues were highly impres-sive as they rolled up an 8 to 4 leadin the first period. Both teamsscored nine points in the secondround and Carteret maintained itsfour point margin, 17 to 18, at l i ehalf.

In the third quarter, both teamsagain fought to e deadlock, 8 to 8,and the score was 25 to 21 In

The score:Cartaral Hifh (31)

Comba, f %Bnot, f ft

year and sent Sbewak, t: 4Markowits, <t 4Barbamuk, g 2Lukach, g 0

ttttals 18P H H . I O B High (14)

O.Lloyd, f 2Ftiel, f oCoulten, c 0Carroll, g 1Wheeler, g _ 6

Totals .~8Score by periods: '

Carteret 8 9 8Princeton 4 9 8

P.•

aft

••4

8

Metropolitan Section Will HaveRoad Racing Introduced In 1934

DO YOU KNOW THATByM. R.

Road racing—that type of speedcompetition th*t many years agowrote an important chapter into thedevelopement of the automotive in-dustry—is to be revived as one oftha nation'* favorite shorts. • .,

This prediction c*nve today fromCaptain Eddie Rickenbacker, chair-man of the Contest Board of theAmerican Automobile Association,governing body of automobile rac-

Brooklyn looks as though it might ing- . . . . . . .. .shape up tetter than expected. The Basing his contention on the wit.failure of Carey to go anywhere with standing success of the recent stock-his clubfriction which may

CarterefB rautfhinc victory over Princeton High, givinge Klues the Central Jersey basketball crown in Group 2, and gHJL^str&p::!:'.vir.g them for the state semi-finals which will get under- uif in wekon

partly due to internal <•»• race at Mines Airport. Los An-. . . w ^ u . » « may be eliminated un- 2*1™, C*ptam Rickenbacker, fam-der Casey. Joe Stripp was the lead- »us world war flier and himself aing dissenter, and during the off cham^onship driver o! the oldseason the club made every effort school, said today: The 78,000 fansto trade him. Failing this, 4 e y de- who attended the U s Angeles road

almost overn race last month spoke for the sports

world. AB a result of the ojrtstand-

way in the huge Convention Hall, Asbury Park, this afternoon,liriiig back vivid memories of Carteret's successful conquest"f the State Class B basketball championship in 1982.

In that year, Coach McCarthy and his team, rose from ob-scurity to a posttipn of athletic eminence in the state. Boastingof only a fair record, Carteret High, racing tremendous odda,marchi'd to the State championship. It was the highest honor

achieved by & Blue and White team.After winning two games in the opening rounds, Carteret

was slated to meet Keyport that year in the sectional< at Highland Park. It looked bad for the Blues becausehad been decisively beaten twice by the Keys during the

of the season. Keyport was heavily favored to roll up a

of

t 'Vi'r

,'Ursc

on the Blue and White team.

.'lllll

illllj

• i t ' l l l ' (

Iw

Hut contrary to all advance expectations, the Blues play-ilu'ir greatest game against Keyport that memorable day inHighland Park auditorium and beattlhe Keys by a healthy

I forget Wihat th* soore was but I think it waa aboutAnwway, the Blue and White team was victorious

. -J of competing in the state semi-finals had finallythrough. That was a happy day for Coach McCarthyi* protege*.ranford w&sjvictorius in north Jersey and the Blues were

iuled to meet'the Union County team in the semi-finals.in lord, flashing a lengthy winning streak of something like•»ty-one games that extended over a year and a half, like•i">rt loomed as a big favorite against the Bines.

Not " " " " . . - • - - .

TCii .„ welcoming Stengel. With an '"Linfield composed of Leslie, Cuccincl- fi'iate A m ^ n .lo, Jordan and Stripp, Brooklyn is awakened to the fact that American

fans whole-heartedly endorse the re-vival of this once-popular racingcurcuit. I venture to say that withinthe year road racing, on speciallyconstructed courses, will be a partof the automobile racing schedule inmost, fiyery section of the UnitecStates".

Already plans are under way forconstruction of a conrse, simitar tothe Log Angeles track, near metro-politan New York City. Those back-ing the project have advised the Con-test board that they will start workas soon as weather permits.

The Mines Airport course, theContest Board announced today, willin all probability stage a champion-ship road race for speedway carsnext fall. And a plan is on foot, atthe direction of Joe Dawson, Con-test Board member, to revive the oldFairmount Park road races at Phila-delphia where many of the worldfamous drivers gained recognitionirf the early 19O0Ts.

likes Beat PassaicIn Tourney Game

Win Second Game In LeagueOf Ukrainian Club Basket-ball Tournament — Scor«49 To 26.

With Joe Hamulak and John Sof-ka scoring at will, the Carteret Ukesrouted the Patw&ir liken in the thirdgame of the LUC basketball tourna-ment Saturday night at the hifhschool gym. As the final score of49 to 26 conclusively indicates, theCarteret team overwhelmed its up-state rivals.

The victory was Carteret's secondin the League of Ukrainian Clubstournament. Carteret drovped thesecond game, winning the iirst andthird.

Joe Hamulalc had his shooting togson as he rolled up fourteen pointson seven field goals. And Soft a wasclose behind him with six baskets fortwelve points.

fcS

In a preliminary tussle the UkeReserves beat the WowMnridgeCardinals, 18 to 14.

Tomorrow afternoon the GarteretUkes entertain the New Britan,Conn., team in their fourth leaguecontest at the high school court.With the visitors' team will be sev-eral outstanding high school per-formers, from New Britain.

The score:Carteret like. (4ft)

G.Sk>fka, f - 6Boben, f a

Carteret Ring FansTo Eye Casey BattlesCarteret fights fans will hat*

another opportunity to see their Ca-vorite amateur fighters in actfcnnext month when the Knights of Co-lumbus of Perth Amboy stages it*annual amateur boxing champion-ship show at the Raritan Auditoriumin that city.

The tights this year will b* haMApril 20th, and the finals will tostaged April 27. The bouta will l»of elimination style. All boys nWcare to enter the nghts may d» •»by communicating' with Wesley Wil-son at tlhe Perth Amboy Knighta rfColumbus.

The Knights have allowed all con-testants training for the bouta touse their large gymnasium in HiAstreet, Perth Amboy. Persons aiudooato sea their fighters train are al*»allowed to visit the Casey gym af-ternoons, and in the evening whatthe boys will be preparing themaahf-es for the "big night".

Wei Wilson is chairman of tUayear's nghts, and Is assisted by Har-ry McArdle, Thomas Hendersen ariiThomas J. Patten of die Perth A»-

well fixed as any club inthe league, then with P«derich;, S H £ S E £ K S R O M A N C E ;

p-k-

Ralph Boyle, LenKoenecke 'and young Glenn Chaiman, they have a pretty fair loo!ing outfield. In the matter of pitch-ers they seem to have much to be de-sired. Van Mungo is the only realpitcher they have unless some of thenewcomers pan out, or the oldsters jmake a comeback. Carroll could. Heentered professional baseball with allthe promise in the world. Last sum-mer for a time it seemed he hadfound himself. Perhaps he was work-ed too hard. Benge is another whomight become a help and Beck cer-tainly showed promise. Of the new-comers, Leslie Munns seems to have

uVtT

person, In a hundred thought C»rt«ret even hadnance ofi winning. Cranford with its flashy quintet and

iunt record rated a 5 to I shot to beat the Blue and White

The game finally started. Cranford lived up to its repu-i in the first half by rolling up an eight point advantagetiie Carteret quintet n i t that is as far as Cranford got,

tl

a li

The

•arteret'B fighting spirit in the form of spectacular longu by RhU Foxe enabled the Blues to overcome Cranford'a

V mountainous lead and gave the Blue and White. It also qualified Carteret for the finale,setting for th« final game was tens* with drama. A

1 of 8,500 spectator*" the«large"st1hat ever turned out for•Hketball game iaWSory, waa on hand that night aa Car-;L and Woodrow Wifcftri. oi* W<whawken took the floor toi ie the State ClMi B chainpionahip. ~

both Keyport and Oranford, Woodrow Wfflson was, aw ' i l . l iout

0U8 faviw*. having gone through tfce regular eeaaondropping a, Bthfle^me,game « # 7 j U f t . « f toe Cranford conteat the.day

"rt*'re. Carteret"Ult' point "1!KIIU» ever°"k' point <«r"lul« of the am

Thia

in

W«od|fow Wilson Bometting likethe most dramatic unhilldefeated Weehawken by

'• b«ftket i i the tost three sec-.

destined to repeatd K

BOSSES SEWER GANG

Broken Dream* Force Girl toTake Lowly Job.

Welson, III.—Her dream of teachingEnglish In far-away Hawaii shattered,Mlsa Juanita Martin has now returnedto her home here as a successful bossof a construction gang.

§lnee girlhood, Juanita haddreamed her dreanuB of sailing to faroff Isles In the western Pacific, there

the most promise. In the catching de- t 0 e n j o y gorgeous sunsets sail hearpartment there is Al Lopez, thanwhom there is no better in the lea-gue.

