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a::,,lf|ntie i\
gU,-
, ni.irht out at the',„ the contention WMhat double proflte wer.,,,,! from a single ptoe.,,„„ diflcloMd the Ubl-
,i the other end of the,,.0merl to be leg* than
ESS 1*4 TW CnwiyriScrnfki ' WFor Sports Newt
11,5TRIDAY, MAY 1,1986
3 FUNERAL RITE FOR Comba A s k s W h e n H i s T e r a a a O f f i c e B e g a n ! G.O.P. HERE HOPESJOSEPH F. YOUNGDEAD AT AGE OF 70Resident Here For 45 Years
Held Local, Church,Fraternal Poiti
BURIAL AT ROSED ALEFurieral services will be held at
;« <.f Its position, n * 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon «t
, ipnlities had the uui- _ _ _.,,,n company up against
,m(.n's *State Republican
, ,,,1W which is sought by:,„;.• would affect CaTter-1llv]i;1(f(, and Perth Atnboy,;,',i,sted by the" three
,.,tii»s. The <— - - r ]ji expected the nl
I,I increase the use o;
Church for.loiH-ph P. Young, wventy, one ofCartetet's oldest and bent knowncitizens, who died at his home, 121
'^rh'^pre'presenting!Bm«rson Street, Wednesday night.hers voted at Its Atlan-lljr. Young had been ill for somennventton to work for y m e
photographing anaballoting; of voters.
BUI Extending Tax Job Crettefe Puzzle Here
» w e expect «Mh *ented by p
,,„<,," but declared a "fl:l t i
resented by,«..** but deellhonest elections
. floater vote.'* » •
ningist of Western Gol-.,,i Ohio, has confirmedmost college men hare
(i,.(i- that the girls withocial engagements are
mt. intelligent!
Formerly a member of the Bor-ough Council and at one time pres-ident of the Board of Health, hehad lived in Carteret forty-flvey*Un. • H« 'Wa4 a retired ontyloy»of the United States Metals Refin-ing Company and held membershipin a number of fraternal organi-sa t ion These included the OddFellows, the Junior Order UnitedAmercan Mechanic's, the Maaonsand Knights of Pythias.
Anticipating passage by theLegislature and nigning hy theGovernor of tho law extendingAjwemhly Rfl, the bill designed toextend the terms Of tax collectorsin municipalities of leas than 300,-000 population to flva years, TaxCollector Alexander Cumba hasasked an opinion from the Attor-ney General as to how he would beaffected by the measure.
Mr. Comba's situation is pecu-liar, probably to himself alone. Hewan acting collector from January,1035, until November, 1930. whenhe was elected to the imeipiredterm of the former collector,Charles A, Brady, who hud failedto qualify for the remainder of histerm in office. That, term expiresDecember 31 this year. What Mr.Comba neeks is an interpretationof th« law an to whether lrt» termshall be construed to run from hiaelection, thus Riving him five yearafrom last November, or whetherit should begin January 1, 19-37should he be elected at the electionnext November. He haa filed as acandidate for the office pending a
decision from the Attorney Gen
The Bill"Be it enacted by the senate i
iral assembly of the state ofJersey.
person now holding theion or office of tat collector
municipality of this stateor hereafter having a popula-iiot in excess of 800,000 in-
W datermined by thefederal census, or any
io shall hereafter be ap-tfd or elected to tin position>fflce of tax collector in any' foality, shall hold hia taid
for a period of five yearsm the date of his said electionappointment and the terms ofpersons now in office are ex-
ded fo* such period no as to give—'A incumbent a Urm of five
from the date of such dec-or appointment: provided,
the provisions of this act shallJ to the term of any taxwttoBe office may hereaf-e tat whoBe auceeator haa
m 'tax collector' aa uaad.this act shall be construed to
' and include the officialfliarjed with the duty of collectingt»n*s upon real and personal prop-•tty in eac); city, town, township,
:e or other munici-
,. of United 3,t«tw Sen- Funeral services will be con-,,-ry Moore. His desk Mtiducted hy Rev. Daniel R l/trentz,f,,,- both red and black | p B R t o r n f t h e praibyrormn Church
'paper"dipt! H e "— h e l d t h a o f f i c e of t r U B t e e
* • • in this church for forty years.,.,,-i in many New Jersey,Burial will be in Rosedale Cemc-
.n,,.. are now turning| t ery[ Linden.
i tMi'tocal'poHcemenJ Surviving Mr, Young are hiaMIK engaged two athletic wife, the former Miss Annie H.at $4,000 annually each Clark; a daughter, Mm. Elsie King,down the girth of the of Carteret, and four sons, Clayton
!;;';;;onnare sSlhedbick •»•» Chester.of. IMubetb, Joseph:1, from walking asuign-
do enough walking,• it \- reporteB a reduction
• •, cent in ita police sick:'!<>!• establishment of, aniraining school for the po-
t » •
iir in Norfolk, Va., man-
Mother s Day DetailsArranged By Affiance
.li'-aater which follows T«ck-i::tr The police justice of
. i n isi city (jave the sailor ai it) days in jail and • 126
attending traffic schoolnonth for six months andi lu- article. The article iiu "And Sudden Death."
* • 1-:.( Piuiiecko of Eliaabetb l |nking parole from StaleHe was sentenced to 11*
••• tin-iil t h e r e f o r m u r d e r* Aas fifteen years old, has
ir five yeara now and is••Mtiiui's youngest life-term
dogs took the apot-iiv award to animal heroes
The general eow_ttM In chargeof the arrangements for the cele-bration of Mother's DayHebrew Social Alliance c
lor the event at
at.8 o'c:The program includes apeaking
by Dr. Louis Shapiro, Moe Leven-son and Attorney Samuel Kaplan.A play, "Something Different,"with Miss Esther Venook, MissAnne Daniels and Miss SylviaFisher in the cast. They are beingcoached by Miss Louise Morris of
tin New York Anti-Vivi-iWoodbridge. There will be shortn<itly's semi-annual pre-skits and other entertainment fea-
i ilny, held Saturday. Mar- tures by Ike Daniels, Harry Heller,< i man pinscher, of Key- Albert Jacoby, Louis Carpenter,••ivt:d ii medal for saving! Erving Klein and Robert Seader.in from asphyxiation by'Mr. Jacoby will act as master of• ; Prince, collie pup, pro-;ceremonies.•ii lust master, a five year Miss Esther Venook and Harry
from the atsistance of Heller are co-chairmen of the gen-Mifiidly motorist, forcing eral committee. On the reception•rut to leave his car and'committee are: William Lebowitz,Ii him and the boy to a po- Miss Miriam Jacoby, Dr. P. R. Wex-;"M. Monkey, a fox terrier,,ler,Dr, Leon Greenwald and Harry
• posthumous award for Heller. The entertainment com-hoiiaehold from fire last mittee includes: Miss Edith Brown,
! Monkey died a few'Harry Keller, Miss Harriet LeBow
35 Get Grand PrizesAt 2nd Bingo Party10 Receive Special Awards
At Sacred HeartChurch Series
Thirty-five grand prize winnersand ten recipients of special prizeswon the fine awards given Tuesdaynight at the second Bingo party in
. , the series being conducted for fif-There are teen weeks* at the Sacred Heart
Slovak Church. Rev. A. J. Sakson,pastor of the church, is chairmanof the parties, with a large commit-tee assisting him. Attendance atthe parties has been large, with anumber of players coming fromout of town. Admission is sold atthe door.
The winners this week were asfollows-
Clock, Joseph Dolinich; mixingset, Miss Ann Anyler; toaster, MissAnna Petro: wine set, Mrs. AnnaSedlak; student lamp, Mrs. MaryMiglecz; cheken fryer. Miss HelenBodnar; table, Theodore Huber;beverage set, C. Mulligan: zipperbag, Mrs. George Lucas; blanket,Miss Alice Kaiser; table, Mrs. MaryBarna; bed quilt, Benjamin Klein;lamp, Joseph Shiner; mixing get,
[George Snow; chair, Mrs. Joseplffasek.
I/amp, Gabriel Nepsinsky; smoking stand, Mrs. Joseph Hasek; blan-ket, Mrs. Jane Gurka; table, Ru-dolph Komumicky; electric coffeeset, Stephen Cyzewski; magazrack, Miss Mary Germak; lac.Mrs. Thomas Larkin; baking disiJohn Stancik; quilt, Mrs. StefantKubala; overnight case, John Pot-
High School Studmts Present Play
••!il University let it benrmly but politely, that
< i.il government would not' <>!' it.i hands the functionshiding the tercentenary of
i of learning. When it•i the United States SenateI u> constitute itself part of'nation committee, Jerome<•>•• official of the universityii h S t e
h y, wroU the Senate
tatives of that body would'incd as guests, but only aa
• * «•<m Allen White, himself•<<• leading newapkper pub-f the country, called news-•' ners the wont foes of the• II f the preaa. Speaking to
f
and Ike Daniels.Final arrangements will be
made at a meeting to he held at S>o'clock Tuesday night, instead ofon Thursday as expected. Refresh-ments that night will be in chargeof the following committee: theMisses Lillian Schwartz and EstherSobol, Meyer Rosenblum, DavidRoth, Sidney Rubel, Dr. Shapiro,Mrs. Samuel Roth and Robert Sen-der.
P U N MAY DANCE
of I , : .
Holy Family Girls SecondAffair May 8
Arrangements for the second an-the Medill School ofinual May dance to be held Fri-
-m in Illinois he said pub-1 • ' l " - - " :- '"• *•-'»•"•'ill "unconscious class con-*" and that "the advent .., „ , .._„.. ..Ivertising and the machine j ing in the club room in Roosevelt
papers of the Avenue. Al Kalla'a orchestra was
FOR A BIG VOTE;STRESS HOUSE BIDMayor Asks All Citizens To
Exercise FranchiseIn Franchise
LADIES MEET TONIGHTLittle activity is noted in the
Republican camp in the final fortnight before the primary electionMay 19. The ono concern of theparty since there is no contest forthe local offices, in that a large votebe returned. Mayor Mlttuch thisw#ek asked all voters of the bor-ough to avail themselves of thelifrancbJte. He called especial at-tention to the contest in the choiceof representative in Congress fromthis district, John McDonnell hav-ing filed against the incumbentDr. Charles A. Eaton of Watchung
, Women1! MeetingTho Lad if*' RopuMiein Club wil
hold a business meeting followedby cards tonight in Firehouse No.1. The priies in the card partywill be garden tools. Mrs. J. W,Mittuch and Mrs. Fred Koeble willbe the hostesses. Arrangementswill he made for the members ofthe club to attend t h | banquet othe county Republican women inthe Hotel Woodrow Wilson in NewBrunswick May 7.
PRICE THREE CM
BOOST CARTERET BASIS OF BOYS'OPENING HERE TOMORROW
Kids Costone Parade Schedvltd Next Saturday With'Cash Priies Donated By James Lnkach; Scoats To
Be Inspected, Boys To Ron Boronfh Tomorrow"Boost Carteret," will be the theme of the BoyB Wt
program which begins tomorrow afternoon *t 2 o'd$when a boy mayor, boy members of the council and B(of Education will be sworn in. There will be g Kid»*;,tume parade Saturday, May 9, and the merchants of'borough are naked to join in the spirit of the day by
Boy Scout TentsGoUpAtLiebig'sAll Preparation* Made For
3 Troops' Part In'With
Circumstances Alter Case*, Written By Ruth Giorloif,Will Be Acted By Rita Btindon, CamiUa Enot, Doris
ScaUy, William Cot^Uin, John Lapczyntki
mp,ish,
; g ,ocnig; diah, Ralph Leonongelli.
Smoking stand, C. Mulligan; trav-eling set, Mrs. jane (iurka; silver.set, Charles Crane; ooektait set,Stephen Munyak; table, A. Novot-ny; lamp, Miss Anna Petro; teaset, Mrs. Ethel Kay; lamp, StanleyScylag; chair, Mrs. Edward Wif-gus.
Special prize winners were: Cashdivided among Mrs. Joseph Hasek,Mrs. Suyan Kolibas and GabrielKasha; Cash, Miss Alice Kaiser;cocktail shaker, John Subo; cash,John Mayorek; cash, divided amongRev. Quinlan, Rev. Petriek, MissFlorence Mudrak and Mrs. J. A,Berta; sweepstakes winner, JohnSukson of Trenton.
ComingOtSpringDolls Up BoroughScrapers Refurbish Field;
Streets Of The TownAs WPA Helps
Spring bas come to Carteret, notonly to the trees and lawns, and tothe housewives to whom the vernalyrge brings an irresistible desireto air curtains and beat rugs, butto the municipal housekeeperswell. So the Borough is being re-furbished.
Down at the Liebig Field onRoosevelt Avenue the newly ar-rived scraper has been put to workto get the field in condition forbaseball games. Because the Hi 'ffchool field can not be nsetf'tyear, home games of the localschool tiMin will In; played on thoLiubig oval.
Street* Fixed Too'i'ht! scraper lias also been used
:o smooth down many unimproveditreets in the Borough. Sharolnd Longfellow Streets are beingesurfaeed as WPA projects.
A force of street workers is al-o engaged in giving the street,urb ami corner markers and park-ng restriction signs a new coat of
nice, clean, white paint. AltogetherCarteret is well on ita way to get-ting a new appearance. At least,iretty new.
Five students of Carteret HighSchool, coached by Mrs. W. J, Conway, will present "CircumstancesAJter CaseB1' at the Play Festivallield tomorrow afternoon at NewJersey College for Women. Theplay will be given at 2 o'clock atth» Little Theatre on Nichol Ave-nue. Tickets, which are priced ata nominal sum, will be sold at the•door,
Odd Fellows Fete VeteransAt A Celebration Tonight27 Jewel* Will Be Presented
To The Men Who HaveBeen Members 25 Yeara
any lugui., May 8, ill the FalconHall were made by the Holy Fam-ily Girls Tuesday night at a meet
: turned the papea _ .•way from their old place hired to furnish music. It was
I'irum of the people and I voted to offer a half keg of beer1 journalism from a profes- as an award for the organization
business." having the largest number of rep-* • resentatives at the dance. Missat Columbia Uni-
resentatives at the daHelen Konkowkh is chairman of
i h f thHelen Konko s
"live proven that small the committee in charge of the ar-lik« serious, classical mu-!
fuiijjem(!nts und will name her as-"up of judges watched
»n ut a concert of severalyoungsters ranging inHU to fourteen years in
!inch their decision.* » •
v two year-old George•f Astoria. New York,- rir»t impulse on Sunday••aw his new hat fly frominto the icy East River."» a pier and when his
'I i« the water, he wentlU'nt on retrieving It. But
tilt how cold the water••a interest in th« h*t w d1 Help, when cime from
1 '•men who hauled him outhim to a hospital. Mean-liat went dovfititreain.
* * * "H<itre and the Fourth E»-' I't-moan the loss suffered
of Percy Hammond,
aistenta.The club also decided to honor
the mothers of the members onMothers' Day by having a banquetfor them Sunday, May 10 in FalconHall. Mss Irene Beigert is incharge of the banquet arrange-ment!.