Cockrane has given an order atthe Tigers training camp which willseem strange to a Tot of people. Thatno man may order up more than onebeek steak each day, And he is work-ing with Greenberg, the big firstb i t t h

dreamy music of the ukulele when notengaged In warning against split In-finitives and verbosity.

While In high scliuol, Juanita spentone summer vacation assisting her fa-ther, E. O. Martin, In building a sew-age disposal line between North Au-rora and Aurora, 111. So employed,she gained valuable experience and

baseman, trying to teach him to hit ( t h graduation from the Nixonto right as well as left field. Lasty«ar, his first in the bljf leagues,

felt .801; an extremely^ for a beg-mner, »nd Cock-rane is expecting big things fromhim this season.

One lad we will be glad to seemake a comeback is George Earn-shaw. Last season when he arrivedfor training, he weighed 220. Thisseason he reported weighing 200 and |with a great big smile. If he is rightand contented ne can win a lot ofgames for the White Sox.

Rabbit Maranville is one playerwho is anxious for the season to getunder way. The Rabbit believes Mhas a splendid chance to better Wag-ner'a record for games played in thebig laague*. He only needs 1S6 moreto set a new record.

The Newark Bears got themselvesa valuable player this week in DaleAlexander, a big first baseman wholed the merfcan Leaftie in bitting in.1932. He geta tremendous drive inhi* hits and should be a sensation inNewark, driving in many runs and,breaking qp * fewi hall (Times.

tocouS

TMakfof

S B 1 * '*

township school, her father obtained ai-uutrAi-t for construction of a 9112,-000 sewage disposal plant at Genevaonly to find himself unable to directthe work.

Juanita, however, Jumped into th«breach, signing contracts, hiring men,purchasing materials and taking overth* Job as active boss. 8h« directedher men with the same vim and tactthat she had used In dealing withbankers and government official! andwhen the Job was done (he federal In-spector detailed to look over It de-clared that It compared favorablywith the best concrete work In thestate of Illinois.

On one occasion, when work washalted due to lack of dynamite neededto blait away an obstruction, Jvanttaleaned Into a, monster auto tnxfr,raced 20 miles to Lemont, Mjpureft theneeded explosive and fenrricjd back Intime for th« ww* to proceed withouta Utch. '

Another time, the waa fwced tomake t tontft) trip to Washington tooM«l» a to** M aecuritte* tojob|*jnfnnAi tc- co»pftu the Job.. iUbwi AwHMi WM

«t h«- 4«iSl of theXtkAm. Ad MA U M the I

Mwkwwijpob

Big-Footed NationSome shoe dealera and inanufac

turers claim that the American peo-ple are getting larger feet, observesthe Royal Oak Dally Tribune. ThereIs said to be more demand for thelarger shoes, Some firms advertisemen's shoes up to 14 and 15 size,and women's np to 11 or 12. The oldIdea that small feet are beautifulshould be tolerated no longer. Smallfeet probably mean less ability to par-ticipate In active work and sports.People who crowd their feet Intoshoes too small for them are destroy-ing their power for action. The super-stitious Chinese of old times mu; beexcused In their Ignorance for bind-ing the feet of their children, but In-telligent Americans should encouragutheir feet to expand all they want to

John Hamulak, f 0Wadiak, f 0Kus\ an, c 8Joe Hamulak, g _... 7Gregor, g , 2,Bubnick, g «, Z

F.0011100

Totak .,...28P«mi« Ufcee (M)

L. Porocnic, f , 3Wachur, f „ 6J. Poroconic, « 4Paroby, g „... 0Pedopchak, * 0Mikula, g _ 0

5 49

P.000200

2 26

Atpartftu Luxurj la BritainThere Is still a tendency In England

to look upon asparagus as a luxury,writes the Purls correspondent of theLondon Dally Telegraph. The deli-cious shoots do not so often grace thetable as they do lo France, where «s-

nLgus Is rapidly bwuuilii* as com-mon s i runner beans. It Is on!) dur-ing the past 60 years, however, thatthis cuKnary revolution has takenplace. During the pest six years theannual pneductlon of asparagia IDFrance has reached the Impresalf*figure of 28,000 tons, though the grow-e n are still the Benjamins of theFrench agricultural world.

Totals _ i aReferee: Jago.

(PreHtaktatr &»>•)Uke Reserves (18)

G.Sofka, f 8Boben, f 1Wadiak, c 0Gxegor, g 0Bubnick, g 0J. HamuUuc, g 1

Totals - 8~1.F 18Woodbridg. Cardinal* (14)

Jago, f * 0Murdock, f 1Handerhan, c 2Miller, g 0Takach, g _...._. 0

F.06111

"0

0000

TotalsReferee: Hamulak.

0 14

Carnal t*a(l> f«r AaleThe old silk route, along which WOO

years ago camql caravans transportedsilk from PelDlnf to Syria, wVenoeit was shipped to Born*. Is to be re-surveyed and made Into an automobileroad.

Blastie Qlese « WayWhile unbreakable glass which will

bend and stretch | l still In the eiperl-mental staaea, t b m to poislblUtj ofl u producttea v$ Jiaj. according tb *London man, WM has been InterestedIn the eipertwenta. There is no res

hi thion why thli •ytttbetlcnot replace ordinary glajday u»," He uW Jn a leidou. "In tbe <*ae «f OWunbreakable flnalltise mtable.*

Theta L o a « 9 « nBobble (In oh»r«b)—«

glass shouldl i t e r every-SfcetnLon-m«rUt,lt«ke It teraln.

i

BWma, whatwill beeoi»4 of all thoee ftowon on uura l t a r t '•'•

Mamma—-They will he g lna to thoseVho are DiLJt tee dote of the

She A4aiU llOti#ervio« a young woman

atone, the yoong m a sttpped up toher and Mid: "Pardon me. Ten tookIQte Helen Black."

"Yea," ahe neplled, "I know I 4o,but rd look fat worse In white."

boy Knights of Columbus.Following is a list of the IMS

Golden Gloves A. A. U. Countychamps:

112 pound class: Joe Murtha, 8LMary's H. S-, Perth Amboy,

118 pound clws, Allen "Red"Volk, Motuchen.

126 pound class, Tony Calantoni,Raritan Township.

135 pound class, Frank Bors^New Brunswick.

147 pound class, John ZatanakjtPerth Amboy. >.

160 pound class, Mike Strawback,Perth Amboy.

175 pound class, Martin "Pop-eye" Kurtz, Perth Amboy.

Heavyweight class, Edward "Lef-ty" Tauber, Perth Amboy.

Carteret Team WinsRailway League Match

Sweeps Montroae In ThreeStraight Games To HoMLoad In Rah,way RecreatkwBowling Loop.

With both Ormy McLeod an*Steve Kazinere cracking the woolfor brilliant averages of 226, Cart-eret swept Montrose in three gameelast Thursday night at the Rahwa»Recreation alleys to hold its ramlead in the Rahway Recreation Boost-ing League.

McLeod hit three two-hundretscores of 215, 225, and 236, better-ing himself by ten pins ia eadegame. Steve opened with, a 258 anlfinished with a score of 236. His se-cond game was 192. ,

After hitting two big nine hun-dred games, Carteret rolled a tcular score of 1067 in thegame.

The score:Cartent (3)

Goger r... 146•imere L... 248nnelly j , . . . 199Gogtor ..., 153

'cLeod ,..,.-.,..... 215Totals ...^......._,.. 971

Uaatree* (0)Condron .4883Peterson 1MFarrington, _ 157Quenen 178Thompson ,. | 34

167

Why doewt somelody wiMttne G m t Aweric'ai K*velt

K*ow«Jl~It in a eoropUaiteu prc*-)Mk-+ questlen now whether It ikonldH j(n i»W er hqekaj stotuj.—Lcwl*vnie

SbenUt'tikattTeelMijwhe

wtfe, s*ys a write,, (••«•

Totals ^ 828

MC CUTCHBON WITHDRAWAL

Withdrawal of State ComptrpUe»John MeCutcfceotf tmm the race fre-eltction nt the Joint Sessionthe Legislature to fee hold on "'Vf. ha» aimpUfied the sit.,t i t l and also has improved

f M F k J Meliancas of Mayor Frank J. _ . , ,of Orange, of securing the importaal9t«te post i

1 J*e>yr Murray WM nominatedthTpotitUm by Senator ) 'Wbller, Seiex, at a caucus iHcan ljfiab.tor# .here onUst The Ekfftx 0daleae^on^^tE^e _ ^

t.

N. J. AIR DIRECTORURCF.S SUBSIDIZATIONAIR TRANSPORT SYSTEM

separata militaryM d i d «lr tr»rw~

Creation of •air corps and * t n M d d

C system in recommends by GillI) Wilson, State Director of Avi«

tlon for New JenHigr, In commentingupon the Intent move ni PresentRootievelt for a nationwide mirveyof aviation with * view of preparing:a unified air policy.

CapUin Wilson also advocatedin«bm<ili:ed liffM aircraft manufacturein ordfrr to promote more interestin aviation throughout the countryhy th« ronntruetlon of more airport*and the educationpilots. He predicted

ofa uni:

itentlalled air

policy for the country would succeedif plRCfMl in the hands of airmanfamiliar with conditions.

"I am in thorough sympathy withany eonttrwtiv* pmfcrwpn wWfhwill remove a technical developmentfrom political strategy," said Cap-tain Wilson. "We should have a

separate Air Corp. la * a t rb h e n t . TM« woaM m a U nos-

riblft M procurement program, anexperimental and research programand would enable the military «•**-hlishment to h<Hd the Interest Milfurnish career* for the magnrfleentpersonnel material It him developed.

SPRING STOCK COMPLETE

Nut's Men's flnop of Peri* Amhoy, operated hy the popular Heim-lich brothers, Nat and Peter, whoformerly lived, and engaged in huslnew in Carteret have announcedtheir stock of spring M>d summermen's wear will be one of ttie finestIn be found anywhere

They urge ttieir many friends andcimtomern in Woodbridge and Cart-eret to note their ad in next week's

d d P

Mites FirstFrances V. SmithWoman Secretary to A Governor

Frances V. Smith, popular ansis-tant secretary to Governor A. HarryMoore, realised a life long ambitionon Monday by becoming the firstwoman secretary to a Governor ofNew Jersey. She took ov«r the dutiesof John J. Toohey, recently namedas State Labor Commissioner. Gov-ernor Moore announced tho appoint-ment today.

Ml* Smith is known to thousandsnf p<vr*on« in all parts of th(> State,and will hold fhn important positionuntil January 1 next receiving a sal-

on the basis of $5,000 a year.eret to note their ad in w , T .issue of the Independent and Press.' The appointment is the result ofThis «d will offer some real valuesand the boys feel it will be to any-one's advantage to note the wrings.

Ads. Bring Raaulta —

SEE THE WONDERSof the New 1934

^CHEVROLET

Now On Exhibit At The

Jefferson MotorsShowrooms

KNEE -ACTIONWHEELS

SEE HOW KNEE-ACTION MAKES THE FRONTSPRINGS AS SOFT AS THE REAR SPRINGS. ANEW EXPERIENCE IN COMFORTABLE RIDING.

MANY OTHER NEW AUTOMOBILE

FEATURES ALSO ON DISPLAY

TLJIO CVLIIDIT1 Op*" to the public of the1 H i d L A H l t J I 1 -Raritan Bay District -

Comes to Perth Amboy direct from the NationalAutomobile Shows in New York City and Chicago,HI.

Jefferson Motors. Inc.180 - 166 New Brunswick Avenue

PERTH AMBOY

SPRINGMillinery

faithful service during* five executiveadministrations. She redden at 248Bellftvue Avenue, Trenton, N. J., andwas first employed by the late Gov-ernor Edward I. Edwards In 10 20 ana stenographer.

When Governor George 8. Silsertook office in 1923, Miss Smith waspromoted to the Assistant Secretary-ship, a position which she haa heldthrough the following administra-tions of Governor Moore, who U nowserving' hit second twin, and Gover-nor Morgan F. Larson, a Republican.

Miss Smith waa educated in thepublic schools of FalWngtem, Pa.,a few miles from Trenton, and RiderCollege. In her capacity aa AssistantSecretary, Miss Smith came in con-tact with many political and Bute

STATE FACTORY WORKSHOWS SHARP RISE IN

FEBRUARY; PAYROIXS UP

Factory employment in New Jer-sey showed a gain of 1.9 per centand payrolls 6.0 per cent in Febru-ary as compared with the previousmonth of January, while averageweekly earnings Increased 2.9 percent, according to the monthly re-port on employment compiled underthe supervision of John J. Toohey,Jr., State Commissioner of Labor., Baaed on returns received from701 Identical establishments in 56 ofthe principal manufacturing in-dustries of the State, shows an in-crease of 8,724 in the number ofpersons employed and of $196,449 inaggregate earnings for the weekly*yroH period ending on or nearest

problem* and can count many promi-nmrt person* in het list of acqusint-

Moore has Imposedh bilit d

tnces.Moore p

much confidence in 'her ability dur-ing oil terms as Governor andprsJMf bar efficiency in handling thegra*t tnim Of correspondeMe receired hi the executive office day.

LtQU&R CONTROL BOARDEXPENSES ARE $303,000

!xp*iH« of the newly crgatedState Department of AlcohoUn Beve-

QtStol for the coming yearAt f89ft,00O ara expected

to raia* Ui« total of the annual upJOVrKUuti bill this year above the20,089,882.19 recommended by

Governor Moore in his annual bud-get m<

Senator Horace G. Prall, Hunter-don, cftairaan of the joint appropri-ations coaunittee, annouced the billwill be ready for Introduction in theSenate two weeks hence. The com-mittee la working daily at conferen-ces with various state officials andboards la an effort to have the billready for introduction during tiheweek of March 26, he Mid.

Increased coats of clothing andfoods haa caused difficulty in reduc-ing the institutional items, SenatorPrall aaid. Because of the great num-ber of demands for funds for im-

Impetus, Style

mediatesupplem

we, *ental ai

is believed that aappropriation bill will

accompany the fiscal money measurethrough the Legislature this year.

COUNTY PRESS CLUB WILLMEET TUESDAY IN CABIN

The Middlesex County PreRs Clubwill meet Tuesday evening at 8:30in the Gray Log Cabin on St. GeorgeAvenue, Woodbridge.

Vice-Pfeddent Thomas J. Brcn

GiveTo Old Sewing Needle

This Ago-Old kruipmenl HasBecome Part and Parcel Of

Us Jaded Modern*

MEN ALSO IN THROES 7

Loud guffaws Inevitably greetedthe prediction t*at we of the psjrtjaw age would ever pick up homelylittle fireside pastimes again. But wedid. The sewing needle Is partand,parcel of the modem woman s equip*ment, and today she really knowshow ot use It. ,

It returns to active service for ahandicraft as old as civilization itself—needlepoint tapestries. No doubt,the Prince of Wales, who poses sowillingly while engaged with his em-broidery, sways feminine (*nd mas-culine?) support. And who has everseen Mm. Roosevelt .without the pro-verbial bag of knitting or needle-work? She helped no end.

Vienna, the city of culture, atmo-sphere and gay people, producedlime. I. Jolle, the world's leadingtapissier. Because so many womenneed to be educated to use theneedle, she creates small, simplepieces which come with the differentportion completed by Viennese ex-pert* tinder her supervision. Tarnsare supplied with each piece. If youare meek or lazy, start witih one ojthese. They're in every departmentstore; some are merely one dollar

Tapestry, to Mme. Jolle, may hecompared to music. One wrong coloris as harsh as ft false note. Her jobis to see that the wrong color neverappears. All one has to do to make"the perfect song" is to follow thecolors stamped on designs. Even MaxHerzberg, confesses he is ready toatart a needlepoint tarxwtry chaircover. Hdw about it, men?

nan, of tfae Independent; Oil Hunter'and Hoe Weiner, of the P. A. Even-ing News, will be hosts.

Business of importance, includingthe laying: of plans for the Club'shonorary membership night, will bediscussed. It U planned to hold a

. - m. - , j. , membership night dinner-dance in•ebruary 15. The factories re- tte Outside Inn, April 21.

ported employed 194,923 workers v

with aggregate weekly earnings of14,136,734, Average weekly earn-ings increased from $20.61 to$21.22.

As compared with the correspond-ing month of the previous year, thenumber of employees in 677 identicalestablishments increased from153,093 in February, 1933, to 190,-082 in86,989,

February, 1934, a gain ofor 24.2 per cent for the

year. The total weekly payroll in-creased from $3,124,561 to $4,048,-914, while average weekly earningsjumped from $20.41 to $21.30, or4.4 per cent during the year.

CONDUCT PLANE CONTESTAn airplane contest is being1 con-

ducted by the Woodbridge Hard-ware company in which they axe of-fering; some real fine prizes for air-plane models constructed by localboys. To date many have entered,with the list growing daily. The en-tries so far are: William Market,Sidney Grossman, Bernard Gross-man, Paul Simfenorfer, John Du-hack, William Partrick, HankSchaufels.

All boys interested are urged toenter at once.

RES^OTTCfpATED REVENUESSurplus Revenue Appropriated

Miscellaneous Revenues Anticipated;LicenseeFines and PenaltiesFees and PermitsInterest and CostsFranchise TaxGross Receipts TaxPoll Taxes -•Bos Grose Receipte TaxAlcoholic Beverage LicensesDeficit Over-appropriatedEnterest Assessments ....Gaaoline TaxTax Scarehos ..._.