At the meeting of CarteretLodge, No. 267, I. 0. O. P., Fridaynight of last week final arrange-ments were made for the big meet-ing to be held tonight in Odd Fel-lows' Hall when twenty-sevenjewels will be presented to mem-bers who have been Odd Kellowstwenty-five years.
The members of the lodge, theirwives and members of Deborah Re-bekah Lodge will be present in ad-dition to visiting delegations fromneighboring lodges and some of theofficers of the Grand Lodge.
History Of St. Joseph'sTo Be Printed Next Week
.NeXt week the C»rteretPress will publish the first In aseries of features about Car-teret institutions. St. Joseph'sKoman Catholic Church is thesubject of this first featurestory. .
Boys Held For RobberiesGet A Hearing On May 8th
May 8 is the probable date forthe appearance of Edward Sino-the ppwifa, 17,JosephS t t
SHUTELLO NAMED HEADOF YOUNG DEMOCRATSPresident Of County Unit
Names Carteret ManAs Chairman
Joseph G. Shutello, Jr., of Em-erson Street, was appoint*] coun-ty chairman of the Younf Demo-iitts of Middlesex Monday night
at a meeting of the county groupn the County Records Building in
New Brunswick. The appointmentwas made by President EdwardJohnson who said Mr. Shutello willbe needed to aasiat him in takingcare of the speakers' bureau andother work of the organization.
There were about 125 persona itttins meeting representng eighteenmunicipalities of Middlesex. Inthe Carteret delegation were James
'hill'ipH, Louis R. Brown, WillianUhouse and Shutello.
FOOD SALETOMORROWSt. Joseph's PTA Plan* Event
In Devercux Store
The P. T. A. of St. Joseph'sSchool will hold a food sale tomor-row beginning at 10 A. M. and con-tinuing until everything is sold, inthe Devere'ux store room next toBarney's IUmy Btse in WashingtonAvenue. Sisters of the faculty ofSt. Joseph's School will be at thestore to receive donations pf food•for the sale or cash. The proceedsof the sale will be used lor charilalile purposes..
Carteret High School is one ofnine schools raking part in the fes-ti*al, each presenting a play Theplay to be given was written by
(Lontinued on page twelve)
Funeral For Ana, 31,F i l l s SI. Elizabeth-Well-Known Athlete Found
Dear] In Bed AfterHeart Attack
The funeral Of Michael Arva, 31,who was found dead in bed ofheart disease Monday morning washeld Wednesday at 0:30 o'clockfrom his hume at 8(1 EdwinStreet, with services in St. Eliza-beth's Roman Catholic Church at10 o'clock. A high mass of requiemwas offered for the repose of theIOUI by Rev. Julius Kisa. The:hurch was filled to the doors dur-ng the service. There were aboutforty cars in the cortege and twoopen cars were used to convey theflowers to the grave in St. James•emetery, Wooqbridfre.
There were twelve bearers, sixfrom the Metal and Thermit Cor-poration plant, where Mr. Arva wasemployed: Stephen Jucob, OttoHlechsmict, William Lynch, Ste-phen Demeter, Louis Demeter andJoseph Slinsky. Also six membersof St. Mary's Society, Branch No.I, of Carteret: .Stephen Suhay, Ste-phen Makay, Frank Kovacs, Wil-liam Fodor, Albert Tomori and[.ouis Mikawla.
Mr. Arva was widely known inCarteret, especially among thosein athletic sports. He was active in
field sports and was one of the>«t skillful bowlers in the bor-
ough. He was married and is sur-vived by hs wife, Helen; a daugh-ter, Goldie; flis parents, Mr. andMrs. John Arva; two brothers, Al-bert and John, and four sisters,Mrs. Michael Fedor, Mrs. Marylluduar, Margaret and Helen Arva,ull of Carteret.
On Trip To New YorkColumbus Pupils, Will Visit
Museum, Stores,Acquarium
The day for which the pupilB ofColumbus School have saved theirpennies since September will ar-rive tomorrow. At exactly 8:16o'clock in the morning, when thebus departs on their long antici-pated trip to New York City thedreams and expectations of thepast eight months will be realized.The buses will go by way of theGeorge Washington Bridge to thiMuseum of Natural History, whenthe morning will be spent. Lunch
Living up to their alogan "BePrepared," the Boy Scouts of Car-teret will usher in Boys Week thisafternoon with all their prepara-tions made in advance no that theirprogram will m o v e forwardsmoothly without a hitch. Whenthe idea of holding Boys Weekvith the Scouts taking an activeiart in the program was first made
several we«k» ago theScouts began to prapara. Woodaa collected and Vundled for theamp fires and for other uses in theirogram. Equipment was over-
hauled and put into good condi-tion. The three troops of the bor-ough wereready for their part inhe program a good ten days ago.
B«flni TodayThe Scouts program begins at 4
'dock this afternoon when theywill set trp tents in the field be-tween the Liebig houses and theBenjamin Moore plant. The tentswill be finished by 6 o'clock. TheScouts will work fast without lossof motion aad complete the Jobwithin schedule. That will work upthe appetite they will display dur-ing the supper hour, 6 to 7. Sijmeof them wlH cook their meals atthe camp.
eon in the museum cafeteriafollowed hy a trip down Fifthnue to see the Empire Stateing and visit to Macy's toy de-partment, the Aquarium, the Sta-tue of Liberty and home throughthe Holland Tunnel. Teachers con-ducting the tour will be Mrs. See-der, Miss Kutcher and Miss Knorra practice teacher from NewarlNormal School, who is doing herpraetiM teaching with Mrs. Seader,
Honor RollThe Columbus School honor ro
of pupils having an average of 85per cent, or above in each subject,is as follows:
Eighth Grade—ftene Hemsel,Irene Buru, Anna Cuprewick, Eliz-
From 7 to 8 there will be a par-
)laying flaga. Seven cashfor the parade have been doso far hy James Lukaeh.businessmen are expected tocontributions of prim forunique and other daniflcstlABilcostumes. Sort* merchantsenter decorated trucks.
From Monday to Thursday twill be registration of thosewish to take part in theThey will be registered on tti* Lfloor of the Borough Hall in
Sponnorlag Condepartment.
Program TomorrowThe Boys Week program ton
row afternoon will begin with :spection of the Boy ScootIn Lieblg*! field after the boyclals have been sworn in bymayor at 2 P. M. The three Iof the borough, Troop 82Scoutmaster Carroll B r i t t o ITroop 87 under Scoutmasterold Cromwell, Troop 84Scoutmaater Joseph Comb,,tha ''lib psrk under Robert Iriss and James Burns, will bethe field. The Scout program ,
escribed in another column.B07 Judfs
On Monday there will be ajudge In court. At 8 P. M. a Imayor and council of boys will int the regular council meetlnWednesday a boy tax collector Iboy assessor will assume their <ties at the borough hail.
The boys elected to the BoahT]of Education will sit at the meet-"ing of tha regular board May I tgand the Board of Health will merttwith boy officials May 14.
Boy OflkUU EUet«l 'The boy officials were elected I
a regular election held among I'school pupils this waek. The i
Walter toxe Wins Race,Sets Record For Wheelmen
The Alpine Wheelmen "of Car-teret held their second race onApril 25, 1980. It was a ten -mile
abeth Gombos, Aline Lasner, IreneFedlam, Russell King, StanleyTokarchuck, Helen Fistis, HelenJeneji, Emma Kish, Cecelia Sos-nowski, Charles Sokled, Joseph Tel-»poaki, Irene Gerzanich, GladysKchwarta, Silvia Price.
Seventh Grade—Gazelln Oil-bak, Pauline Dombrowska, HaroldGross, Frances Silva, Ethel Bo-dak, Lenore Hopp, George Matey,Helen Breza, Elizabeth Htinich,Helen Kielmun, Michael Capik,Margaret Jupin, John Giulmested,Beatrce Bodnar, Rose Virag, Jan-ice Wantoch, Faith Wilgus, Ste-
(Continucd on page twelve)
V. F. W. MAKES PLANFORMEMORIALPARADEPost Willie Sell Pop-
pies; Delay NamingDelegates
At a meeting of Star LandingPost, No. 231-1, Veterans of For-eign Wars, Tuesday night, planswere made for the post to take partin the Memorial Day program. Thepost members will inarch in theparade and will have a float in it.
The committee in charge of thecard party held recently in the postheadquarters in l.«ffei-tn Street pre-sented a report showing the ven-ture was a financial success.
•It was decided to defer the nam-ing of delegates to tho State Con-vention of Hit V. I'1. W. in Atlantic
i II paced handicap race,•mled in this oru
Walter. FoxuLeslie Van PeltAlfred FenskeJack HumphriesWalter Van Pelt
The race
HandicapScratch
7 minutes5 minutes7 minutes2 minutes
Whatb 'JMW7 And How Can ItBest Be Administered In Crisis?
11"''«ld Tribune. In oT_..>>e work he loved and"''« engaged in Mr. Ham-
"" wife and so; " ' "1 *H week!
KI,,.,, l"-.»«4«l»p.1
KMI ;»'»«, wa»111 I Hit.
' "Hi l ly.
" " " • H f cl l l U U
I1 Ik
earance of Edward, of 27 Lelck Avenue, and
Joseph Bodnar, lfl, of b FitchStreet, before the Uuiou CountyGrand Jury, ...
The boya were wrealud in. w«w<-flrid while engaged in robbing ahome there, and confeased toeleven other burglaries, accordinsrto « statement from a• meinber olthe Sinowit* family. The Wertfleldpolice aatd f^e confession WM of «much higher number. Last year
Tb* (*U«wi»« arikU is re-priaUd from th . New«rW Sun-day C.1I of lait Sunday. Ack-nowl»gem«nt ii made i^,!
lhmi
publication for «» >nt«ll(»*BJcpniUoratloa of & \M
ne«bT»gto pin entrance to a room
qUMtlon.
Everybody is talking aboutrelief. What is relief?• ' jt is providing food sum-cient to sustain strength,clothing enough to avoid
the outdoor element*.
m»ke the effort to do it for them-selves. For suoh persons societyhas provided a» part of ita dutiesregular means of aid, paid forjointly by more fortunate persona.
Education, health, the uruUc-tion of life and limb, general pub-lic safety and safeguards againstwrongs are part of the general,customary service of the state andare not part of relief.
In time* suoh as we havo beenhaving, when unemployment hasmade many millions unable to pro-vide th«m*elv«a with tha three et-
M thlnm <rf tfet'ooa, doth-and sheW-wtokh Is an indi-
Douglas Humphries 10 minutesCharles Brady, . 8 minutedWalter Foxe was the winner of
the race with the time of'34:10 2-6setting a new Tecord for the ten-mile course,
City until the next meeting. Theofficers of the post will sell poppieson May 23. They are: Roy Dunn,Ernest Burrows, Stephen Straw,Andrew Sivon, Frank Hlub, FrankLaRocco, Charles Walling, GeorgeKimbach, William Bishop und JoinModzuleaky.
A new radio bus been installedin the post headquarters and wastried out, giving satisfaction at themeetintft.
ade of Scouts through tha principalstreets of the borough. Prom 8 to9 P. M. will be the camp fire hourwith some form of entertainment.Those of the, Scouts who are tomake it an overnight camp will goto bed oh the ftelfl and the oth«»will go home.
UD EarlyAll hands will be up and on the
job tomorrow morning with the 8o'clock bugle and a' flag raisingceremony will be held. From 7 tos will be breakfast hour. AfUr thatthe 3coati will'be busy with var-ious Scout activities until tioonwhen the boya will cook their lunchon the field. All cooking equipmentmust be stowed away in kits by
Continued on page twelve
SCOUT BOARD PASSE.9B0YSF0RPMM0T10NBadges Will Be Awarded
At Court Of HonorOn May 28
Nine Boy Scouts, seven membersof Troop No. 82 connected withthe l'resbyterian Church and twonembers of Troop 87 of St. Mark'sipiscopal diurch, were passed for
promotion at a meeting of theBoard of Review here laBt weekirid will appear before the Courtif Honor in the Presbyterian!hurch May 28 when badges will
be awarded. * Two other CarteretScouts will appejar before theHoard of Review in Iselin May 27and if passed will be intime foriwards at the Court of Honor theollowing night.|
The scouts who were passed byJie Board of Review last week andthe awards they will receive are:Herbert Van Pelt, first cluss scout;Frank Hodroski, first class scoutand merit badges for painting, car-pentry and handicraft. Both thesescouts are members of Troop 87.
From Troop 82: William Muller,Continued on page twelve
SCHOOL GIVES PARTYBrotherhood Of Israel Af-
fair Ha» 40 Table* In Play
There were forty tables iu playWednesday night at the card partyheld in the Lutheran Hall under the
dates were selected from amoBSeniors who have pasting uvera
Continued on page iwcht
Map Primary TacticsKovacs Addmiei Mee_H
Of Election Workers j
auspices of the Hebrew School ofthe Brotherhood of Israel. HarryChudosh who wan chairman of thecommittee in charge said the partywas u financial success. WilliamDonnelly won one of the specialprizes, a leather coat. JosephBlaukopf won the door prize, apotteil plant donated by JuliusKloss. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Feathd lad, With Friends'Camp Out'On Garage Roof
A policeman found threeyouths of high school age ly-ing an top uf. a. garHgu luuone night this week. When heinvestigated he was told one ofthe youths had hit a youngerbrother and w»e afraid to gohume because he feared hisfather would punish him. Theothers were keeping him com-pany. The officer sent themall to their homes.
Democratic Women SetParty DtUPor May 14
Democratic Followers Of CoughtinPonder Perplexing Primary Puzzle
Same local Democrats are facedby a difficult problem in the com-ing primary election: They want tovoU iwe th* oiuulidatw of one orthe other of the warring Democra-tic organittttiois; they want to askfor a Democratic ballot, but morethan all else they want to vote forJohn MeOvnuell o-f Tort Euadliig,who itt the choice of the Union forSocial Justice for Congress. Andto do that they havu to auk for aRepublican ballot and forego tak-ing a hand in the Democratic pri-
mary co:ntest.To add to the difficulty there is
the election law which requires oneit two years before, changing
« 3 * * ! i a 8 S f 3
r'thelfrom
Thbeaafccratie.i
scheduled to Democratic
will bw governed to some extent atleast by the number of Democratswho are also members of the Unionor in sympathy with the doctrinesof Rev. Pr. Charles K. Coughlin.
At a meeting of the CarteretUnit of the Union for Social Jus-tkv Monday night most of the timewas taken up with study and dis-cussion of primary elections andhow to get out the independentvote in support of John McDonnell.Informative talks on the primaryelection law were given by JohnSchein and Attorney Samuel Kap-lan. It waa stated that local sta-tistics show only about twenty
t f th tatod t f
A lively meeting of connty conwmittee men and women, membersof the election boards and worker*of the Gtneral Democratic Organi-zation was held Monday night inthe office of Charles A' Conrad and ,later when the crowd could not beaccommodated, it was moved to theoffice of the Carteret Building andLoan Association, Plans for th«ampaign in the primary fight wew
discussed, especially In regard togetting out the vote of those be-lieved to be friendly to the groupas opposed to the Carteret Demo-cratlc Organization, Inc.
John E. Donahue presided. Theywere talke by Louis T. Kavae*, „*-candidate for nomination formayor- Edward Dolan and JohnLeshick, candidates for council} ~Louis R. Brown, Albert Lehrer, for-mer Councilman Charles A. Con- -rad, James Barry, Matthias Beigert "and Joseph Lloyd. »
Leaders of the group in the See-.11 d and Ffth Districts made plans '
for a card party to be held May Iin Firehouse No. 2.
While the General Organizationworkers were meeting on the hilltho executive board and countycommitteemen and women togetherwith the candidates of the incor?porated group met in Falconand discussed plans for theirmary campaign. Detailswent on at the meetng weremade public.
Delegates Are ChosenFor Foresters' Session
Eight delegates to the For•_.,,,Convention May 17 in Hobokwere elected Tuesday nighf | i <meeting of Court Carteret, No<'*"Foresters of America, in the a_foresters' Club in Carteret Air.inn'. They are: Joseph SariUlo, «iWilliam F. Lawlor, Jpnn HenJoseph G. Shuteljo, Jr., HaHock, Edwn S. Quinn, John S. 'bricht and George Kurtz.
Arrangements were made fqcard party to be held in theMay 20. In charge are G<Kurtz, William P. Lawlor, JoMG. Shutello, Jr., John S. OtbvW.,Joseph Sarzillo and John Heregiiir'jIDonors Of School PruShould Talk With Fa
Arrangements are beingby the high school faculty for iannual distribution of prizes ;excellence in study and other,'taiiiineiita at graduation time, iorganization or individual plantto establish i I t "p
faculty to geC
a prize If rto get intouch^h a u y to get in touch
|lrs. Conwjy »B soon as possil»rder the new prite may beeluded in the list.
nlja con
cent- of theborough t 'eleoUon*.
twntyvote of
No Date Set For TriMOf Moroney For Assault
No date has y«t been nfor the trial of Joseph Mfor the trial of Joseph I
gey of 6 RooMvalt Avpleaded not guilty
of atrocious
tat
;.&&• TWOWat
in Europr Ahead of Man
at
T h e gnnnp cnr i fur Imrk Into nnB i>r'"l'W nf fnnrt n«iliiTfi l l w n a n l r e m l yIn I ' n r i i p n l i c f n r o m n n
W l i n e «l(iii(r. HIMI w l l h i t i r ] i n < n l h | r( B I M p t l o n of I l in niTriiiiMii l i en , ivn«Jtrobnlilv \\\o Hrsi bird iioniomIr-ntti. Four Ihnusi<••> \••inv iij;" II
jWM r w i n i e i l nn « KHITM Mrd In
j f cyRf , Hwnzli 1n fin fur n« Hint| I U y trnnslnte Inld irlliui" II muKlfe« rtl«c«untf<1 by tin' fni-t Hint the
| 8 t y p " n n > < ''nrlv inrwlc It n hnhittO m u l t i p l y l l i i ' l r •>i<• • • k liy i n r r i M4 In H | M V I I » I . ' I ' t i iTo n r o rp f i ' r -OT t n g r i ' s i ' In s m i i e n f t h o S n n -S k r l t w r l t l n c s . i n d In t h o ton i t i pOf I . n t n r ( l^iirrM of i i r c s t ' nrp In-
nni•»(iir Hie i l c n n i l l n i i K ,T h e i t n tn i i i iB m n i h l i T w l K 1 " " " 1 H T
n u r n n l . d i ' l l i i i c v . n m l p j i n r n w i nn o m h r nf thi> hlnls wi-rf plnrwl In|ieng nml fnn-lhlv fiittenpil li'y rrnm-
It w:m jipilnilily Kftme ofe gcosp u-liimr Innd nlnrm "Hived
019 Rnmun ni|>llnl from I lie nttnekOt the (innlH In HIP Fourth century,
• • « . a • ,
• ' , In Pllny'R (Imp. gwnt1 Hi>ri> drlvpnF.iir»pi* In flocks from
yrancp nml IMniuin Intii Hfily. AndPliny Rililn, "McssuJInus Cotta, the
*ion of Mi'ssnla, the nrntnr, dlncov-•red the melliM nf conlclnn theweha of the (rouse's feet, and f16*1 IIR Ihcin In siii.'il) (Ushps
rucks" rnnih* "
T I I P CeltB lire reputed to haveInrjipst ri'sponslliltlly for pop-
the (remap; from them the^ o Ipiimed ttie nrt of fillingCBSlllons mid iiiiittroRHi'.s wllh the
.., feather!) to m.iko Insurious coudieg .
An*rickni Oou Preferred T HBefore the Revolution Americana
w much taa u tha Kngllih,Americans drink more coffeet**«. this habit being formedat that time.
Difference In CocLroacheiThe Australian cockroach closely
retembles the American cockroach,but possesses a brighter yellow bandon the prothorax, and a yellow dasb•n the upper wings.
U I M Namei IdenticalMichigan has- 91 "Long" lafcet,
•0 "Twin" lakes iiml 59 " R A d "lakes.
At De Pew, N. Y., Mrs. MargaretMetzger, who teaches home econ-omjcH to nineteen men and boys,tome of them aspirants to places ascooks in C. C C. campa, stated that
, Inen make better cooks than wo-men because they bring a scientificViewpoint to their work.
M0NEY&
OLD CAR
Let Your NextPermanent Be a
SUPERCURLINESTEAM WAVEand Note the Difference!
DESPITE TRIAL LAG,TONY ZULLO'S STARVIEWED IN ECLIPSEVernillo Pool Room Closes
After Long FightFor License
WINNERS ARE UNPAIDAlthough no new date has
yet been sot for his thrio1-pnHtponed defence against acharge arising from a slayingin Port Rending last Fall, thestar governing the highlypublicized activities of Tony Zullnseem»d definitely in eclipno thismorning.
Months ago, sundry informed cir-cles of the township were, not onlyagog but thrown practically inl-oa case of the jitters by the newsthat Zullo was actively interestedin securing n pool-room license fora Port Rending house owned liy hismother. The applicant, on theecord, was James Vernillo but
,'ullo's pronounced interest in thelicense stirred the Municipal Build-ing as it, has not been fluttered formany a year.
He Got The Liceni*Prolonged investigation of the
sltuatkm by police i evented doproper rermon why Mr. Vernilln, nhifrhly-rcspected citizen, should notjfet the license. He WHS informed,however, that neither Rambling norits conversion into headquarter!)for the "number" racket would betolerated. Chief of Police JamesA. Walsh and Detective CaptainGeorge E. Keating guaranteed, infact, that they would be person-ally responsible for the zealousnesg
with which Mr. Vemtlio followedpolice instructions to tiia extrtcaution in conducting hit hu«in«n.
This week, th* pool room clo««d.BnnineM, police laid, had been
scant bill t had nil of it liecnvery, very legal. Authorities werepositive thnt had anyone PVPU at,-tempted to use the place ns hpad-qunrtprft for nny /rambling whnlBoever, a riild would have developedinnrtirally j n s mutter of mtnut.es.
No P.y-OffMcnnwhile, ugly stories of a
player who "hit" the number gamewithin the last fortnight Bnd failedto be paid off floated among the
pt t roni of th* gam*. Tlwjr dnpilCited similar i t o r i n tonu Bao»th*•2o of n gambler who v u not paidlifter he drew a winning tfcktt in» lottery ennducted out of PkMric.
And stories of th«t kind, It Wasagreed, will blight anv operator'sbusiness in "the number*" f« t*rthan either police or an «pld«mi(of mnlnrin.
Citr> OfficiIndlnnanolis' ofllcliil seal wt«
adopted by the <lty ootinotl June 7,1847, Thfi conncllmen ebon aneagle perched npon a globe With n«cale In Ills beak.
Maplewood h*« ptarUd the portcard ipy system originated in aSouthwMt rit.y Bome lime ago. Abody of automobile vigilantes have(ieen given numbers for their offi-cial designation*, and they will re-port, by postcards bearing thesenumbers, all traffic violations theyobserve. The chief of police ofthis Essex nuburfiRn community isheartily in ncrord with the plan,arhndnli'il for regular orgnnir.nlinn Monday night.
N"w« of All Carteret Borough Inthe Press, the moit widely
read Piper in Carteret
PETERGREINER BEGINS HIS mAS BAR3ER - WTTHJORROWED TOOLS!Bold Young Thieves Raid Shop Of Oldest Businessman
In Town And He Discovers He's "ForgottenHow To U«e TheOMHand-Clipper»!
of hl"
Giant Three-Vnit Show At Rahway Theatre Features'Wife Versus Secretary', 'Lone Wolf Returns', Marxes
Another giant three unit showwill be the attraction at the Rail-way theatre, Rahway, this week-end. Heading the lint is "Wife ver-
sus Secretary" starring ClarkCable. Myrna f,oy and Jean Har-low. The story deals with the prob-lem of a millionaire husband who
finds himself caught between theloves nf two women.
The second big feature in an nilstar mystery picture "The LoneWolf Returns" wth Melvyn Doug-Ins and (iail Patrick. "Horsefeath-ers" starring the Marx Brothers ifthn Saturday night request fea-ture.
EMPIRE IN RAHWAY BOOKS ZELDA. MYSTIC,FOR 6 DAYS NEXT WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY
Ucpalnbecome mor*
costly. It low* Intraile-in value.
TRADE IT IN FORA leitet USED CARWe have late model Ford V-8'sand other popular makes atprices that will BurpriBe you2'Day money-back guarantee.Ewy terms through UCG.
DORSEY MOTORS, INC.Maple & Fayette Sti.,
Perth Amboy, N. J.Phone P. A. 4-3500
B» not bake the hair,tttly STEAMS the hair
(o toft flowing wavesi ringlet end* that last.
Guaranteed.
ie SupercurlineiWavu Given
|Exclusively inifPerth Anibfty at
.PKRTHAMIiOY4-1110 FOH
APPOINTMEN1
KAERSiuty Salon
^ 6 2 Madiion Ave. ,Mm.
Princess Zelda
The great mystic, Princess Zel-da will be the stage attraction atthe Empire theatre, Rahway, forsix days sturtinp Monday. Consid-ered the mental marvel of the age,she knows all and tells all; solves
problems of any nature. A specialladies' matinee will be held onThursday at which time a palmanalysis chart will be given freeto every woman in the audience.Two biff hiU, "Frisco Waterfront"and "The Fig-hting Coward" urethe screen attractions.
r Tel.7-1250 RAHWAY THEATRE
LEON'S
3 1 S T ANNIVERSARY SALEFeaturing Quality Furnitureat Great Reductions
Jtr««t, A T .Bouden ofpolice h r i
5'D0WH.Upte 18months !o>
Future Deli wry AccountNO DEPOSIT REQUIRED
Tel.7-1250
GIANT 3-UNIT SHOW
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
Clark GableMyrna Loy
Jean HarlowIN
*i
WIFEVERSUS
NEW -, ^ p .
M P,1R E—THEATREV-
TODAY and2—BIG
Rod LaRocqueMarian Nixon
IN
"THE
. DRAGNET"
-RAH. 7-2370—
TOMORROWHITS—2
CHARLES
BICKFORDIN
"RED WAGON"With
RAQUEL TORRES
SECRETARY f
LONE WCLfSTARRING
MELVIN DOUGLASGAIL PATRICK
SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTIONIn Adtfitioa To Our Regular Progr.m
STARTINGMONDAY
— IN PERSON —ON THE STAGE
6 DAYSPRINCESS
ZELDA
Today, Peter (irei.H'r erlebratoM the 1 _.Iftieth year of business in Woodbridge-and ho 11 have touse borrowed barbers'tools to doit!
Wednesday night, hold young thieves raided the shopat 16 Green Street where the dean of the township « busi-
men has been cutting hair and flhJiving^s_«>irJ4
Hut. then—he Is known as 'Top'o all the children of the neighbor-
hood. And there are families inWoodhrid(ffl to whom he has Beenbarber for five Kenerationsl
Otherwise, the week was remnrkably free from petty thievery.Youngsters, the National Fire-proofing Company in Kcnnbny smdare damaging clay banks there anrmilk was stolen from the home othe Rev. E. H. Devnnny on Iwrway Avenue. Rut. a purse lost b.Mrs. William Turner of 375 Avene
SHE
MARXBROS.
REQUEST FEA1
SATURDAY NI
THE MENTAL MARVEL OF THE AGE!
SUN. - MON. - TUES.ONTfcESCREEN
2 —BIG HITS ^ - 2H.l.a TWELVETREES"! "tJIWLOW
BENLYONin I JACK LA RUE"FRISCO 1 • DOROTHY TREE i*
WATERFRONT" 1 "BRIDGE OF SIGHS"
years. They carried off scissora,mznrs, combs, clippers, cigars andisrarettcs in a brazen 9 o'clock en-
>ry, while the street nearby stillwas occupied by playinft children.
Mr. Grpiner waa not visibly per--urlied thoii(tU hi! admitted with »•huckld ypstcrday that he bad "for-rottcn" how to use his nld hand-•lippors nftpr Ifi ypnrs' use of the'leclric tnnl. All that will he mend-'(I today, be promised, as he mennsci nci|iiirr another machine in the
iirm confidence of many more pro-ductive years in the business frnmwhich hi> hn.s never lost a day
ough illneRB. -Robh«d 25 Ysan Ago
And the marauders timed theirhaul nicely. It wns almost exactly>:> years RRO that, Mr. Hreiner was• nlilied fnr Hie firni nnd only otherime. The principal loss that night,lie recalls, wns a highly-prized newpair of shoes Bnd new suit recentlynci|iiire<l by his young foster son,"Angle," now of course Mayor Au-t;ust V. Clreiner.
In November, tho older CJreinerwill celebrate hia golden weddinganniversary. He observed his.7lstbirthday in February. He himselfwns one of 10 children in an Alsa-tian family. Since their marriage,Mr. (ireiner and hia wife have rear-ed nine children — three boys andsix girls— all the offspring of rela-tives.
Llcarlc* Long I* UwLicorice haa long been us,,,i
mart the tut t of nanwatlnK m,clnea.
W 1 T « OB Eqnal Footln,Under the Swedish mnrrljik-, ,
wives are placed on an equnt flhing vlth husbands.
Guard Your Eyesight!VISIT OUR OPTICAL DF.ri
Export Optical Sortie*EYEGLASSES ON CREDIT
Dr. M. Roodmu-g, OptontMri.i96 Smith St., P«rlh AmUv
DR. CHAS. SAM, Optomctriii1 1 1 Bro»d St. EL1ZABKTH
HEADQUARTERS FOR
Philco RadiosFor Authorized Philco Service
Call Elizabeth 2-8900
Jersey State Electric Co., Inc.Fixture* Appliance* — Gift* — Radio* & Service
BROAD ST., at Flizabeth Avenue ElizabethOpp. Courthouse Tel. EL. 2-8900
IFYou are in the market for either asuit, topcoat, tuxedo, sport coat,slacks, etc.
ANDYou are l oo lw for a real clothing
WHEREThousands of garments are on dis-play at all times -- making your"Pickin'" easy
WHENThis idea strikes you -- follow yoururge to get Better Clothing at a tre-mendous saving--by buying "BONDCLOTHES" Direct from the Factoryat Factory Prices.
WHYBecause tio store overhead enable*us 6 pass this saving on to you.