Total Miscellaneous Revenues Anticipated .... 6<,0flo.0<> 81,000,00

Amount to be Raised by Taxation 109,818,10 lftP.Mfr.PO

TOTAL RESOURCES ... »W6,008.1» |)llt,MMU4

APPROPRIATIONSGeneral Government:

Administrative and ExecutiveGrounds and BuildingsElections -Assessment and "Collection of TaxesInterest on Current LoansDiscount for Prepayment of Taxea ...,.

f Lif d P r t

1984 1M8

7,600.008,000.00M»f00M»f.008.M0.00Tioo.oo8,600.00

^ P o l i c 0 1 1 l . ^ 6 " 1 1 . -P rT.'!y . : - 4*,00Q.O6 41,W«.(>0

BLACKSHAKES OF VALUE?Farmers and city folk in New JeT-

sey today continued the verbal bar-rage over the value of blacksnakeR,and John Colt, State Director ofEmergency Relief and C W A Ad-ministrator is thinking seriously ofcalling in a naturalist to settle thedispute.

The controversy began when aNewark resident complained to Mr.Colt that the killing of hundreds ofblacksnakes by C W A workers wasan outrage and would soon resultin rats and other pests destroyingthe farm crops of t i e State. Heclaimed that bfacksnakes are naturalenemies of such rodents and otherdestroyers of farm products.

MAKING HAT RESTSHat rests may be made by cutting

cardboard to make a cone about nineinches high. Cover one side withmaterial oif paper, and join, the seamby stitching, or with paper clamps.

VOGUE DRESS SHOP281 Madison Ave. PHONE

P.\. 4-2840 PERTH AMBOY

PRESENTS: THE NEWESTIN [SPRING SUITS-COATSAND DRESSES . . . .

We art; very much enthused over our new Springline and we're sure you will be also. There is really somuch variety—so many stunning styles — truly spacedoesn't permit describing these beautiful garmentsyou muat see them!

A MOST BEAUTIFUL LINE OFnew Spring Coats, Swagger

Suits, Fur-trimmed S&ita and

Redingotcs of (full length

woolen Coat and drees). Any

number of styles, colors and

patterna to choose from. Sizes

12 to 46.

RANGING FROM:

CLASSIC BRIMMED FELTS

STRAW HALO* kmi TlARAS

MJEtOII SAILORS

3IPI FLARE BRIMS

ANNOUNCEMENT!We taVe pleauure in announcing to the -woman of

presentation of tbepe tots, mnd ttthw•<at the Fashion yghow, batog Iwld by.

1 Club, at the O a f t w i W . Club, Ilay nijfht, March VL . k

50$10W T O$29

NEW SPRING

DRESSESHigh shade* for afternoon, dinner and evening wear.

A .large selection of printed silk Dresses — a beautiful

line of Navy Blue* and Blacks. Wzea from ri Id 48.

RANGING FROM; .

»TO $29"

IMPORTANT

IN ANttOUSCING TO TUB Vmm THAT THK ABOV1S'

000.00

Firi ...:::::::::::::::::Police and Fire Pension FundHydrant Rental —Health .„_.„Kiddie Keep Well Camp r

Poor - - -•Poor—Emergency Relief _Civil Works Administration -Streets, roads and sewers _...Garbage Removal —....Gas Tax MaintenanceLighting of Streets ll»?5S^SLibrary - - . - «,100.00

Debt Service: ,j «»•***»«Payment of Bonds — i w u i i 1 *MWMwInterest on Bonds : 21,780.00

Contingent IJM.OODeficit Tax Revenues -

Emergency Authorization (Notes) ..._Emergency Relief (Notes) (Bonds) 2,000.00

Remitted Taxes More Tlian « Year* In Arrears 10,000.00Longfellow Street ImprovementAssessment Interest Deficiency 39,2».1&

W0fi9»MUUfcOO

TOTAL APPROPRIATIONS $265,908.19

H. VO. PLATT,Borough Clerk.

Approved: February 7th, 1934.Adopted aa amended on second reading, March 7, 1M4.

JOSEPH A. HERMANN,Xairar.

This Ordinance shall take effect »s provided by law.NOTICE

Notice is hereby given #ut the following local bndjret and tax or-dinance waa approved by Ae M»yor and Council of the Borooffe cf Car-teret, on February 7th, 1984.

_A hewing' on the budget and tax ordinance will be held at the Coun-cil Chamber*, Bo rough Hall, on Wednesday, the 21st day of March at8 o'clock, P. M., at which time and place objections to sab) budyat and taxordinance of the Borough of Carteret for the year 1984 may b* preawfctiby any taxpayer of said Borough of Carteret.

Local Budget of the Borough of Carteret, County of Middlesex, forthe fiscal year 1934.

This Budget shall also constitute the Tax Ordinance.H. VO. PLATT,

Borough CWrk.C. P. 3-0, 1G.

SHERIFFS SALEIN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

—Between S O U N D VIEWBUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCI-ATION, a corporation, Complain-ant, and ADA A. DAVIS, Defend-ant, Fi. Ftu for the sale of mort-gaged premises dated January 80,19134.By virtue of the above stated writ,

to me directed and delivered, I willexpose to sale at public vendue onWEDNESDAY THE 21ST DAY OF

MAHCH, A. D, NINETEENHUNDRED THIRTY-FOUR

at two o'clock Standard Time in thaafternoon of tho said day at theSheriff's Office in the City of NewBrunswick, N. J.

ALL that certain lot, tract or paj-cel of land and premises, hereinaf-

(ter particularly described, situate,lying and being in the Borough ofCarteret, in the County of Middlesexand State of New Jersey.

BEGINNING at a point distantnortherly one hundred eighty (180')feet from the corner formed by theintersection of the northerly side ofRoosevelt Avenue, formerly known, a&Ra'hway Avenue, with the westerlyside of Lafayette Street, and whichsaid point is situate in the westerlyside of Lafayette Street, from saidbeginning point running 'thence (1)in a westerly direction and along aline parallel to Roosevelt Avenueone hundred seventy three and fiftyhundredth* of a foot (173.60') to apoint in rear line of lot 126, on acertain map of property entitled"May of Francis F. Vidol, New YorkCity; thence running (2) in a north-erly direction and along line almostparallel to Lafayett* Street, beingthe rear line of lot one hundredtwenty-six (126) on said map thirtyand thirteen hundredth* feet (30-.18') to a point in the northerly lineof lot one hundred twenty-six (126)thence running (3) in an easterly di-rection and along line of lot onehundred twenty six (126) and paisallel to first described course onehundred seventy and ninety twohundredths (170.92') feet to a pointin line of Lafayette Street, thencerunning (4) along line of LafayetteStreet thirty feet (30') to the point,or place of BEGINNING.

BEING better known and desir-nated «s lot number one hundredtwenty-six (126) o« said map ofFrancis P. Vidal, which said map hasbeen duly died in the office of theClerk of the County of Middlesex atNew Brunswick, New Jersey.

The approximate amount of thedecree to be satisfied by said sale isthe sum of Two thousand seven hun-dred thirteen dollars and fourteencents ($2.718.,t4) together with thecosts of thU sale.

Together with all and singular therights, privileges, hereditaments andappurtenance* thereunto beloog&w"•* in anywise L.I_J_ «• •»

| h e r «!> °*in the

ALL those certain lota, tract* orparcels of land and fowmlaes, sj&£ate, lying,and being in, ttu» Boroughof Carteret, County of Middlesexand State of New Jersey,

Which on a map entitled "Hap ofProperty of J, Steinberg, situate inMiddlesex County, N. J.'rdated June,1910, made by Fred F. Simons Sur-veyor, Roosevelt, N. J., which maphas been duly filed in the Office ofthe Clerk of Middlesex County, NewJersey, are laid down, known andshown as lots numbers seventeen(17) and eighteen (18), frontingand facing Edwin Street as shown onsaid map.

Being the same premises as con-veyed to the said Steve Lempko andMary Lempko by Andrew Kruppaand wife and recorded accordingly.

Being the premises commonlyknown and designated as No. 67 Ed-win Street, Carteret, New Jersey.

The approximate amount of thedecree to be satisfied by said'sate isthe sum of Three thousand one hun-dred sixty-three dollars and ftfty-*uccents (13,163.56) together with thecosts of this sale.

Together with all and singular therights, privileges, hereditament* andappurtenances thereunto belongingor in anywise appertaii

ALAN HROBERt LOUIS BROWN,(26.46C. P. 2-23;8-2,9, 16.

, Sheriff

Solicitor

— Please mention this paper to advertisers; it helps you, it helps them,it helps your paper. —

DR. WALTER FAGANSURCEON CHIROPODIST

FOOT AILMENTSP. A. National Bank Bide.