CONSULT PRINCESS ZELDA ABOUT YOUR PROBLEMS.SHE WILL jAJWI&E YOU IN ALL YOUR QUESTIONS.
SUITS $201?With 2 Trousers
| _ AOQEP EVENTSE»«rr
Frl. N i l . "Race
SPECIALLADIES'
MATINEE•Mi '
COMPANY, Iii«,REMSEN AVBWUEi AT HOWARD ST.,
QlmlMMA.lt>md Thur«ky, 7 to 8
i ",
H.1
priseMrs. _
L Arrange Celebra-m
c Of Her Birthday In
^ lames Halllin,7y was given in
,,,,,1 Friday night InM ' % n r y Mistay. of, „, hy her friends", ... M, Port.h Amboy.
' wth
«yi, Mr. and Mrs. Benit- Irain Ofur*, Mr. and Mrs. John IISzaniyi, Mr. and Mm, John Palan * "czak, all of Carteret.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gregus, Mr.and Mn. George Kovaes, Mr. andMrs. John Pastrlck and Mr. andMm. Stephen Honulick and dauter, Lillian, all of Perth Amboy.
Mr. and Mrs. John Barney, Mr.and Mm. John Meaicin, Mr. andMrs. Andrew Henyecy, Mr. andMrs. John Kovacn, Mr. and Mrs.James Kaklar and Mr. and Mrs.Joseph DanceR of Woodbridije; Mr.and Mm. Frank Katko of Avenel
minivpranry,,,1 refreshments.
i t
There
Kin« Mr. and Mr*.•,„.,,„, Mr. and Mrs.
.;,,, Mr. and Mrs. John,n,l Mrs. Stephen Fab
I M l , .John Santon, Mr.\l, .s,,mlor FabUn andvl, ,l!1(l Mrs. Neil C » t -
i \ | , , Alexander Per-,,,l Mrs M. Kuhn, Mr.
, , , , ] „ Si«t»yi, Mr. and11,..,i( Mr and Mrs. John
,,,,1 Mm. John Bertraw,M, ^t.nphen Bodak, Mr., ,,,,M Kady, Mr. and Mr«| l | i ; | l V n n d daughter, Mr
; Teleposkl, Mr.rt M d
,.,,1,,-n
T e l e p ,Unart, Mr. and
M d
$1,000 Bail Set For EachPending Hearing
TonightArnold Miller of Bl Wedgwood
Avenue, Woodbridge, an employeof the U. 8. Metal* Refininjc Com-pany reported to the police Satur-day at 1 A. M. that when he quit' M r " " I M r R Rn'»'1"«l Coned-
k d ^ ^ ^ S Z ^ ^ l
i'nlinkns, Mr. and,, I iikntoa, Mr. and MM.,, .„••! Mr. and Mm. Jos-Mr and Mrs. Charles';t..phen Babiajak.\l,s John Suto and
Mr and Mrs. Michael,,,,1 Mrs. Frank Tdth,
,'. Stephen Soltesz, Mr.,i,,ni Horl, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. «nd Mrs. Alex-..]y, Mr. and Mrs. Mich-
M, and Mrs. MichaelMr nnd Mrs. John,,,l Mrs. Stephen Toth,
,l', ; John Balcsar, Mrs.,il, Mini son, Miss Mar-
Miss Bertha Korop-,.,,1 Mrs, John Kondaa,, John Sotak, Mr. and
Zimmermans Feted BySynagogue AuxiliarySilver Service Among Gifts
Marking Twenty-FiveYean Marriage
The silver wedding anniversaryof Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Zimmer-man of LonirfeMow Street was celebraled Saturday ni|fht at a dinneiparty (riven by the Ladies' Auxili-ary of the Brotherhood of IsraelCongregation. The couple werpresented many jrifU, includingsilver service from the organiza-tion. Dinner was followed hy musiand card games.
Those present were aa follows:Mr. and Mrs. Sam Berg, Mrs. DoraJacoby, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fish-er, Rabbi Solomon, Mr. and Mrs.Samuel Wexler, Mrs. David Ulman,Mrs. Isadore Brown, Mr, and Mrs.Morris Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. AaronRabinowita, Samuel Brown, Mr.and Mrs. David Venonk, Mr andMrs. Isadore Mausner, Mrs. HenryBerson, Mrs. William Brown, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Blaukopf and Mrs.M. Salow.
Mrs. Simeon Mentcher of Car-teret, Mr. and Mrs. P. Granick, Mr.and Mrs. David Wiell, Mrs. C.Granick and Mrs. F. Millman, allof Newark.
Thi marriaK* of Ml*a A M U M«-ravek, daughter of Mr, and Mn.Fiorian Morarek, of 11 WarrmStreet, to John Pavloreik, also ofWarren Street, took place Satur-day morning. Rev. A. J. Sakson,pastor of the Sacred Heart Church,performed the ceremony at th«church. Afterward them was a re-ception for fifty guests at the homeof the bride.
Mliof Mr. and
qwork and went to the company. ^ ^ ^ S Z ^ ^ lparking 5 p M e his oar was missing, 'white hat and accessories, and aHe described the machine to thepolice.
Saturday afternoon at 1 o'clockCaptain J. J. Dowling and Patrol-man John Harrlgan arrested Ste-phen Greek, 21, of 40 MercerStreet and Walter Orenciak, 18,of 31 Bergen Street for having thestolen car in their possession.
They were held in $1,000 eachfor a hearing Mondny night butthe rase and nil other cases ncheduled for Monday night in policecourt were postponed to tonight,(ireck and Orenczak obtained bailand were released.
Harry Collin» of lUhway, whooperated n motion picture machinein a local theatre, went to theSlovak Hall Saturday night toWRtch a bowling match, leaving hiscar parked in Wheeler Avenue.When he came out the car wasgone and be reported the lnss tothe police who found the machineSunday night in Lincoln Avenue.It was towed to headquarters andlocked up in a garage until Mon-day when fingerprints were taken
the door.
Founded MobiUMobile wns founded by Ibervllle
and Rlenvllle at the beginning ofthe Eighteenth centurj as the firstcapital of the Louisiana province,before the colonization was movedto New Orleans.
corsage of tea roses. The couplewill make their home with Mr. andMrs. Moravak.
DEffarat Fluaa From PealI'eat, a carbonaceooa deposit oc-
curring principally In iwampi aadmarshy places, Rives an entirelydifferent flame from wood.
TIM Powar of LaraNo wonder that love Is so great
a power, coutderlng that bj lot*the. world's life Ii transmitted fromgeneration to federation.
NEW WtALTH FROM SOIL
New wealth whlcn comes from thesoil Is of special Interest to those towhom fulls th« responsibility olmaintaining our credit structure.
Unless agrlrultnre la successfulfarm horrowers cannot ultimatelysucceed, neither can the hanks theyserve. Foreclosure sales are not alound imtilK For Rood firming orgood banking. Bankers, thereforeare. as much Interested In the permanenl success of th« agriculturalIndustry as are the farmers, wh«ther the deposits come directly fromfarm patrons, or Itdirectly throughthe ordinary channels of business.—D. H. Otis. Director of Agriculture,American Bankers Association.
MBit Ceil Kernan SpeabAt Unit's InternatMnal
Relations NightMiss Ceil Kernan of Union, who
traveled completely around theglobe in 1934. traveled all overCentral Europe the previous year,ind saw nit the interesting placesin Norway and Sweden last year,t H the speaker Monday night at• meeting of the Junior Woman'*Club. It was International Rela-tions Night with Mint Helen Nie-
ns hostess. The speaker toldintlmiately of conditions in manynaUnriH.
Tfc. W«tMIn her globe-circling trip in 1934
MJ«* Kernan told of crossing theUnited States to San Franciscowhere she sailtd to the Hawaiianbunds, to Japan and the DutchB u t Indies in Malaysia, throughtha Red Sen and Suez. Then atrip through Egypt and stops atintjei idling points alone the Medi-Wranian Sea with a final atop- atGibraltar before sailing back toN»W York.
On her trip to the ScandinavianPeninsula she made a careful atndyof the countries and the people andhe? observations enabled her tog|Te a vivid picture of life therefarsonal experiences, some thrilling and others amusing, were re-I I M by the speaker. Sne was presented with a corsage bouquet.
CtMJni BanquetThe club made preliminary ar
rangements for the banquet tomark the clone of the season. Iprobably will be held in the Riverview in Rahway, June 8. The nexmeeting will be held May 11 in th
Mn. Michael Man-chutak of 127 I-ongf*llow Streetwill become the bride of FrankSkiba, son of Mr. and Mn. StephenSkiba of Edgar Street, Sunday.The ceremony will be performedat St. Eliiabeth's Roman CatholicChurch by the pastor, Rev. JuliusKiss and will he followed" by a re-ception.
Oak to be-ware of the traffic lights In theQuaker City, which is now expart-mentlng with It* dfnali. Th« r»-•ult is said to be confusing. Oneworry to motorUU U that on NorthBroad Street and on th« Parkwaythe time of the overlapping grten-amber signal haa b«en cat to fiveseconds, and motortsti art expect-e<t to stop when tha grMn-ambercombination hi shown if they are
WftjMlntfcattm a "to" Imi i
g yBorough Hall. Mian Helen Struthers will be hostess. Miss MarjFilosa, president of the club, wilrepresent it at the state convention in Atlantic City the week be-ginning May 10.
Members present at the meetini
Week In Review
ehanye on ahon notiea.And w« thoach th«
had til the worry nowaday*I
The 107th year of eontinfiexistence la being olSprint by RutrtnSchool This is tha »Kond oMaehtol In New Jersey,dated only by Nrwa:
Cyrano is back on Broadway.This means Walter Hampden ha*again arrived in New York to playhis most famous role, that of Cy-an o de Bergerac" in which hisareer dates back to 1923.
• • •
WPA writers on the New JerseyHate Guide Book call attention toAwnside—the only all-Negro bor-jugh in the state, and one, of twoin the entire United States, as be-ing worthy of visitor's attention.In 1R40 Ralph Smith of Haddon-ield, a Quaker with an antipathyo slavery, started the communityis a haven for runaway black men,bought a tract near Camden andsold lots at small cost to escaped
chattels." Originally the commun-ity was called Free Haven, thenSnow Hill and finally by its pres-ent designation. The census re-
oids 1,224 Negroes and 156 whitepersona. They live peaceably andwhen the Negroes offered the whitepopulation representation on theBoard of Education and Borough;ouncil the white men said: "The
Negroes have managed the com-
DRY COLD FUR ST0RAG1,-\
Monday night were: Mrs. WilliamThorn, Mrs. Joseph Algowine, Mrs.Frank I. Bareford, Jr., Mrs. RobertGraeme, Mrs. Edward T. Smith,the Misses Mary Filosa, GenevieveLe Van, Gladys Huber, FrancesSarzillo, Phoebe Conran, Ann Lcw-andowski, Ann Proskura, HelenJurick, Wanda Knorr, Helen Nie-mic and Elsie Schuek.
I, Am
eaa ba iaf* aga ia^. . . ai*ta< . . . I. . . tkaft. la <•taraga vaalta jm ' l t a j r a iFURSa. AJil.a^a*tlialaflkai — kea«.'U» —bat thaahad laaai la kar "•»A*r llaad" cloMt •maay etharara ataUag ilia taiat,mi (take.
HERE'S WHAT YOU GETFOR YOUR 2% OF VALUATION1. Modern np-to-data vcnlU 5. Air-aretiara slaaalag2. In frigid, below framing «• Complala proNjIloa agaia«t
lamparalar*Each arlicl* hang iUnder coniUnt lupartritlon
7. Prvnai free e«ll a
A. Greenhouse. Inc.Phone P. A. 4-1346
SMITH at McCLElIAN PERTH AMBOY
STORE CLOSED TODAY PREPARING FOR PERTH AMBOY'S
GREATEST BARGAIN EVENT! DOORS OPEN TOMORROW - - 9 A. M.
SMITH ATMADISONPERTH AMBOY
:i
dc-^ . l i u a o t e r 15 in-tucatcd by a suitablesign above or preceding ih d
•$TH€STOftY
^CONCERNING ITS SERVICE1220-3
RNUNION
J. C. WILLIVIR
SIONSDL - DM Lctui
NM - Nlsht M M U I
NL-NlihiU«w
LC-D.ftrr.dC.bl,
NLT-C*bUNl»htUit«
Ship R«dlo»nm
filing timeaa shown la tbo dulo lin. on fuU-rtto tele^mm. and day Irttem, md the Um.ot nctipt mdctimtiOB u thoma cm tU mea««n. U STANDARD TIMK.
NBC4 84 NL^PHILADELPHIA PENN APR 2 6•i
W I L L I A M S DEPT STORE:
MINUTES IN TRANSIT
WE BOUGHT THE ENTIRE STOCKOF J. BAREN STORE, PHILADELPHIA, PENNA.
25,000
H A V E J U S T P U R C H A S E D F O R C A S H E N T I R E S T O C K OF J B A R E N TWO
S I X T Y S I X S O U T H F I F T H S T R E E T P H I L A D E L P H I A PENM S T O P
P R E P A R E AT ONCE T O P L A C E E N T I R E S T O C K ON S A L E . A T P R I C E S
T H A T W I L L I N S U R E I M M E D I A T E C L E A R A N C E S T O P S U B S T I T U T E AND
R E D U C E P R I C E S ON R E G U L A R S T O C K WHERE L O T S ARE I N C O M P L E T E j
S T O P T H I S IS Y p U R B I G C H A N C E TO G I \>E P E R T H A r V B O Y
S Q W E 1 H N G T H E Y H A V E N E V E R S E E N B E F O R E S T O P H E S I T A T E AT
N O T H I N G TO S E L L T H I S S T O C K I N T E N DAYS F O R W I T H T H E S E
" • S H I P M E N T S Y O U R S 1 0 R E W I L L BE O V E R L O A D E D W I T H M E R C H A N D I S E ' ]
L N G R E E N .
fRTH OF BRAND NEW SPRING« ^ SUMMER MERCHANDISE! s A # , A B I I 1 1 1 I H
TO BE SOLD WITHOUT CONSIDERATION OF FORMER COST OR VALUE•COATS•MILLINERY•GLOVES -
• HOSIERY• LINGERIE• BLOUfES
• HOUSE DRESSES• INFANT'S WEAR• CHILDREN'S DRESSES• CHILDREN'S UNDERWEAR
MEN'S FURNISHINGSMEN'S WORK CLOTHESBOY'S FURNISHINGSCHILDREN'S HOSE
• CURTAINS •SPREADS• TOWELS <***mmn*™• PILLOW CASES • SCARFS
COMPLETE LINE OF
HOUSE FURNISHINGS ft COOKING UTENSILS
n b C K POSITIVEI.Y BEING OFFERED AT AUCTION WlCESjI,
JOBRPH J. SHAMAN AND OOMPAWTA.-( "iinlmiti »nrt Auditors
February 1. tl*«
havnUlS Borm.gli •
(Mr an.iii
tor-Trcnatir^rAnd ftro nnri.
Om aii'lMMj of I he run
(nan nip I "•••In .. .mi-.
,,!i.l r o m p l s I M i n nn.111 "f Ih f sc rnun l s « n i r i r o r t i . <>t, , ..| f..r the vom i-n.lfil I ' f ' m b o r 31. l»3li.I, «»» .-oniliirlml In m r i . t rnmplln.i<-« wlfh_th» r w u l r o
\11< 11 (r>r «inl>rnrn.! th<- flnnprlal m n Mvnrlmin' «ehc<t"le< n l i l . l l l i rr ri-nlllrnlthin rppor i
LII.1 not •vn t i 'mpl r. . . i . . i , » * i t . A a i . n t o i i T . t r I ' l n i m i m i n i u r n r u n . n
Cnun'-ll
SMI .T i l "
iof ins (.oil
wfrh pr«pnr*Ml
ililll, lull «r ill»»g.> liy t lie I 'nil h nur nu.l
I r a i l c l r r m l n n t l n n nf I h e q u a n t i t y OT q u i l l -reniTi t i ' i l f u r r l n l m s piilr) r l n r l n R t h e p e r l " 1
n«v( | i ' I ti*1 » pITi 'vnl nf I !"• lh
i i l icl l nf t h* I t-sipiM-t lvi» r ln ln i«>. I IUVJ . t h e f a l l o w i n g
C I H B F N T
iinimniitp lo nwlw
Owk>TliP V " " * " ' i ' V l l " i n t h l » l
" • " fU3t , w , n , recnrl'lo-i with c e r . i n r . l e , '>>>UlT"-<!I from lh« ™ H o « « if
nm! foufi.l t.i
ljr,JU>4 w.'rp pnU or l"pr"inBook IXHRII.-t i l f tv mAil<-•Ttr nnti H'MA fnmpdr.Snovni TIM'gjf to liningproper lliitl
| h i - l k
m i n nI IR! I I
iNnti.•l.i
rnrrei'i. All rorelptn flnnlly handled by then(uiln«t . l e | in r tmenl« l reconiB; »n«l senori'1
rc i .n l i ,\ll nmni-vi «»r» p r o m p t l y rtepimlto.l.iKprntllory l>nnk». Tlil> «'»«h b a l a n c n on hnml
i II. Cimlly I'luinti'il nml found t o b« corrrr*•il with linnk ImlnnrM rnimt hlj>- All e«P«'ncliv.ri' tiy rliiM-kii nlunivl hy t i n Mayor , Tn-ii1 in pifli InxtRnre tlio oliork w»» cininlii*i iiHIuiiKpnioni" liook m verify 1h« m i m
wore \ frlfloil fli tn i iirro.t nPS-** nf (ini.iilnto Ihf ni-cniitit nml flcrrtl pe r iod , flu In tl
The Honor roll for tilt fifthportod of the school ynr at
was annoiinrwlthis »pft an follows
Eighth Year: Murv Hoinwatch.Mary Fabian, Albert HWun, HildaAnbolt, Irpnp Katnoy, HildaEll7ftf>eth MasltBHner. Mnry Mlelnirk, Jrnnlr Stul^kp, Mnry Wol-an.'ky. Anna Huto, Joseph Pnlehonki, Roulna SkftlniiRo, EflnaManllo, (,'oth(>rliir Wnrol.ylkn,CnlhTlnr Mcllck. Ixivey Mcllrk.Hi'loii Hutldy, Et.hel arrimelwr,Rnsr Hkurat, Herbert Venook.Thnrsa Wlzna.
Stdona V»l«lt,t/>rl» Otitowsltt.
Y«ar: Atigiut Neumann.Miiimi] Mftgniia, Anna• MunichKthol KBRklw, Mary Raakullnw/Mnry Hlivnirta. WllUam 8nt<>Mary Knrplt*. Ethel Hudak.Marion ohlott, Helen MankftlyAnnottf HtHiibprfr, Kvelyn DobrekMargnrr-l Kt-rpgarto, Edyth*Chodosh, Antoinette ChudlckOusslr Molnur, Rita Nelson.Cnt.herliif ('(Milan, 8tanley Hayrtuk, William sklbft, Hyman Cho-dnsh, Eriipst. Brwhka, JosephHews. John LUZM. Qcrald Mma
T l i . i i i i i . . u
BUTll* NIKIWII "M Slicft!M RrrHvlh lnTh" IIHIITISJ "f livllvldiml
I rlnnlly rhiM-keil »Kft!n«t thi* nllli 'lul' linmllllitf fit till M
I of ihin import.
mlnillcn of Hie Hoinrft bondpil for n
•ttOUnl «|id«W* hftvo II|II iFoUnfr (*nll<
Trii- l>:ir. Ito bt In ngrieafota 'it b
It. im nr tnxes rpri'lvahlo IndlrntlHl that upt i l | | ,p . l e t n i l f i l lint of lnx i>« w n « fJ,O«S.fll loft* ' l i n n 1 !»•-
n In II , . ' r i m t r n l l i i i K m i n i m i In tli** K'1 '"" ' '* ' l l ^ i K c r ; t l lo rpf<»i ' .ii'.i n ' . i>imrnt<' n . - . -ni inl k t i n w n «« " D U B f m m C h a r l e n A. B r m l v .
n ' p . ' ! t ln*f TMrth t h i n ( l l f T c r p n r o hi t1ii» i l p l f t l h M n c r m i n t *..I i . i » . B KM I . I M . U I I tiy t h p ' I i i p l t r n t * . w » « p r o v e . I n n d fnniH)
•ii'tit w i t t i i In 1 . ' i t i l r i ' l l t i iK n r r o u n t . T h e < l " t n l l « t i t n s h r e -l.y ii>^ i i i i iot t . ' i n r n « h t > o o k w e r n t e s t ohp*:k*Ml I n t o t l n -
n p l l r a t r J\n.l t ' t * fto-Ii I O . 1 B . T H n m l f o u n d t o ho floclimtrly p o n t n i l . A niif On- ( a t l i e n I f i l f ior I 'wll i ' f t tefl t h a t t l io o r l K i n a l t lonw Ino i liflv.1 l . f i rn I . v tnod i lup In a r l i a i lRf l m a d ^ Ui t l )P n « ^ r « B -
• M n t , t h e r e b y r innOi iK . " n n l . d l n h l o i n n f i n l o n w h l i - h o u n n n l y lii> c n r r t T t4 4 b y l i a v l n g i T ' i ' i i r ' - . l n n r w nt i ' l u p t o d a t r l a x n « « e n i m fW i l l p r o p r i l y r'"*i>ril i l i r «nni'ti»Mii>nH a n d t h e r e f r o m I t m k£ l l e c k l h K of h i . l i i M u n i i n j iki iM In R ' - c n r r l n n r n w i t h t h e a » H n f l n m c i
W e r i r n i n l t i ' n . l Hin t t h e I n n ' s rpt -nlvnl i l<- f r o m I»17 t h r o u g ho h A r g e i l off nK ;*lnHl t h ^ r o p ^ r v c fo r i i n . ' o l l n r t e d t a x r n
A t i l l H^l"' lin1 ' n o t h p p n h e l d s i nMtl« b e h p l d i l u r l n x thi" y i r n r 1 936
T h e c u t rtMit t B * i l n p l l r r t t i• I S i n p t l o i i n . i l r i i i l ' H . ' H ' . , o t r
nt nn^p whir l> po»»lli |p lh
D!i!l In
1927 ani l wi- ri-i-ommonfl t h a t Bilrh n
i n milled nml provWi-rr iliit'liO'l ^Ralm
.l by u«. All rpml«(i1on».l (ho propflr aulliorllB-
Thc rrr-roller! c
i i i lg In.Ki '1 un l i i i i i l l
w.ficnool Tax**,l e c t o r , m a k e II " n tm a y r x l ^ t n m l H i n tt h « t n x r n l l H i . l ' . . | > " .
I I i i . r c t . v ' . n i lS U l l O ' . l . 1 . 1 n i l l n \ <
f s r r o d i i i v r i - m A l l
u l d t i i M - u n « r I
I h e B f - i i M i i l l - - . l n . - i - .
ti- that (thereliy
.nl rnrp"ffH. ' '.Hnimfnd I tint the IIH• ..f nil Mjn imi ' i i
tin lil-M f
n i l n m l e l y 8 0 " - m t h e t a x i ' n r<!i:l>lv«lilp.k l n x II i n i i i r u R l h l n t n p a v 1 0 0 % of t h fi, i ' .Min i y a m i H U t o T a i n n a n d L o r a l
M-, c o - o p p r a t i n g w i t h tho, <:nl-r l l m l m i l p u t i y e r r o m w h l c l i
r t h e p u r p o s e of r p r m i v l i i K f n u ni v w h l r l i In n l m p l y a Iniri1< n i n I h o l n . n l t n i p r t y e r .
Mint m i r ippri ivtMl t a \ a r r . - n i R l i ' t t l n l o r l i n g hi'i>n I n -« n | ) l o a n i l l i K i l u d l n K t t i o y f l r 1 9 ^ h f i v c t t e e n t r n i t n .iinpiLfil tf ixofl w*Tf M u l e d m i l l t h e t n t n l a m o u n t of t i l l -
A Itli t h e t o t n l n« s h o w n l i y t l m r o t i t r o l l I n g t i n c n u n i In
( • d l t n o d l . H W K I ' H .1. S K A M A N ,I!.-Kiwi t ' l ' l i l Mull I't I'll 1 A. 'nun I it [I I
T a x THIr 1,IfimiTli.- inilivliliiiil Mi'i
found to In- l.'ifl^ .in i' «"IH* t h " I r-inftUT of I hiCo l lo i i n l " iii'i'oiinl. « iWhich so ts f.n-lli in <h
H In thd In* t i t le l ionI liatl the ( onlr.dHhtf »'*''
i Hum to the ' I>uf f romIn vr pi .'[mi. .1
ill oacli rnrfIfl-ntIMfi.
H I I I ; thpr'liurlcH A.
lirMluL' kiniT\Cnlhor wi th t i
wore llBtnl mid
Hrmly. l ormi-r• * f* l'>l,M,lt 1arriiinulnt Ion
Ot lien up to II. r.-mlii r SI, lilSii. You will no lo tlinl II w i n nori 'Bnnry forUS to a* * iiniul'il*1 ill.' r<H tnxcK, a» tho r a i n i e r au i l i tom fal lod to do HO.
AV.' luivi' Bi't fnrlli In th i s schcilllh', n r n l u i n n known u s "Huhjcr t forAbRtcim lit." whli-li Inillcntos vnr lons 'onn.i whlr l i . in our op in ion , Biipiiort-«d by th.ii of Hi.' Co]l,'i t o r -T r in s iu i - r , Hliould lie iilmted, a m o u n t i n g toJJ88.2J. We. roroiutnond t ha t Ih ls hi. don« d u r i n g Hi.' your of lilltij hy ohtirR-I11K thi- Hillno liKiLariHf Ilir r^Herve for unrol l . ' r l iHl tiixoR.Dke f rom ChnrlrH A. l l rndy , F o r m e r C i i l l i r i o r i
An I 'xamlnnt lon of Hi" K « I I I I H I loilfser Indlrnl i ' i l Hint d u r i n g 1934 t l ioreW*i cliiirKed npaliiht tho Itonorvr for Tax AlmteniAiitu 1770.30 whlol i r e p r e -•Ante.ri t ax r t 'C-lpl i h"ld liy taxpiiyorfi whU'h w^re. not p o s t e d t o t h e t a x e sMceiviii.lo, mid thl« «»m of moni>y wan nut iivuMalilo; t h e r e f o r e , In o u r
Slnlon. thiH v\;ii ;. propi-r r t r n w (LKn.nHt tlm former C o l l P f l o r tind w eve po sot furlh ihiM iiiirn toRethor wi th t h e (lllTert>nce* In t h e t a x t i t l e
And tu\<vs r f r t ' l \ i ih t . ' ThlM s u m of money In thv proper s u b j e c t for col lec-t ion from i - l t t w ihc fo rmer T i l l C o l l c t o r , .(lie Sure ty Compt tny , or finallybttdgct a | iprojnl: i t lortP.C*«r l r - A. H r m l F — S n a p r m r Account—f2OS.A11Bad C h r c k A r i n n n l -t.Mt.OOi
Th. 'sn snimB have been r a n i ' d In t h e g e n e r a l ledger for R e v t r a l y e a r sa n d It is Imposs ib le to t r n r a the or ig in of t h e s e en t r i e s , t h e r e b y m a k i n gt t i e i e MiniH a p roper I tem for collect ion f r o m t h e former C o l l e c t o r o r bud-gti a p p r o p r i a t i o n .E M e r f t r n r y l l rvrnut*—$4,221.311
TIIIH sum la made up of liability Insurance, and lntereat on assessmentbonds which were not provided for In the budgrst. Thete «ums should beprovliliMi for In the 1S36 hiulRet. When the 1985 budg«t Wai being nrepar-
Sd, Hie recordH wtsif In the liantls of the formor »unttnrt and tha interestguren provldeiJ for In the tajl hudgol U I I H furiilnhed by them nnd failed
to Include the Interest im aBscssmentn.OTtmprBdltorM ISM—f l,-1U.O6l
The ftmount of the overexpendlturea for 1934, which were provided(or In the 1935 budget was furnleliei) by the former auditors and this aumWM flimlly determined to be In error In Hie mm o( 11,282,06. Of this error,11.000.no represents the emeiKenuy i-ulluf niiiiroprlatloii for th6 yoar 1934,which was not reserved In the 1934 audit. The former auditors, In a letterdated Pecember IK, 1935 udvlKlng us of this error, called at tent ion to thesum of 1879.42 which a n he taken as a revenue.Returnling Bond IMDP |-II>HI.I> IBSo—•»,7.1<>.tK)iDiscount on llffnodliiit Hnndi Sold-fO.WKl.TN]
Tin-so Hems reprt'^ent the oxpe.nHy which wns Incurred In connectionwith ihe reflnKiiclnK of the Hormish liulobtedness during the year 1986and should he provider] for In the l'J3t> midget.AiKHNmeniii itrcelYnt)!*'!
W.= llsteil the riHm'Hflinnnta roceivablo as ahown by the Hen lodge.r andhave m--t forth the result thereof In this report as Bihlbtt T-2. You willIMte that several of the accounts Indlriite a difference between the Indi-vidual listing find the controlling account In the Kenornl ledger, so that thenet result In a ill/Terence of 1206.28, which has boen transferred to a re-«erve for uneollected imsoaMments and will be used to record any differ-ences which como to the attention of thn Collector. We found the assess-ments, recorded In the Hun ledger, In very bud condition anil found It verydifficult to determine the correct Ht at us of those usfle.samentB. AssessmentsWhich were levied agiiliiHt particular properties have beon changed and Inmany Instancca, we found the iiHBosBmtnt.s appeared to be duplicated. Thiscondition will undoubtedly take Bcvornl years to clear up and differenceswill present themselves from time to time as taxpayers request searchesor tax sales will be held.