113 State St. IUMJB 403HOUBB: Dt i l ; 1:10 K. If. to 1:1* P. M.lv«nl«»»—(TawUy, Tkumtar, Saturtk?

MMM Pert* Amfcey 4-114»

SHERIFF'S SALSIN CHANCERY OF NEW

Bitween BLAI

ornTHE CAT A » THE FIDDLE" OPENS

WEEK'S RONAT STRAND THEATRE^w.y 1 . 9 m « h R*n«»tic Hit Come. To P«rth AmboyV r t w n InUct With J«ron» K«m't Delichtful Muaic —Ranlon N<wW». J—netta MacDonaM Starred With C««t.

ft|mort half aC t d

( nCat

;0 the

* r of P*tha >1ddle

of tha Strandone

nt gnuw •••!• - • „Nowro and JeajwtU Mae

h ta* B«* «» »in N"»rB th*

ti» *

|,.nlv

bill

art! ">» w r w » » •—• ™ — —romantic fare-rita, but i n ac-

,h e d ringer. ThfJ aw teamed.first tinw In this production,

success has been ao innan-, and outstanding that M-G-Mreported to be seeking a new

which they1 may appear to-

lf cat and the Piddle" wasid to Uhe screen from the suc-

Majre ptay by Jeroma Kerno Harbach. It had a long "in

NvwYwk and hai been prewnUdtinr large cities throughout the

" ,. it it a romantic musicalRml includes mch hit song

~ 'it Was Made

vt-hi'-l«* i n

,,1'ip

for"Try

•'•The

tn Forget," "One" "A New Love Is

Yes",fomentd" and

The |lavish

i/ive paraaa . . . .i?h production went Into theP of ttie picture, as it evidenc-

the making. of the,-it:l:.i in tne maEing. jaucn UJ. ™„„„• ukes place in a, theatre seat-

0 people, whkh was con-,t the M-O-M studio* in

inj? -

Oli,f,,mi» duplicate ofj>na of

A Malodic DramaAlthough there is a wealth ofhough there is a wealth of

music throughout the play, it it* not,strictly speaking, a mustc.l pictureIt is instead a story with music.Bach of the numbers sting by theco-stars and members of tihe supporting east has a definite place in thestory and advances or adds to tfieinterest of the drama being enacted.

The cart Includes, besides thestars, Frank Morfran, Charles But-terworth, Jean Hernhrolt, VivienneSegal, Prank Conroy, Henry Armet-ta, Adrienne D'Ambricourt and Jos-eph Cawthorn. The picture wag di-rected by William K. Howard.

SLOAN GETS PAY RAISE?LAY OFF MINOR EMPLOYES

Major William G. Sloan, StateHighway Engineer, has been grantedan increase in salary from $12,000to $15,000 effective March IB.

Colonel Arthur P. Foran, chairman of the board, said he had conferred with Governor Moore on theincrease in pay for Major Sloan andthat it had received the approval othe executive.

At the same time, the Wghwajcommission announced that due toseasonal curtailments 27 inspectorsof the project division, which workswith counties and townships, wouldbe laid off temporarily.

CHANEVS - S E E S A L L - T H I S ALL!

known Bhowhoo— of Parts. — A Classified Adv. Will Bell It —

I imK MORGAN,RAMON JWvVWJftO.J&JNETTE MACDONAU)and JEAN HEftSkStT frCltmOX AND THE FIDDLE'^»

THEATREPERTH AMBOY

Continuous 2 to 11 P. M.

STRAND

A young man-with a marked re-semblance to his famous father, butwho, nevertheless, steadfastly refus-es to capitalize on Ws parent's rep-utation, is young Creighton Chaney,son of the late Lon Chaney, whoplays his first leading role in "Six-teen Fathoms Deep'*, the thrillingMonogram sponge-fishing picturewhich comes to the Crescent Thea-tre for a three day run starting to-day.

Younpf Chaney was Horn in Okla-homa City, Okla., and spent the firstseven years of his life touring withhis father who was appealing instock companies throughout the Mid-dle West. When Ixin Chaney enter-ed pictures, Creighton took uj> hisstudies at Hollywood High School,and upon completing his education,entered the water heater business inLos Angeles.

That such talent and reputationshould not be wasted on water h

U O T I C DYNAMIC DRAMAOF SINNING SISTERS ON A Dl

Brfatf* To Emotional d k u LOT*. Of Two Girl. InSam* 1B Which TW Y«onf«r, In Confoaaing Her Own

Sham*, Point. TIM Flaffa* Of Guilt At The Other—Fine Cut — Op*aa At Majeatic Tomorrow.

With its sudden outburst* of mvp- given the best opportunity ofessed ti d M ipressed emotion and

passion, "Heat Lightning", the MWWarner Bros, pktnr* at Uw Majestictomorrow. Sunday and Moaoay,match tm in drama the atssoaimerKda*hM of the sun-baked desertWhcrK ita events take place.

The picture is baaed on the formeTBroadway stage hit by Leon Abramsand Ceorge Abbott and eoneeras aformer dance hall girt, wbo escapesher tawdry existence, to open a fal-ing station on the desert, where shehope* to find the peace and content-ment Bhe has aiways longed Tor.With her, she brings her younger

PRINCESS SALMATheatre-goers will be treated to

something new in entertainment nextweek at the Majestic with the ap-pearance of Princess Sabna, famous

Egyptian Psychic, w*ho will answerquestions on affairs of the heart, in-vestments and family problems. Herengagement starts Monday, March19, and continues to Thursday.

1 AST Clark GABLE and CUudette COLBERTTIMES inTODAY "IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT*

SEVEN BIG DAYS STARTING SATURDAY

THE "PAGAN" PRINCE OF ROMANCE.. AND THE QUEEN OF SONG

IN A MELODY OF LOVE THATWILL GIVE YOU NINETY MIN-UTES OF NEVER-TO-BE FOR-GOTTEN THRILL AND JOY!

Hear them sing "TheNight Wan Made forIx>ve", "She Didn'tSay Yes", "Try toForget", "One Mo-ment Alone" and othergreat Jerome Kernsong h i t s ! A newthrill!

r a * MORGANBatterworthHERSHOLT

"> -

"Across The Footlights" Is NewIndependent Theatre Page Feature

, g ysisteT, whom she hopes to shelterfrom the world of men.

But she finds that she cannot es-cape her hateful past, when her former lover, who holds a powerful in-fluence over her, appears on thescene. And her sister, whom shetried so hard to protect, finds herself bored with the unceasing monotony of the desert, and give* herselfto a worthless scamp, in the hope offinding something of the joy of Kfe,

This brings to an emoitonal clim-ax the lives of the two girls in igripping scene in which the youngein confessing her own shame, point*the finger of guilt at the older.

The picture carries an all star castheaded by Aline MacMahon, whscore* a triumph in dramatic expres-sion by her emotional portrayal ofthe dance hall girl, while Ann Dvor-ak as her wilful and discontented sis

y p y y pply the foil to the more lntMMdramatic momenta. Others in. tfe»cast who give splendid characterlHk-tion Include Theodore Newton, Wtt-lard Robertson, Harry C. Bradleyand James Durkin. Mervyn Le Sofhas done a splendid place of work iahis direction.

career to prove her g-enuinsfor dramatic WOTU.

Preston Foster, in themasculine role, that of a fasciadespoiler of women, handles his ]with a dashing virility that mihim likeable even in his villain.fGlenda Parrell, Lyle Talbot. 1 M BMcHugh and Ruth Donnelly keep

byplay of comedy antics thatth il h l

FORDS THEATREIS NOW OPEN

t«T, hungry for the Joy of living, is nightly.

The Fords Theatre, long idle, wssiopened last week under thp manage-ment and will henceforth be knownas the Fords Playhouse. The hoaas)has been completely renovate*throughout and new goundment installed which hasgreatly to the attractiveness of t)s>house.

The management will run tfcptheatre on a two feature pAlicythe intention of later produeshort stage presentations,players from New YoTk City.

Since the opening the managenMireports a brisk business with ths>house playing to (rood cr

ers was Mie opinion of executives ofone of the larger motion picturecompanies, and after the death ofhis father, they finally persuadedCreighton to take up an acting ca-reer.

He subsequently appeared in "Birdof Paradise", "Lucky Devils" and"Scarlet River", but his steadfast re-fusal to permit the company to billhim as Lon Chaney Jr., finallybrought about his release, and hejoined the Monogram company to ap-pear with Sally O'Neil in the under-water picture.

Chaney is ideal for this "he man"role, having distinguished himself asan amateur wrestler, swimmer andtennis player, while his hobbies areprincipally hunting and fishing.

The audience is seated. The or-chestra copductor lifts his baton.

The curtain goes up!And through the eyes and ears of

one of Broadway's foremost obser-vers, Beatrice Atlasa the readers ofthe Independent will be in the thea-tre. The newest play, the gayestmusical production, the smartestcomedy—brisk, crisp accounts of allof them as they appear to the trainedeye of Miss Atlaw will be printedeach week in this newspaper.

Miss Atlass knows the theatre inall of its detail as we know our al-phabet. She has practicajly lived inthe playhouses over a long periodand she has interviewed the peoplewhose lighted names dazzle the pathalonfj the Main Stem. She has seenthem "Across the Footlights" andin the dressing room.

SINGER, DRAMATIC ACTRESS* NOW A^iOVELTY DANQER

For the firtt time on the icre«n,lovely Joaoettv MacDoaaM d*nce»in "The Cat and the Fiddle", ro-mantic musical drama in wkicK•ha it co-atarred with Ramon No-varro at tb* Strand Theatre to-morrow. Heretofore, notion pic-ture f«a» have known Mi»t Mac-Donald aj a superb actreii andan enchanting songitreis whoselilting tunes have entranced mil-lions, both from the screen andtile concert stage. And now, in thepopular Kern-Harkacn musical ro-mance, ska dances. The scene is aBohemian party in her studio ina Brussels pension, where RamonNovarro quarrel* with her andmakes love to her. He invitetmany of the music student* in fora surprise party. To entertainthem, Jeanette does a modernisticdance.

Crooks and ConniversMix In Film Thriller

Her appreciation of the theatre isbased on an intimate study of all itsphases. She has rend and criticisedcountless dozens of plays in manu-script form through her work inplay broker's office in New York. Shehas written press material for seve-ral Broadway productions and herinterviews with such personages asHa! Skelly, Claude Rains, RichardBennett, Madge Kennedy, Lynn Fon-tanne, Eddie Cantor and manyothers, have received wide commen-dation.

There ia none of the cut-and-dried,tiresome, insignificant details in MissAtlass' writings. Her articlesalive with important news oftheatre, interesting, searching,thentic.

At the present time, Miss Atlassedits the drama department of theMagazine "Trend," a periodical de-voted to tihe best critical thoughtconcerning contemporary creativework. Says this magizine of her:

"The contemporary theatre is abaffling study lor the layman. Onlyan experienced and discerning critic

T h e Moth Excit ing Story Of | can separate the worthy productions

G a n g d o m Feature* Sally O'-

Neil , Paul P a g e A t Crescent.

Sally Q'Neil and Paulfeatured in "The Moth",

Page area story of

modern society life and moderncrooks, witih New Orleans duringMardi Grls as the colorful back-ground for much of the exciting ac-tion. The story is an original by JoeO'Donnell, directed by Fred New-meyer and supervised by Al Alt, pro-duced by Screencraft Productionsfor distribution through ShowmensPictures, Inc. It opens a three dayrun at the Crescent toda

from those that are, meritriqions.Trend is fortunate in having MisaAtlass as editor of this department.After graduating? from Vassar, shewas on the staff of a mid-Westernnewspaper for some years. Laterhaving come to New York to take amaster's degree at Columbia she be-came aaaociated with a large news-paper syndicate her*. Miss Atlasshas been closely associated with thetheatre in New York and has written,extensively on her subject for vari-ous metropolitan newspapers."

***«* .« CONTINUOUS 2 to 11 P. M.PERTH AMBOY

PRICES FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

Friday, Saturdayuntil 7:30 P.M.

MatineeEvening

CHILDREN AT ALL TIMES 10c

26c, 40c30c, 55c

ON THE STAGEaretheau- ALL /TALQ

VAUDEVILLEON THE SCREEN

IFIWANTTOBEOUGRACEDYOU (ANt tf0r\

Miss Atlass' column,Footlights" will start

'Across tfoewith next

Fords PlayhouseFORDS, NEW JERSEY

SAT., SUN. and HOLIDAYSContinuous from 1 to 11 P. M.

ADMISSION PRICESWeek Days, Evenings including

Saturday, 20cSim. and Holidays All Day 25c

Children 10c At All Times

Fri. - Sat.—Mar. 1 6 - 1 72—FEATURES—2

"THE WORLD CHANGES"with PAUL MUNI

— Associate Feature —"THE DUDE BANDIT"

with HOOT GIBSONEp. 2 "MYSTERY SQUADRON"

Scrappy CartoonSat. Mat.—Free Gifts to nil

Children Attending ,

Sun. • Mon.—Mar. IS - 192—FEATURES—2

"HAVANA WIDOWS"with JOAN BLONDELL

and GUY KIBBEE— Associate Feature —

"SAMARANG" with Native CastMetro News

Sitlr Symphony Cartoon

PROGRAM

Wed. - Thurs.—M*r. 21 - 223—FEATUREiS—2•THE CHIEF"with ED WYNN

amd DOROTHY MACKAILL— Associate Feature —

"Shadow, of Sing Sing"with, BRUCE CABOT«*d MARY BRIAN

"Hot Daw"—Comedy

MATINEE10c- ISc

EVENINGSSat. • Sun.10c-25c CRESCENT CONTINUOUS

SHOWSDAILY

2—BIG FEATURES—2FRI. - SAT. - SUN.

of TMU4 « t n *

UMUEAVAUt SISTER;Was she a crook? o r j u i i j

n lh« <ame o( life 1MY51EIW! ACrVQiTUffil INTRIGUEf

ROMANCET With the

notous

Fri. • Sat-Mar. 23 - 242—FEATURES—1

"DANCING LADY"witb JOAN CRAWFORD

•ml CLARK GABLE— Associate F u t u n —

'REX, Kin, «f ta* Wild H « Wwith REX, tfct W M « W HOTM

'MYSTERY SQUADBXW, Ip. SCartoon

San, . Moo.—Mar. 19 - a«•2—FEATURE*—*•THE HLONPE

SHELL"

H

Has any woman the

right to tell another

woman how to live —

until she's lived herself!

Broadway's dramatic

thunderbolt hurled

across the screen in

soul-shattering drama

A Watntr Bros, triumph with

A L I N E

MACMAHONANN DVORAK • PRESTON FOSTER

OLENDA FARRELL • tYLE TALBOT

FRANK McHUGH • RUTH DONNELLY

MON., TUES., WED., THURS. — Mar. 19 - 20 - 21 -22

EXTRA! ON THE STAGE EXTRA!THE MARVELOUS EGYPTIAN PSYCHIC

PRINCESS SALMALET HER HELP YOU AS SHE HAS HELPED OTHERS

CLEARANCE SALEFIXTURES - APPLIANCES

FIXTURES FOR A 6-ROOM HOUSE

CompleteExceptB l l

L«t her adviue you on affairs of the h«art—on investments—and family affairs, Aak her any and all questions that maybe of vital interest to you. Her answers will amaw and sur-prise you.

Electric Co., Inc.^ ?. GIFTS IMPO TUBW

SPECIAL MORNING SHOW

THURSDAY, MARCH 22

FOR LADIES ONLY.AT WHICH TIME WOMEN MAY ASK PRINCESS SAL-MA QUESTIONS WHICH COULD NOT BE ASKED INTHE PRESENCE OF MEN.

ON THE SCREEN

UONEL BARRYMOKE

LOOK l()MMV*t><| ' -

«<lt II toMK'V" . / I OH- OH- OH' V-

~> ' KUlTMODTAtlWkl

RUN FOR YOURnve, TOMMY,

B

Tin - ThE KELLY KIDSwe u. oiow HIM UP

6000 AMD

AND U

j

% " -

v& vo?S A

j<J VOON<1tessoMPo<?fe€T

IS

i * < »^f •

1 i

^ ~ — T

YOO «oq DINNV COMAN1 see itt' i<on i

SHOT!

• » * • ' •" • ' *

I You 1 1d an

f machine,„«.« divide t h e•(i ,m E v e r -

„ you geth(> world's MfM>

,!v/ blade gives theworld's happiestshaves. 50% thicker,n(| ever so muchkeener.

Thia tnde-mufchead id«ntJfl«tthe genalM

Amtrtctn Safety Riser Cor».fBrooklyn N.Y.

Yon All KnowLYDIA LPINKHAMIHer Vegetable Compoundhas been justly famous forfoar generations. Endorsedia writing by more than700,000 women. By accu-rate record 9* out of 100who report say, "It helpsate." Let it help you, too.If Ton are nervous, weakana rundown, cross and Ir-ritable—get a bottle fromroar druggist today.

Do TO* know that the• • ' iMedlcineCo. man-

does? Lvdia R Finkham'aPile Suppositories offer wel-come relief from itching,burning, bleeding piles. Sim-ple to use. Highly recom-mended. Packed 12 to abox for 75 cents.

Lydta K. Ptnkham Mad. Go.LtmMmmchmm.

I «odo»e......... Plaawaendtte at one* bom* ofLydia E Wnkham'i Pile &*-poaandea ^ 7S oants a bos.

NMI

"R.RH."forttaf l

due to A e I

Pint-ItSpfauXIt QT

RADWAY&CQMPANY

NlWVOJat

INSIST Uf-CW t . R . R "

a* a counter irritant lini-

Saootuf—if earned by «»• ift itoeaach,due to Imperfect or hurried maitlca-tkn of food, \iae "H.R.R" inroramlfy. Take one-half teatpoaoful Inhalf glata of warm water.

Third—it cauaed by tbaple nervoui-ncav do thi»: apply "JLRJt." brlaklyto thaback of the neck.thtn get intobfw. nfflathewithaawwcvcftfnytjiin;let the narvca relax and won, toundrtatful rieep li yourt.