You will note the Assessments Receivable, amounting to $118,362.23are 111,637.77 leaa than the (128,000.00 of Assessment Bonds which wererefinanced. Thin clearly Indicates that all the taxpayers throughout the
roiip(h would h»v, . l n ' t u k f up tiionr' InmltPl even If Ihi-y Were n o t reftn•od.
tnfrretif PiildtWe linv.' nimls-xed thin n rcnun t from ltd h r g l n n l n « anil rind t h a t I t lUr
. - t tin Id "ii 'unKiKHmnntn »•«• n r . -umula ted to thin nornunt unt i l f inal ly InI!'!H. .i j .nrt w i n nppropr la te r ) for tn t h e hudgot In 19U In tprem foT p a n>i itn. v .n r wan cl inrged to thin a c c o u n t her»u»e an a p p r o p r i a t i o n m noi
ui.ult' In thf hinlirpt for anRednmentii bonds . Thlx m-^oiint. Rhnula b e Appvo!•i nit".I fur In lln e n t i r e t y In the 1IP3I hudjeet and r l e a r e d from t h e r t o o r d n
POIi lCR ANI> FinKMICtl 'H PENSION KIINflWe ttindo nn audi t of the a r r o u n t n of the Pol ice nnd F i r e m e n ' s Pens ion
Fund nnd hnve Included herein, an K l h l h l l T r . Ihn rpiiult of t h i s a u d i t . AI.'IHMIMI lint of t h e Inventment In morl icnges IB Included herein a« Bxh lb l l
I T '.'. An e i n m l n n t l o n of ililn erhedt i le will I n d i c a t e t h e enac t s t a t u s oi»ncii i.f Hii>s^ mor tgaRen with r«'fcreni-n to the tnnuri inne IKU rled, 1ntere.niii n r r . a r n nnd d e l l n n u c n t inxefl, H ml we Termnmi'nd l o yoy a comple t ei iudy of tli<> ntatuit of Hir>ne mortKHRcN hpcHiine yon will note on BxnlViltI I :t. un'iiKHKee which huv.. nlroii.tv I.con f i i reclmed nnd nre n o w ca r r ion
cpn| e s t a to ncqul red .
Thi* financial reenrdfl, an koiit I'v Mr. AleTnnder f^ornba, Collectorr»ii«in.'r. are In perfprl ciniillltun *.IM1 we wlflh to commend him to yon
'nr ihe fine mnnner in whl.-h he IIHH conducted IIIB otTlce. An exhrnlnatlonif the Audit Reports for I hi- pnet twelve ypnrn Indicates that this Is thelr«t year the taxcR rei'elvrtlilf proved to the penny. During thfi pas t yesri n notlceil considerable improvement In Ihe recording of the minutes oflie proceedings of the Mnyor and ^ouncll.
We wlnh to express our sincere tluinkn In nil the officials for the asdst -mce rendered during the course of our audit.
IIKCOMMKNIIATIONSI Tlie preptiratlon of H m:vi l iu map which will bring the Assessors
ccorrts and the Cnlle.otoi'« rei-ords Into mrropment a» to the proper assess-ment and levy of taiiin receivable.
2. Charge off iincoilecilhie UXCH Hlnce 1917 xcalnnt the Reserve forFncollected Taxes creatnd fin1 that purpose.
.1. A tnl sale will !>e belli dulltiR 1MB.4 The Dems set forth nn "Kubjeit for Abatement" on Exhibit 1—
Schedule of Tax Title Men -tn- < limned ngiilnst the Re««rv« for UnooUontMl Taxes creflie.il for thnt purpose,
n. AciioiiniB itereivahin several ycnrii old amounting to $40.61 be clear-n from the recnril.s t»v innlKet appropriation,
R. Tlint the I'hnries A. Hrady Hunpense and find Check Account belimed by collection from him or hy budget appropriation.
7. The mini or tUS I;! deposited In the Rmcrgency Hsllef Account wasiot imeil to reducii Die Indebtedness, therefore, hecause this Indebtednessfiaw been anHiimod by the Current Account this rush balance should alsof<e t ransfcrreil to the Current Account.
K. The AsspKRinentR tteci'lvnlile should lie verified 100% to make pos-sible, the adjustment of these ficcouniji nml (tlao have the neceBsary Infor-mation to prepnrfi a tax nnle.
Ii. A survey of AHsen«nn'ntH lie mnde hy the Asuessor and Collector to•lltnlntitc any errors nnd rcmoi-e from Urn uix roll« by sale and foreclosurenuperty which In a hunlen to nil the tux pnyern,
10 AecountH Hecelvnble -tr,d on- In the Trust Division of accounts beupproprhitrd for nnd cleared from the records.
II luti-i**! >'nH nn.i T^eefvnd on ANBnmim«tntfl In tho Trust- Division •honlil bo clcnrcil from the JlccnuntH by the budget. j
la. All ciiflh In (lie. Trust Areniint should Im transferred to the Curfent 'Account In payment of nn mlvance made to Trust In 1982.
13. A complete Mudy of tho Investments of the Police and Firemen's'cnslon Fund should be made.
H. A Cash Register should bn Installed In the Collector's office toeliminate the antiquated cash box which Is now being used,
C E R T I F I C A T E :We hereby certify that the attached report agrees with the books and
lecords of the Borough of Cnrteret presented for our examination and,subject to the foregoing remarks, seta forth the financial condition of themunicipality as of December 31. 1886.
An exact copy of this report has been filed with the Honorable WalterIt. Darby, Stato Auditor, Trenton, New Jersey.
Respectfully submitted,,JOSEPH J. SEAMAN A COMPANY,
BY: (Signed) JOSEPH J. SEAMAN.CBHTIFIEn PtllHJC ACCOUNTANT
REGISTERED MUNICIPAL ACCOUNTANT No. 55Exhibit T
COMPARATIVE BALANCE SHRKT — TRUST DIVISIONYear less
Increase orJanuary1,1_B36 December 31,1)85 Decreaai.y,ASSETS
Cash | 7,749,78First National Bank, Carteret,
Participation Ctf 113.49Assessments Receivable 121,583.27Accounts Receivable 60.00Interest Paid 3,174.79Capital Division 13,6*9.44
J14t.321.77
LIABILITIESAssessment Bonds 128,000.00AsseHHment Overpayment 74.SBInterest Receivable 4,614.79Assessment Reserve 92.87.Current Division 13,489.28Reserve for Refunding BondBKeserve for TJncollected Assess-
ments
}14S,221.77
I »,30S.lO
113.491U.362.23
(0.007.U4.79
19,549.44
1141,428.05
74.834,614.79
9! 87 .13,489.28
128,000.00
206.28
I14«,428.O5
$ 1,467.12
S,»«0.00
I 206.28
128,000.00-
128,000.00
201.21
t 206.28
Biklbtt PFI'OI.ICE AND PIHBMBN't PENSION FUND — RE8BRVK
COHFARATIVB BALANCE 8HBKTYew 1MB
ASSETS • January 1,1985 Deecmber 31,1836 Decrease •Cash | 2,118.89Klrut National Bank—
Participation. Ctf. 1,415.B0Mortgage! 31,600.00Heal EstateBorough Appropriations 1.86S.4J
* 86.817.87
I 3,767.«2
1,416.6017,200.0018,371.72
I 40,744.84
f 1,«39.23
14,300.00'18,371.721,8(3.48
I 3,847.47
C. P. 4-24; S-l.
ASSETH
Exhibit A1888—COMl'AIIATIVB BALANCE HHEItT_€URRENT ACC'T.
CMhTsjies Receivable •.Tax Title LiensAccounts ReceivableChark-H A. Brady, SuspenseB»d Check AccountBmergency RevenuePeAcli ncy Unexpended BalanceOTerexiiendlturenTrust DivisionCapital DivisionQrose Receipts Tax ReceivableRefunding Bond Issue Expense—1956Discount on Refunding Bonds Bali —
Lafayette stt-eet Project . . .Due fruin Cliurles A. Brady
Jan. 1. 11136t 6,174.17319,136.<821,88».67,
1,406.60'298.6158,00
7,7«S.OO1(8.16
5,218.0618,439.2820671.64
Increase or
1396,277.57
LIABILITIESBtatt and County Taxes 1129,106.48Schocl Tuxes 78,989.82
| ) i4axen Overpaid S.643.7Ji't AccouMta Payable Reserves 17.707.86| i | . Reserve Outstanding Checks 894.68ijiv T«x Kevemn-B Notes 100,000.00
• 'Reai'i-vi—-tlni'iillrrted Taxes 32,887.96Burpiuu Revenue 83,037.611936 Taxes PaidRetitrv. fur Accrued Int. on Refunding; Bonds
.>( B.t)(k r\ •• fur Hefundlng Bonds
»29«,277.6T
Dec. 11, 19SSt 66,411.16
842,748.8821,601.56
384.(2M8.6151.00
4,12181lBg.lt
1,212.0513.481.2820,671.64S.681.083,790.006,120.00
686.78199.61
8.141.61
M89,046.66
*12E.88e.714,287.471,226.158,898.1»
33,«68.2677,221.1*
6,188.874,856,44
226,120.00
Decrease •169,239.5913,608.401,711.191,021.98*
S.671.69*
8,956.01*
2,682.083,730.006,12000
686.781*9.61
1,141.11
lt2.769.08
I 3,286.77'74,762.S6'
2,417.41'7,709.17'
894.58'100,000.00'
770.3044,181.766,388.874,366.44
226,120.00
I489.046.6S 162,769.08
Exklblt CSTATEMENT OF EXPENDITURES—CJJRHENT DIVISION
Y«U 1M5Transfers
Appropriation To
1,390.02(70.89
AccountsiiOBNEttAL GOVERNMENT:
"Jmlnistrallve and Executive . . . . I 7,500.00 1founds and Buildings J,600.00
ctlons 1,200.00jeasmtnt and Collection ef Taxes 8,600.00
interest on Current Loans 7,600.00mpenaatlun Insurance 1,110.91
adit 2,500.00.RESERVATION OF LIFE AND PHOPBRTY:«llce 41,000.00mi Pension Kund 1,000.009re 16.500.011 1,477.90ydrant Rental 14,600.00ftAI.TH AND CHARITIES:
iealth 6,000.00Wl Keep Well 109.09or 12,000.00
mergency Hellef 19,961.04npjoyment Bureau 1,800.00ure Time Acilvity 100.SO
fctl-Tuberculo«l8 10000pBEBTH AND ROADH AND 8BWEK8:
»« ••• 19,500.00J»«« Removal T.OM.OOhtlng of BtreutB 14,800.00JIARY: 6 100 00BT8BRVICJ!;: »,i»».uw
Redemption 16 1)00 00lloymeiit l l . lkf Honda 2,100 00
ereet tn Boitdi 21 JJO 00erest on State Bonds 'l0l!(0,t« Hdldler'a Bonus Bonds 21616' I Road Bonds 2 031 61
TINOKNT: UtOOi.8BRVB FOH ONCOLLBCTBD
TAXES: 10.090.00
111.12
2,184.1*
6,888.68111.01
From
847.471.666.60
270.04,124,(9
(12.14209.4J
1,U6.41Ut.bt
Expended byCash
I 8,890.02 |3,070.89
882.616.444.50
, 2,(88.062.680.9!2,600.00
42.729.961.876.40
11,977.9012,J82.'98
1,111.111M.00
14,114.6419,1(6.70
1,690.61100.09100,10
28,293.(4
UnexpendedReserve Balances
4.117.(1
(4.94
2,000.00
12U)85,9.6VT46.44
16,00 O.M
1,0(1.(7
1,0 Jr. SO
tfildXiPiSNrjJ/gugifcHj. IBI4JI1B81ON OF TAXSs-lrt*:IPEN8ATI0N CAB81:
. BROENCT APPROTHIAT10N8:'jdibllity Insurance 1 017 >7
Jfntertst on Amassment Bonds S'lSt'lt
60,000.00
1,481.00
1.017.9T1,111.14
HBCAP1TULATIOMHfJ-ROPHIATlON;
«t 1105,047.514,121.(1
It Will Not Ckangei"Whether yon believe de world
Is ronnd or fiat, said Uncle Eben,"flon't waste too much time tryln'to change Ita shape to suit your-
lt"<
Largest of All Bird.The ostriches and their close rela-
tives, the emus, nre the largest o(all birds. A. full grown male Af-rican ostrich stands eight feet andweighs as much as 300 nouudA.
Windmill National MonumentImmortalized In paint bv the Sev-
enteenth century painter, Ruvsdael,a windmill at MlJk-blJ-Duuestede,Holland, Is a national monument
gttotkof and can.meaty traded inon the popular1936 Ford V-B.You'll <ind lh«
DORSET MOTORS, lac.TEL- P. A. 4-3500
MtpleSt. PERTH AMBOY
tiK PunliKrBttlt" wfflbi' the Riilijcrt of the Le»son-Ser-ni"T) in tin- h'irst Church of f'hrlst,;.'ii'iitiBt, Scwaren, on Sunday,Mny 3.
flip (Jnldpn Text is: "There isi.i penr(\ siiith the Lord, unto the..irkiMl" (Isaiah 48:22) .
AmnriK Ihp citations which com-urim- Ihf I.enson-Sermon is the fol-iiiwiiiR from the Bible: "And therewns wnr in heaven: Michael andn- nn iHs fought against the drnif-mi; nnd the dragon fought and hisnn;('l«, nnd prevailed not; neither««« their place found nny more inhraven" (Revelation 12:7.8.)
The Lesson-Sermon nlflo inclnri-"s I lie following pimnage from theChristian Science textbook, "Sci-
in-o nnd Health with Key to theScriptures" by Mnry Baker Eddy;"Kor victory over a single sin, werjivo thnnkfi nnd magnify the Lord• if Hosts. What shall we say of thoniightv conquest over all sin? Alouder pong, sweeter than has everlicfore reached high heaven, nowrises clearer and nearer to theyi-PBt heart of Christ; for the ac-cuser is not there, and Love sendsforth her primnl nnd everlastingstrain" (p. 568) .
Man M«.t Know Hli Hor.aBefore a man can train a horse It
Is necessary that the man knowmore abont the Job than the horsedoes. Given a good trainer, It Issaid, a hor#e that Ig Intelligent ennlearn to pull hard, even without anylines whatever,
ner, Sophie Krupa, Marie Med-vlck, Mary Paslowskl, Ethel Relder, Rose Wlzna, Helen Butkocy.John Brechka.
To Funeral In ChurchLast Rites Said For Midi,
Who Died After Brief
Illness, Aged 25The funeral of Charles Hidi, Jr.,
who died Saturday at 1 A. M. inthe Perth Amhoy General Hospitalafter a short illness, was held Monday nfternoon at 1:30 o'clock fromthe late home »t 71 Pnlaski Ave-nue with services at 2 o'clock intho Free Magyar Church. Thetwenty-six bearers took turns incarrying the coffin from the hometo the church. Two open cars con-veyed the many floral tributes tothe grave in the Presbyterian Cem-etery in Woodbridge.
Mr, Hidi who was 25 years old,wnn the son of Mr. and Mrs. Char-les Ilidi, of the PulMki Avenue ad-dress. He is survived also by abrother, Joseph, and a sister, Mar-garet. He hnd been in poor healthfor some time with a heart ail-ment, but. was si'riously ill only nfew days before his death. He wasa member of the Free MagyarChurch, the New Jersey Hungar-ian Society, the URkoczi Society,Branch 41 and the Woodmenof the World. The two latter or-ganizations held their rituals forthe dead at the grave where ser-vices were also conducted by Kev,Alex Darocsy of tho Free MagyarChurch, who conducted the ser-vices in the. church.