FABLES IN SLANG

OF THEPROFESSOR

WHO"WANTED

AVCMO

CROWDSI

(M. DA-1 A PROFESSORABOUT TO HANG OM TO

AS Ht TRAiieO SKWMto HEHE WOULO PWO SC3ME AfONti FOR

A NOTE AT THE BAMC.HANQIN6 BTOt HE SAiO*LET ME THWK* 6UTCOULD HE*? YES I

WIFE'S BROTHER WAS6 0 0 0 FOR A QUICK TOUCH

HE GAVE A SIGHRELIEF, LOOSENEOT>€ PARACHUTEAND CAME TOHAD OTHER TROUBIES OF A CERTNN NUMBtR

IN LOUISVILLE

REG'LAR FELLERS Ihere Are,Horses and Horses

1 A W FOOMOA PIECE OF

CHALK!MANI4A Cf B Mt

D»»W APlTCMfP*

0tttING IS NOW OUR NATIONAL PASTIME By RUBE GOLDBERG

IttlAI

AT YOUR DRUGGIST

Yes, i vcoOff TVJ€LV)£

T V J O

OPDE

STVIATTER POP—Oomp! He Showed One Of Them, Anyhow! By C. M. PAYNE

GOODaj u nn

to otir ihwi' r rawbeat type tKSf-wiuU* to

order a j j pdJit it otf

AT Mt! I

Feminine PhiTHE PRINTER'S DEVILB6A«TLV <XP QfttUO.

IMAPRJWTlUQOPfieK/ Mff TWWSHOUtO

VAP^ V W i P^ VWUt,

IS WOfttH A PUTS

CO (SCMMOU

surfHwy At

Hfit H*#*sy Party S«t.

A "urprts* party wa» helil at theof Mr. and Mm. John Hilt,

•tain street, Saturday T)i«rht In honor•f A. O t f « of N*w York City in•••lebrntion of his blrlMay. *

The dininy room ws» «rtintlcaTly•WomW wfth streamers of Eastern•olom, with the traditions! hfrthdto«nt»> gmf in(f thp center of the taMe,turn Which a buffet »iijl|m was• m H st midnirht Italfan folk son*•election* wnre sung by Frank Oliversad Miu Jay LaQpadra, «<vi>m-awnicd by Joseph Punkas at thepiann. Popular songs were also sungi y Rose W. Ust and M. Mesko.iWncinjr and game* featured thp eve-ning'* entertainment.

TTie ruesta were: Rose Mario Ust,Helen McCarthy and Pearl Bussellmt South Amboy; Jens M»cGreg>or,Francis Leonard, Beatrice Curry,JR*phcn Petnmark, M Me*ko, RiiH-ij Murowski, M. Psloti, EvelynBrandt, Walter Powers, M. S. Hngy,• f Perth Amboy A. Cotter and Nick•wridan of New Ynrk; MildrfdSmith, M. Smith, John 0. ITirko. M«-jorie Wininki, Joseph Frank, Charle*fianano, Henry Garneiiky and W.Toochan of New Market; Mary I,c-fMtfl. Ronne Rrdele H»ry Kriasak,tolly, Majorie, Prank and Petor Si-toa, Betty FJrtlele, BertliA Koncnol•md Joe Ptiskas of Carteret.

Elsie Freise, Margaret White, JsyI * Quadra, Mary Gilbrean, Mr. and• r s . J. Hilt and Andrew Thomas of

DID NOT KNOW ART,DEALER LOST MONET

. the ranllldr tale, writ** • PirliMrrtmiKlmt In tb« l-nndon DallyTttasfpph, »( the profit*** whn, har-laf• ortVwcd • copy of the Veoos ofMlro statne. objects wh«i It is de-livered that (ha nnnl are ml Minn '»more credible (ban It seomiHi to h«.SdCh thing* ran hlppM. an a visitorto the "Flea Market" of Paris—whichrexemMea the tendon O«il«1ont«nmarket -discovered to hi* profit and• mimement.

Among the heterogeneous collectionof article* on one of the stalls hefun nil the fragments of an excellent•mull arale reproduction of the ao-olonl Victor; of Rnmothrace headleifirtstiie, which wai found In that Is-land tn 1888, and Is now treasuredIn the l/oorre. After spending nearlykn hour In piecing It together be cameto the conclusion that It could easilyhe repaired. The moment had cometo start bargaining with the owner ofthe fttall.

"Well," he «»Id, preparing for a dls-cuuilon which he expected to last alonf time, "how much do you wantfor I tr

The hrlca-brac man quickly madeop his mind, "After all.*' be said, "thehend In missing. You can hare It for10 fr«nes."

The Tliltor, slightly dated, paid thehalf-crown and hastily placed his ac-quisition In a taxi.

WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF

MODEL AIRPLANESAND

AIRPLANE SUPPLIES# SPECIAL THIS WEEK #

24 inch Plane . . 25c12 inch Plane . . 10cBoats . . 10c to $1.50Planes . 10c to $2.00

ENTER YOUR PLANE IN OUR CONTEST

PRIZES1ST—$3.50 PLANE2ND—$2,00 PLANE

3RD—$1.00 PLANE4TH—66c PLANE

5TH — SOc PLANE

WOODBRIDGE HARDWARE CO.48 Main St. Phone Whdg. 8-0096 WOODBRIDGE

If r** • « * •fftri wilt. cfcanrtM hi hm Uir ,•«• <U!ti*( at hw slack mtiwrist*, or »tl tr ianuj up witha luq«*r*<l 'cord McMeea ««Jbracelet, do*'t b« ivrpritod. Or•K« BMf appear wilk a brooch• • 4 bracolat* o4 r»!Un, or ioa•hoik, all of I1MM« nwtariaUara u**d In iko eo»tnm« j«w^-ry kanahadl for th« coalng

M u ; otltar Morel m»t«ri»lihi cottama jowalry ar« »howa.

Th« > H of wiJU noaldacai andbranUtl o« pl«i« Jr»»«ni wa*•mphasisel to fir* variety to•impW «o*tiin«(. Addiag that*to a bvainau frock will give itthe foviinf af • • afternoon orcocktail dreii.

Th. "Miami Whirl" jewelryi« an opan tpirat of wlrO atrungwith tmall b«a<ft, whllo "Spiritof the Win*" !« r*d eherrie* andlaavo* derelopwl ia t i n andbracaUti. The "Congo" offer-ing it lacquered cord in red,black an4 whit* with IOM but-tons for f»»t»«i«g», Among dieothor offerings Were rattanbracoWtt, broockei and iett ofhat, bib collar aaul cuff* in twocolor* of bead*.

The Egyptian* Had ThemThose graphic charts osed to Indi-

cate the chills and fever of modernfinance have been traced as far tuckas several thousand years before theChristian en . According to Bageoe A.Skehan, speaking to the convention ofthe United State* Building and Loanleague In Chicago, the first effort topresent facts graphically was the enu-meration of the armies In Egyptianhieroglyphics. The ate of a point withreference to a system of co-ordinatesdate* from a Greek geographer of theThird century R. O., claims this sta-tistician.—Liters rj Digest.

More Colombian Rail*Rail service from Bogota, Colombia,

to Port Palanqnero, on the Uagdalenarlrer, near La Dorada, has beenInaugurated. La Dorada holds futuresignificance In the South American re-public through the recent completion

i of Its combination airport and sea-plane base, one of the largest In theworld.

For demonstration, Adjust-

ments, call Woodbridffe 8-2296

No obligation

OFU. S. FOR 35 YEARS OF

w'>to Duty Cele-

brated Onrint; March

Woodman of th« World member*tbroognont the entire country amosMmttnf the month of March Int gtgaatle eampolgn In honor of

>. Brmdstiaw, president, who

De K. Braashaw

has Mired W. O. W. In ar officialcapacity for thirty flte years.

Thousands of W. 0. W. camps Inarary state will hold special oele-bratlona and programs during

, March to pay tribute to the longand faithful serrloe of Mr. Brad-ehaw.

Mr. Bradshaw, whose life hasbeen typical of the log cabin boywho lias risen to dluy heights, washonored at his birthplace In Ixardcounty, Arkansas, where local andnational W. 0. W. officials gatheredfor a special celebration. Hismother, 97 years old, still livesnew Us birthplace.

Mr. Bradshatr has always been astrong church worker, having•erred as president of the Arkan-sas Bnnday School association. Hewas also president of the ArkansasHumane Society and has partici-pated In scores of charitable andcivic endeavors.

His first national W. O. W. officeThe local camp will observe the

anniversary1, of the national leader atthe meeting to be held in FirehouseNo. 1 March 23. Frank Born is localcouncil , commander, and Martin

was Sovereign HentT rfl 1IM InLittle Bock. He later went toW. O. W. headQuArters In Omaha, asGeneral Attorney and his wort wasso ontatanfllng that It brought htmnational promlnance as the leading |fraternal life Insurance counsellor jIn the country.

"The record < f Mr. Bradshaw Is |so outstanding and noteworthythat the spirit of fraternallsm InW. O W. has never before beengreater," said Col. T. B, ratterson.vice president "Mr. Bradsbaw,has endeared himself to every;member because he not only hasbeen progressive In expansion, but|

his wlndom In safe Investment* and(

protection for pollcyholders Is atshlnln* eiample for the entirecountry."

A Rlnnt huHotln board has been'erected In Mr. Bradahaw's officeupon which are posted dally results|of a rmmpalfrn to exceed all past'record for a month. It Is eipected •that the total will exoeed eight'million dollars.

Tlw Woodmen of the World LifeInsurance association Is showingevidence that the "corner of pros-perity" has been reached. Its assetshaving been Increased during last,year by more than $4400.000 andIts certificates by more than B5,-000. It now has assets of more,than $115,000,000 and Is considered (

the strongest fraternal life lnaur-ance associations In the world.

The Woodmen of the World openttes Radio Station WOW In Oma-ha and baa a tuberculosis hospitaland chapel In San Antonio, Texas.

W. O. W. ia now moving to itsnew quarters In the InsuranceBuilding In the heart of Omaha.The Insurance Building, which Isowned by W, 0. W., has been trans-formed Into one of th« most mod-ern buildings in the city. It has ahuge vault formerly occupied by abank and- trust company. Morethan 1105,000,000 of securities worerecently moved under the erirfl offorty armed men and armored carsdown the main street of Oni.iha tnthe new b'urglar-proof vaults.

More ttfon ninety-five per cent ofW. O. W.'s assets are in the highestgrade government, state, city and•".".snty bonds of nearly every state

[In which W. O. W. doei business.Rock is the financial secretary. Mr

At Jefferson MotorsDisplay Will Be Held For T w

Day* Showing FcMtareaOf New Cv

Thone wishing to see somethingunique, educational and interesting,should visit the Chevrolet exhibitwhich goes on display- today at theJefferson Motor show rooms at 180-166 New Brunswick avenue, PerthAmboy.

The exhibit comes direct to Jef-ferson Motors from the National Au-tomobile shows in New York Cityand Chicago, 111,, where it created asensation among the visitor* at thosetwo (rreat shows.

The exhibit which has been dis-played in other cities and visited bythousands of school children as wellas adults features the working* ofthe knee action wheels, the new all-weather brakes, Blue Streak engineand a stripped Chevrolet silver cflas-ata.

The knee action wheel exhibitshowB by the aid of cutaway parts

REUEFINCREASE IN

Despite the eoanMria£ current oremployment maud by « ( f tWorks Administration,

p*r

Belief demands increased ittJrbur theflrrt half of Febraary. ^

Betweea the end of Jaiwtoy «<!February 16, persons aided j te ir tn363,496 in 93,205 famfliet. This Wfc,86,807 or more than 11 p*r Mntabove the 827,190 eared for out 1ftter tialf of January. The at&fMfoary figure, however, is 78,168 bVlow that for the eorreapondiniiod a year ago, when 441,86?sons in 102,659 familiesrelief.

Experience ha« shown that ai thewinter progresses, relief demands increase. The »p«x hut year cane thelatter part of March, wKh 612,B$7persons aided. Since last Novemberthe CWA prevented repetitton. or .ex-tension of last year's flgnm.

In Middlesex County 8698Rons were aided.

[Ted

PRUNES AND PRUNESThere are two distinct kinds of

prunes, the sweet and tart Cali-fornia almost exclusively produce?sweet prunes which hare farm sweet

sugar in cooking. Th* tart pusually are grown In WaahlBftonand Oregon. These primes a**tag<?larger in sice, tarry larger .pits s>adrequire more sugar in cooking.

Rock was appointed by the head- school students are invited to viewquarters Ml the onranization in Oma- tha exhibit at any time after Thurs-ha. The local camp has been organ- day. Experts will be on the floor ofized for many years and has a langemembership.

SUNNYDALEfCCD

170 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOYSpecials For Friday and Saturday

ROLL or TUB

Butter -

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Swiss CheeseFANCY

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TURKEYS 19fb

LOINS-PORKROLLED

Boneless BRISKETROASTING or

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MUk-Fed Veal 8 fTENDERJUICY CHUCK STEAK ] Q j j ,CROSS RIB -TOP orBOTTOM ROUND ROAST15,;

Teal Chops.Chopped Moat

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ContcUnce Brings BackMoney Lost Six Years AgoWa/croat, 4a.—Oareoce Uclntosb

has recovered the value of the contentsof t pocketbook ha lost In 1927. The

| purs* fell from his pocket on the porchof tha I . at. a k. building and. fall-log to find It, hs promptly forgot•bout It1 A few days ago. t Waycross man,*l»a has beet, Uhrtng In another dtr,sought Mr. Mdntoth and said be hadpUked ap th*> pocketbook. T was des-perately la need of money," he said,"and your cash helped me to get outat town to find a J«b."

Neither remembered what theamount was, so the loss waspromised for WO.

com-

Friendt Discover BothMarried the Same Girl

Los Angeles.—Seeking an annul-ment i>f his marriage to Buth CleoStaekplbcrg, Richard Stackelberg ex-plained to the Judge:

"I was riding with Qlen Martin, sfriend, one day wlien my wife passedus tn another car and waved. Martinwaved back, so I asked him: "Do yonknow that woman?'

" 'Sure, that's my wife,' Martin toldme."

Martin explained they had been mar*rled tad never divorced. Stackelberggot the annulment.

Defective Motor LandsFlyer in State Prison

Jotlet, III.-Clayton Kelgber was re-turning to his Ottawa CPU home fromChicago tn his airplane when the mo-tor stalled. Only one spot apppearedsuitable for a landing.

To his amazement, six men camerunning toward him and each of themhad a rifle.

"Go on, yon cant land here. Oetout, and get quick," one of the mentold him. "It's against the rules."

Ketgher had landed Inside the stateprison ground*. Be left as quickly ashe could repair th* motor.

Bantam Chicken SingsSongs on Top of Piano

AJo, Arta.—A bantam hen that singsIs tha proud possession of Mrs. Bits

Th* h«n, Plbby, has performed manytimes, according to airs. Walleastels,and har vocal talents apparently ar*unlimited.

Whan Mrs. Wallensteln plays herpiano Pibby will walk back «o4 forthoa top of th* Instrument "al aging" laparfect time with th* music.

LMANN 4 SON

Da to Band? t o !'tOltOBl,

T*i

Hypodermic Needle Usedto Make Tree Grow Fast

With the aid of X-rays and hyperdermlc needles, scientist* are breed-Ing bigger aid faster-growing trees.By cross-breeding special types oftrees, they are seeking to producetimber that will grow to saw-log slseof 80 feet long and 16 Inches thick In26 yaars, Just half th* time It nowtakes, the Philadelphia Inquirer r*-porta.

Hie new trees are being developedat the Institute fit Forest Genetics,In California. It Is estimated thatIt will cost only one-third as muchto grow a crop of trees maturingIn 26 years as It does to ratse a WVyear crop, Initial costs being equal.

The new tree* are produced by ar-tificial mating, controlling the pollina-tion process. A hypodermic needle isused for sprinkling the pollen fromone tree on the flower of another,canvas covering the flower beingpierced by the needle. Seeds devt'Ioped In this way produce a tree withthe best qualities of both its parents,such as speed of growth und straight-ness of grain.

Experiments also are belli* con-ducted wltb X-raya In an effort tocauBe seed changes that will resultIn the seeds growing into better tree*.

the salesroom constantly to explainthe exhibits to those who are inter-ested.

the manner in which the knee action fresh *Wl consequently Me** Uttieworks. This section of the exhibitionin itself is the cause of considerablewonderment on iehalf of those whovisit the display. Then there is thecutaway section showing the work-ing* of the new all-weather brakes.Specially designed levers and handlesallow those inspecting this piece ofapparatus 'to operate the brakesthemselves and thus obtain first handinformation relative to the mannerin which they work.

The Blue Streak engine also hascutaway sections wWch give a clearunderstanding of the manner inwhich this greatest of all Chevroletengines creates the powor whichdrives that car over all roads andat any desired speed.

The stripped chassis of silver isone of the principal features of theexhibition. This shows the longerwheel-base, the Blue streak enginewith its 80 horsepower, faster ac-celeration and 12 per cent greaterwonomy «t touring speeds as wella« increased smoothness and quiet-ness. The improvements of the chas-sis are so outstanding that personscannot but marvel when these arecompared with the chassis of but afew years back.

Jefferson Motors announced thatthe exhibition here will be open tothe public of the Raritan Bay Dis-trict for a period of ten days or twoweks. The general public and high

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FASHIONSDRESSES OF DISTINCTION <

Edith Hats. . . a«J oar prices will eoavimc* you that j*ar shoypiagtrip to th* eity wit. Its iacoKTasOmc* a»« isaiwis isquit*

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HAVE YOU AN OLD MATTRESS?We rebuild and sterilize your old Silk-floss, Kapok, Hair or

Inner-spring mattress just like new! Box Spring rebuilding also aspecialty.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEwe take your mattress in the morning, rebuild and sterilize it, andreturn it the game day. Estimates cheerfully given by oar repre-sentative. Just call

RAHWAY 7-031824

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Qovinas on3 FRESH KILLED MEATBuy Direct From The Packing House

And Save Money!SUCED SHOULDER A i

PORK CHOPS 7 *FRESH,

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