The bearers were: Stephen Kitar,Stephen Tcrjek, Andrew Kovncs,Joseph Hart.ha, I'niil Hiri, GeorgeSohpydn, Pnul Pirigyi, Wjtlt.o.r Wa-rnl.lyko, John Medvet.7,, StephenFiaksa, Stephen Babies, Stephen
Ttrjek. Helen
EHMbrth Bdhush. Mary floheycta,
Bthel Bartus, Elizabeth Birl, Helen
Sotak. .TUIIR Faiekas, Hi-len Der-
C7.A, Irene Weposki nnd Helen
Snrmi
carries tt« cflnvrllo Prlndp on St. Vltn.tnne 28, 19t4,Her»iae(l theof Liberty."
1 h
Food Store244 SMITH STREET
Phone P. A. 4-1361
AMB°Y, N
S P E C I A L SFRInAV and SATURDAY
De MartiniMACARONI
3p k** 25C
PomUori - Pelat!ITALIANI VITELLI
CARGE CAN
154*CEO"
2 LB. CAN
10c
MILANO SALAMIWHOLE
;clb.35C
PROVOLETTEFULL OF CRF.AM
WHOLEIc lb .
TRY OUR HIGHQUALITY MEATS
IN OUR NEWMEAT DEPT.
Turin oPURE OLIVE OIL
$0.00 gal.
Bi.bo*SALAD OIL
85 C «•'•Fresh RoaitedC O F F E E
2 l b i 25 C
PEPERONI SAUSALFHOT cr SWEET
Iclb.35«ALICI SALATE
LARGE CAN55c can
Fresh Ricotta Every Day
SFOGLIATELLECANNOLI - FRESCHIEVERY SATURDAY
This Food Market is a Branch of The TIGER FOOD MARKET of Newark, N. J.STORE D a i l y 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.1IIMTDC Friday & SaturdayH U U K b 8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
FREEPARKING
NEXT TOMARKET
PRICES Up to and IncludingEFFECTIVE Saturday, May 2nd
Fr\UlTS ANDVEGETABLES
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
Fresh Full Peas Ib. 6 cTENDER
less Beans Ib. 6 C
Iceberg Lettuce head 6 CCRISP
FANCY JERSEY
Rhubarb 4 bun.FANCY JERSEY
Scallions 4 bun.FANCY RED
Radishes 4 bun.FANCY GREEN
Peppers Ib.CRISP TABLE
Celery bunchJUICY
Florida Oranges doz, 1 5 c
5MEATSFRIDAY-SATURDAY
Cross Rib Oven orPOT ROASTCHUCK ROASTFresh Plate orNAVELLean StewingBEEFFricasseeCHICKENSArmour's StarSMOKED CALL HAMSFancy QCclbFOWL ^ 5 C l b <
PORK LOINS, OOclb.Rib End ^ °Legs oiLAMB
FISHCOD FISH STEAKSFresh CutFILLETFRESH BOSTON
MACKEREL
19 c l b
22 c l k
|cU>.
25c ib.
SPECIALTYFRIDAY and SATURDAY
D E W N T E COFFEE Vacuu. Packed 1 Lb. Can 23°DE-MONTE PEACHES ^ I r 1 u
c r 2 f o r 2 5 C
Del-Monte Golden Bantam CORN No 2 c*n 1 0 c
Del-Monte Hawaiian Sliced Pineapple **** c « 1 5 C
Sheffield EVAPORATED MILK ^ c.n 6 1KNOX S JELL A»»»rted Flavors Reg. Size Pkge. 5 1
Uneeda or Sunshine SODA CRACKERS"?^1" 3 " 1 l c
DAVIS BAKING POWDER •— u o, Z 1 0 'S01RAYED TOMATO JUICE « • « . * . 4 f o r 2 5 t
Reg. Si»e Pkge.
9-\ \12'5=1
SONRAYED TOMATO JUICKELLOGCS RICE KRISPIESSILVER DUST M a k « Washday EasyBAKER'S PREMIUM CHOCOLATESTALEY'S GLOSS STARCH • • «HECKER'S FARINA . . 0 , . %CAMPBELL'S PORK & BEANS a * . 3 ^ 1 4Domino Confect., Powdered, Brown Sugar >>j>pk, 6N A T I O N A L P A R K P E A S s t d 3 •- 22
BREAKFAST SPECIAL — OH BOY, GET THIS!
1 ROYAL SCARLETT PURE PANCAKE SYRUP B0TH F0
1 ROYAL SCARLETT PANCAKE FLOUR 1 Q C
omino Confect., PowdeNATIONAL PARK PEAS s"Tti"d
P A L M O L I V E S O A P ^ ^ S&,2
1919
A Better
MUENSTERCHEESE, lbFull Cream
OLD FASHIONEDSTORE CHEESE, lbImportedSWISS CHEESE
Regular 12c Jumbo tf f±iWhite Sliced BREAD J , \J
Regular 20c Home Made t§ j\CPOUND CAKE
Candled Eggs|Doz. 23c
MEADOW FARM OR TULIPCOUNTRY ROLL CREAMERY
BUTTERlb.3Q<
MONDAY-TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY S<GROCERIES
MONDAV* - TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
APPLE SAUCE maFANCY QUALITY • •No. 2 C.u *»]
Royal Scarlett piTOMATO JUICE fin% o». c«n ^*SAUERKRAUTHEW YORK STATE
[•it Can
kid
[MONDAY, MAY 4—
jCkck Steak 15c tb.fTUESDAY, MAY 6—
iCottage Hams 33c lb.|WEDNESDAY( MAY «—
Sliced Boiled HamsVi lb. 10c
k VEGETABLESSUNK1ST
Lemons ea.FANCY DELICIOUS
Apples ea,JUICY CAWFORWA
Oranges ea.
DAIRYCOUNTRY ROLL
CreameryBUTTElf, lb.
Old FathionedS CSELECTEDCandledEGGS
oml for theImmoral
KOSI
AMORT hud never beenHfl did not believe ID,„• m n WM no n d
( H l S i , not for Mm. H*
„„, ems. WM » I * * *„ i Ionian, a «l«olo—• « « •
' c l e T W l t the pwcarl-
WOULD PROTECT U . S . T K K S HEWINGBANKING F E D
IN RURAL AREAS
I rill
r i,,»r hti
m n r l i a l ) ly
Amorican Banker* Assocta-tiom Would Combat Returnof Excess Number of Banks
CITES LAX CHARTERPOLICIES IN THE PAST
SCARS OF LAST WARDouglni Fir and the SitkaSpruce Thrive in Europe.
the roll ofthe war drums Is being heard ontho other side of the world- InIMS thnne drums had been stilledforever, so a great many peoplesaid. War-torn nrpns needed healing
They With Dmlh-Ani
despite »11 Ms wlfrpri and the pol'w "ereHo had made the w drounding to make lovecommissioner'! wife, »
l ] h v woman. Cnfortunftte-• • happened
man
time Frankle was" "l,,|'il.,,iy leaving the city.1 '•' .,nKiiii.(i nl. n n u m n i c r r«-1; ,, | n dm mountains. He;t : ,, ,,| the lending hotel
. .i,r,,n(;h m<«t <>f the <1*T'! . , ,,| „ costume masquer-
. vi,., winters,* wealthj,!l I iiiviirci'c. Frnnkla Im-1 .,.,,1 in work.' '••, ' , , , ; ,,,,,i im wns a guest at! , ,,rtv In the great white". . .I,,. iiiniintnlnMde that was
1 , , ,,.- ,nnnnlnii. And there" . ,, :,.[iiinnli'. Bf hart been
,,. i|,.. Mnic>ita with the''', , ,,ii.l nlinost glrllah Mrs., , .,,,,1 they hud come upon ft
.,.,, ,|i nm> onrt of the draw-Mrs. Winters playfully
, ,:;, ,,f the mpn by the
, ,„ ,„>• imil, bad nephewi, r.,,1,1 to Krnnkle, trolling
]'\: i , i>, thin In Mr. Amory."'",' i, I..IS h'rnnght a charming
.. . ,!,!„,. rur the weekend," Mid
i , , i :) , i , , .-uld cn t rh on ly a n oc-
,,,!,,••,! -^Inline of thfl s h o u l d e r of
I,,. ,'•.! |,,>w.nil l.yle. S h e w a s al-
„„... .-::-ie••!>• screened by t h e men
I,,.,,, i;,.| I.vle tu rned t o w a r d her.
. i , ; : r , T | i : i n l » . , . ." T b « g i r l
,, ,.',,•,..! from the circle smiling.|M „;,< met Frnnkle'n.rmMW LMispml. Ills heart seemed
•„ s l im. I ' H i l l .
I, ,,,.,, morning he sought out<(,,|1i,:ii,lr "I must talk to TOO,"*.. imniiiTi'd " f a n ' t w e w a l k some-
sin. nn.M.'il oagerly, h e r e y e s w r y
• t>rL(£iit. VIT>- Innocent, v e r y y o u D | .
f,'\ A Jn rke t—" S h e touched
I hi* (inn In n ges ture Of COnfldtne*
_ - | uuii'i bo H m o m e n t ! "
He viiti-lu'd na she hurried away.| Bl»' uns no swept I
!"•,. fallowed a little path op' nMuntiiinside and sat for boun
I In A 11'iiri'il npace overlooking thebriii.]. fnr valley below.
Afisr dinner they want for adrlw In the gradually gatheringdnrkniKfi they drove Slowly op themouutfiln road. PastlDf • •Boothttretrh of grnrel Frankl« aoctter-«((>•] thp car, and the Wind Whipped
•l»ni! them. Stephanie laughed, mor-cl.-se to him. t Be )tj|gb»d with
• His arm, In an nneouclon*
I nntiuii. dropped orer her shoolder.She Untied her head agmlnst thtloft pud of his coat.
Fiirthor on they stopped and|»iiirin"i the moonlit ralley below.1
•• sat there a long while. Onceiilmiilt' said, "Uh, rrmnkie, isn't
lit f i .n l ! Couldn't you Just stayiwi' (uri'vcr and ever?"
Hi' lixiked at her. Everything<i!lili: Mm swraeil to fall away and
| !w!• him limp and lifeless. He tookiiMnl. "Rtevle," he whlspewd.
• ChUt Cauie of BunkFt iUrc t W»l Too M.ny B.nld—ExUtlnj Sound Bun'tt S«r»-
I B | Commnnitici Well
hmlly us did theearth.
Americans had
peoples of the
thrown their
! -kni Bhjiy up at him. Shething, but h* could feel her
>" him. She held her eye* to"I llku yon, too, Frankle.
•••<• ciime »ery close to him.in light was silver on her
luriiHi lips, luminous fromtilt slmdowed eyea.'•mi her to him, tight, tightM feel her soft fingers orer
tracing the U M of hit Ups,in. Ills words w e n lost In
in cascade of her hair, batini them— "I lot* you
• I love you.. . ."• • * • • •
winters slumped down In ah''>r uith a shrug of resignation.
it'' came aeroej the roomK <•!! her gloreai Bite was at Stephanie. Tbere was an
" or icy brink ness about her.•'•.r calmly to the man In the"it her tone was brittle.ill you get tfie dough from
unit)"• is nodded. He reached Into''• [»>cket and brought forthpii reel of currency. "Got the
11 ' Stephanie opened her-' and prodjiced a packet of
• "•«• "Let's have the dough.""!"-3 and money changed^Intura sighed w(th relief.
"'e WK rush, anywayT beA horn tooted outside.i'i nodded toward the win-i'li« llsh are biting."
•'•'« r'-sii and went to the wli>>'" \inory?1'
i'l nodded. "-Yeah." She1 '"' rooni and paused by the
^>ii, so long." site sinllAd,• never write love lettersvou don't know •nythlugAnd otie was gOJie,
••<•: HIIW Sleuhacfla bclnd over• imiikle, p e w»l|eh*d a i
• »iiit down the driveway.11." hu murmured, half aloud.
1 ><" how much •ije'll g«t ent
NF" TOUK. — BxlBtlng soundbanks, especially tho nmall hunksIn the rural district* which are serv-ing their communltlen well, shouldbo protected from any return ot theovnr-banker! local conditions causedby former lai chartering policies,which' wero mainly to blnme for theunfavorable failure rerun] nf thepast, says ttia Bco\iomlc Policy Com-mission of ths American HankersAssociation. ThlB Is brought out Ina report covering an lnvestlRtttlonby the commlaalon of bank failuresand chartering policies.
"The Commlaulon'a study given anImpressive revelation of how greata part mistaken puliUc policies Inthe chartering of banks played Increating th8 unsound hanking ntructure which finally collapsed with theBank Holiday In March 1933,"Robert V. Fleming, president of theassociation, says In a foreword.
"Over-production of banks, literally by thousands, ovor many yea™In the face of InlIntent warnings notonly from bankers and others whorecognized .ha danger, but even moreto from the n-ountlng records ofhank talluru tbenuelvat. is olurlyshown to hava coral it.ut«d •> • who)*one ot the greatest single economicerrors In the history of ttie Nation."
A Recurrence FairedHe refers to fears of a recurrence
of over-banking recently expressedby federal banking authorities, totb i powers given the Federal DepositInsurance Corporation by the pro-vision of the Banking Act of 1935over the admission of banks to mem-bership In the lnsnrance fund, tostrengthened state laws and to thepollolM now being followed by bothnational and state supervisory au-thorltlM aimed to safeguard the na-tion against over-banking.
"Bat sound laws and consclenUoos officials are not of themselvesalways infflclent safeguard In anyfield of our complex national life un-less they have the active support ofpnhllc opinion," he adds. "It is th*purpose of the American BankersAssociation to aid in marshalingpublic opinion In support of both na-tonal and state supervisory authori-ties In their sttorts to strengthen andlirotert the banking structure."
The Economic Policy Commissionsummarises Its findings as (ollows:
"The facts show a •llstlnct causalrelationship aetwaen the over-char-tering of banks, and the atyionnalbank failure conditions that pre-vailed from 1920 to the bank holidayIn 1933. It Is desirable that studiesbe made on the basis of experienceto develop standards governing thsnumber of banks.
"Such a study would embrace thequestion whether bauklug facilitiescan best be supplied to the rural dis-tricts by small unit banks or bybranches from banks ot substantialcapital In larger centers. Existingsound bunks, which are serving theircommunities well should lie pro-tected from any return of the over-banked local conditions caused Inthe past by lax chartering policies.
weight Into the ending ot the war.The healing of wounds was to bea longer process. So, on a Jnnuary day In 1020, millions of Amer-ican tree soerts, sacked nnrl rrwlyfor shipment, were started from his-toric Boston common on tholr wnyto do tlielr p a n townrd honllng thescars of enrth. They wore preRented to the consuls of (irftntHrltnln, Krnnco, Itnly nnd Helglmub Ch
This is just an ordinarystreet crossing similar tothousands of others in thiscountry- Not lonpr ago it wasthe stage for one of thosetypical 'American tragedies'that dot our traffic maps.
A father and mother call-ed at one of the little dross shop*near the corner to get their daugh-ter a graduation frock. Theprietress of the store noticed theywere in a hurry. A few momentsafter her customers hastened out,she heard the sound of screechingbrakes and running feet When she'ooked out. she fainted at what shelaw from her window. Days after-ward, when asked to describe thescene, she become pale and ill.
The parents and child had eon-inued their haste in trying to:roan the street and were caughtbetween two lanes of traffic by-hantring t f f i l i h t Th
by Clinrlns Ijithrop I'aok, preildontof thn Amerlcnn Tree assoclntlon.
messenBers of internation-al good will, nfter thfl routine ofgermination nniler t1><! watchful eyeof foronlfis, were to flnd tliolr wayas HPPdlln&R not only to the hntt|earena but to the nrenR where for-ents had been cat down to meetthe demnnda of wnr for timber Bnppups.
Heal War 8c«r«.To'dny thoie Dougln* flr anil Sit
ka spniee, icllllons tpon millions othem, which made up the nnlk olthe first shlnment nnd others thinfollowed In the next four years, arcBtnndlnj? In the mntherlng soil oother countries than their own. Re-port* received by the AmericanTree attsoclntlon tell of gome ofthem IS and 20 feet high and grow-ing better than many native trees.They are tints doing their part ad-mirably In heuling the (rrmmd Rearsof I In; Infil war.
"Their girth does not tiring themInto a war market," said Mr. PackIn (?olng over the reports he hadreceived, "hut they are doing theJob for which they were Intended;healing the senrs of the last war,Soon they will have grown largeenough for commercial uae.
"These trees tire now standing InFrance where forests were blastedby shell fire.Belgium, too.
wo lanes of traffic byhantring traffic lights. They pau«-i(l uncertainly in the center. TheyTnsped hands for assurance and
protection. The child became morealarmed and jumped back direct-ly in the path of an oncomingtruck, drawing the mother withher. They were both struck andthe wheels of the truck passed over
took her to the hospital said she asylum,i e r w d t t l h i b l Sh Iconstantly,'horribly. Sh» 1toon ilied of her injuries, The fath I•r, who had rushed toward hin wifeand ilmightnr (n an effort to res-cue them, was struck by the sametruck and dragged to the curb,mangled and dying.
Nor was this the end of the tra-n d y that the truck brought to thisfamily group on their graduationshopping trip. The mother recover-ed from her physical injuries, buther mind has
ENLAROfeMcCOUJUMMARKET
It was announced today byMrCnll urn's Food Market, Rahway, that increasing business wasforcing th* proprietors to take onmor<> rloor space In order to ac-
d more efficiently thenumber of customer* who
wcri> mAking McCollurn's theirshopping ronter. The entire firstfloor of Mrfollum's Emporium willnnw h» occupied by tho food market departments.
This inrrense in spare will per-mit McColhim patron* to shop ingreater comfort, will eneouragu thedisplay of n larger variety of linequality merchandise and will en-able Runway's leading food mar-ket to feature lower prices thanever before, due to an increase Involume of hiiRin<>ss.
DOLLAR t>AtATSCH11
An unusually Mg day la ipated kt ScMndel's tomorrow !causa the store is stagingof th«hr «T«r popular DollarThem evonU always bring lucrowds of m(«r buyers tothrift store.
Right now the store is lolfrom wall to wall with brand :Sprlnr and Summer mepriced within the reach ofThrifty shoppers will visit the Itomorrow, for according toLevy, manager, hundreds ofgains will be on display.
dangerous for both drirerwalkw.
The few seconds savedbe wtiffeed «g»lnat a possible !time of regret
., , . . . „ . , „ „ u.«iiu ••«•> given way under thethe girl B chest. An autoiat who strain and she Is now in an Intena
It wai a clear (Uy when this trfr(redy occurred. Eye witnesses *es-
tified that the driver of the trackhad the green truffle light* withhim. This w»« his first accident.
Haste at traffic intersections is
Living tiittoryExperts from the Nntnral History,
museum at South Kensington haverecently nmtlr two Interesting dis-coveries, hoth of which carry usback to the Ire nge when this coun-try was In flip present condition ofOreonlnnd. Al tho nnmmll nf a4,000 mountnln In Scotland theyfound B colony of Arctic Insectsthought to he extinct, and. on alonely part of the const of Suasei.cqyered by the son except for oneweek yearly, a deposit of fossil*hitherto found only on the cout ofFrance. The first nro thought tohe survivors of the Ice age, nnd thesecond to point to the time whenthe channel was nonexistent.--Tit-Bits Magazine.
They are standing InThey are growing In
BttrgUr'i RewardBurglar-Whst's de Idea, boss? I
ain't a nurse.Happy Fatner—That's the first
time the baby has laughed In eweek. Just stand there and rockhim to sleep and thea help your
l i s ,•
t t l " 5
til,'
Stnl
I,',
I al:.-:.
fliiilr
l ' -u, i ;imr
\ V I ,
1 111 i l l
* I I . - , ,
Banking Official! Queried"An. Inquiry among stato com-
missioners -howa a preponderantopinion against Increasing materi-ally the number ot bankB, coupledwith the (act that present taws givethem sufficient discretion to preventa repetition of errors of the past.
"Under nre/ailing utuonnal cuu-dltlous, with the Federal Ooveruientextensively exercising loaning pow-ers in competition with the bunks,and with Industry itself so largelysupplied with fuuda as to render It toa great degree Independent of normalbank borrowing, the banking struc-ture eren with 1U present reducednumbers, finds It difficult to supportIts existing capital Investment andoperating peisoiinel.
Oreat Britain where virtually everytree which could be transportedwas cut down for war needs.
"The Uritlah forestry commissionreports the growth of the trees andwhore they are located. They dotthe famous lake country In Scotlaud (tin! iin-iin along the Caledo-nian canal. They are growing Inthe forest of Dean In England onthe bottler of North Wales. Othertrees are thriving In the KingGeorge Jubilee forest In Wales. Theforest of Dean is the famous"crown property" and It was thisforest which supplied timbers forKngllsh ships of war In the olddays. The commander of the Span-ish Armada was ordered to burnIt If he Jaudcd In England.
Do Wall In Scotland."Locntluus of tho plantings In
Scotland rend like an Index of aSir Walter Scott novel. Some ofthe trees are at Aboyne, GlengarrySouth I.iiggan and Loch Katrineand dozens of other placeB. JohnMunro, the forester at Loch Ka-trine, reports Sltka spruce of 20feet In height and Douglas lir near-ly as high.
"At Inverness James Kraser otthe commission reports the Amer-ican trees follow the line of thefamous vulley tn Onich. They arealso thriving tn many plantings Innorthern Ireland where the clima-tic conditions ure similar to thosewhere these npedt>s grow best Inthis country.
"The British forestry commission1B now checking the plantings asIt does every two years. The re-porta Indicate the Sltka spruce hasexceeded any European species lugrowth and the Douglas flr hasdone alniust as well. The seedwas gathered In the Pacific North-west mostly OD the coast side of theOascade range."
self.—Detroit New«.
Conference on BankingNriW YORK. — An eastern statesnriiretico on banking service will
be held by the American Danker*Association In Philadelphia January21 and 24 as a part of the organlialion's nationwide program on bank!ng development, It has been announced.
Robert V. Fleming, president Ofthe association will preside over thermetlnga. It is stated that this con-ference will >e tho first of several toto bo held In various suctions.
The general topic of the eonfer>ence will embrace the managerial,Uglalatlve and operative problemsconfronted by ail clasBes of banks.An nuUtandlng phase of the meet-ings wl II be the development of planstor promoting a general betttf pub-lic understanding In regard to thefunctions and policies of banks.
U. S. Half SiM of R a i d .The total area of the United
States Is lesB than half that ofSoviet Russia.
LEADS TO ALBREN'S
MUaouri S ipmu Court SubAt one time or another Jefferson
City, Fayette, Columbia, Jackson,St. Louis, Hannibal and St. Josephhave been the seats of the Missou-ri Supreme court.
P R O V I D E T H E F E A S T . . . A N D
Jlat gueiti kelp
Thursday To Monday Special!V fortuuule yurt'liiiNr rnnlilfn u* ti* titter this 2tf- pt'.--t-iiiu|il«le aer>l»-e for II—Met iii r,l!v#rwiiTe withaliiliilririH Hterl lilmlt- kui\eH brautlfully box«d lu tar-ulnliiiruuf rhmt . IJk.u(,-lly UH UtuMtruted. Made byout- <t( Ibc lurKi-Ht Mllvwrtvarv iiiunuljLCturerH 111Anierloa. We arc uot urrnilttt-d tu nucutlou the
ame. HrKular S7.W5.
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Hlf l Cflsb up- Cord and plug oxtra. Electrictoastw prices beginat $1.95 leas cord andplug. Electric coifpepercolators $X95c(uhup. Small carryingcharge U you but <mtenni. • .
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FA0B8IX
CARTERET PRESSSubscription, $1.50 P*r Y*»r
R-1U00
Published by Carterpt PressOFFICE
7(1 WASHINGTON AVE.,CARTERET, N. J.
H. BYRNEROSENBLUM
EditorSports Editor
Entered u s«cond class matter June 5,1M4, »t CarUrot, N. J., Poirt Office, underth* Art of MMt* », 1879.
Les$Mni,Plea$e!Within three weeks there will be
prmary election, prologue to the great na-tkbal drama to be enacted next November,Wtti the Democratic party here in Carter-et jltill split into two factions, the campaign
' premises to be a bitter one, not only be-tw»|6n Democrats and Republicans but b«-twtsjm Democrat and Democrat and Repub-lic II).
With this in mind may we make one re-qu»t of all interested parties?
Government is for the governed, It was• »ei; up for the mutual benefit of those who
live under its regulation, in Carteret or else-wnere. Therefore, will candidates seek
^ their offices on the merits of what they pro-' p<tae to do for the benefit of those they seek
to serve, and not on the strength of beingalile to nay something nastier about theother fellow than he can say about you!
ton trenpaiwing on ethica and good taut*.The Newark Sunday Call this week
lummariaed carefully the province andfunction* of the preaa in these words:
"A free press is indispensable for thepreservation of the people's liberties.Equally indispensnble is an honest press. Anewspaper that floes not serve the publiccourageously and honestly has no right tofreedom. A newspaper that suppresses ordistortB news or presents as truth what isnot true is a newspaper that has no rightswhatever."
Civilization Advance*Mexico must have been taking a course
in etiquette from Emily Post.There was a time, not so very long ago,
when dictators, political tyrants and theirilk were unceremoniously taken out in theback yard and shot when a new order tookcharge. But times change.
Plutarcho Elias Calles, once the iron-man of our neighboring republic on thesouth, got in wrong with the powera-that-beand jthey decided to do something with him.So they paid him a very polite visit onenight, invited him out of the country andplaced an airplane at his disposal to makethe trip into exile.
Who said civilization doesn't advance?
Heads-1-WinNo-one yet has been able to determine
what the New Deal's tax bill, now beforeCongress, is all about,
There is, however, this much about it:Corporations are going to get nicked on the
rpluses they store by against the rainyof economic depression and the share-
holders are going to have to kick in on thevidends they receive. It looks pretty
mjieh, therefore; that the Brain Trust is
Cross-Eyed
Dear Editor:—Maybe you could help us out withthis argument me an' ScroRRins Rot. I hear a guy
. . . ,, . ., , , T . . ., called the LumpIiKliler say on the radio they ain'tb$nt upon another of its head-I-win-tai s- . . , , . , , ... , ,
*• no kind o charms, or lucky things, or unlucky numydu-lose propositions. | b e r a 01. a t i y t h i n ( r l i k e l h l l t Welt, this guy sounds
: Tax experts have a t tempted to analyze inke he knows what he's talkin' about so I startthfe bill and only become more and more j talkin' the same way but Scroggins -won't hear ofbewi ldered. They are pretty wel l agreed , jt- It's al l account that fool cross-eyed cat is scaredhowever, t ha t it is representative of t h e , o f ^f ; t o 0 ' „ . ,
. . . , , ,. i . , . , , . We re walkin down m Chrome an a dog howls,whimsica, mudde-brained reasoning of the „ „ . . . •, , „ . , . . , ' .' 6 Rignt away a colored boy pulls a rabbits foot out
poetic professors who are running thingsfor Mr. Roosevelt and that it is character-istically impractical.
No-one, of course, can anticipate whatthe Congress will do with the measure onlywe hope that it will do nothing until some-one explains it more fully and compre-hendingly.
Pleasing That's AllAs usual, President Roosevelt was pleas-
ant and little else when he addressed theNew York Democratic Club Saturday night.
His address was well-written and deliv-
IT SOUNDS
BUNCH O'BEFS^tWAKMiM' B U TI CAM1 T TELLWMEEE
VOUDOPE' A T M N ' TNO BEE'S-'AT'S ONEO" T H E MNEW PLANJESOVEE. ATWHITUEV
FIELD'
.V0U6UV5TOO OOAAANTIC * -TO U/E IN MOOEPKITIME^'.-THATAINTBEES EC AlRPtAKJESJTHEY BEUP TH SAWMILL
OVEB AT SLACKSRACE!
POBLIl ATTITUDEHELPS THE BANKS
Annual Bankers ConventionSay* Public Confidence Hal
Been Restored
of his shut an' starts talkin' to it. "Loukut thatcrnzy bin!," I says. "He thinks because he heard apooch howl somebody's gon' to die 80 h«'s fmn' itup with the rabbit's foot $o it won't be him. Hethinks that rabbit foot is a charm. Ain't that crazystuff?"
"Don't you believe in eharniB?" Scroggin» asks. |"Of course not. It 's all superstition." '"'Then how you explain guys that's got charmed
lives?""They ain't no such thing, I tell you.""Sure they is an' I can prove i t You ever notice
they's one place where I always picks up the cross-eyed cat so's he won't get scared?"
"YeS. In front of that junk yard where the copsis always lookin' for stolen goods."
"Well, there you fere. That junky has a charmedered in Mr. Roosevelt's best Harvard style.!life. He never gets pinched no matter what theBut it failed to answer any of the major C°PS s e t o n 'im- I f t h a t ain>t » charmed life whatquestions which have grown out of his ad-ministration; it fiiilud to state a program;it was productive of no new thoughts.
Politically, such a speech may be wise., But it doesn't help to balance the budget;
it doesn't aid in reaching a sensible taxingprogram; it doesn't solve the problem ofthe farmers and the industrialists; it doesn't]
!put unemployed men to work; it doesn'tfeed the destitute.
It would be far better for the country'/ if Mr. Roosevelt would speak as President
of the United States and not as a candidatefor re-election.
is it?"So you see how it is, Mr. Editor. Scroggins gets
all his ideas from things that happens to the cat an'you can't change 'em. At least I can't. Maybe youknow some way to fix it up. It's the same way allover. That same day I wanted to Btop in a place butScroggins wouldn't go. "I don't want to stop thereno more," he says. "They don't have no clams in
onions an'
Disturbers At WorkWe refuse to think tha t the relief dia-
J turbers in Trenton are representative of thefe «rmy of unemployed for which the StateE the municipalities have gone into debt| | r | g h t and left to keep from privation.
We feel ra ther tha t they are of that
'the clam chowder—just carrots an'1 greasy -water,"
"Well, you don't like clams, you"I don't but I fish 'em out of the
the cat. Anywayg this guy ig gettln'When I kick about they ain't no clams he tells me 1don't pay for no chowder anyways, just buy a five-cent beer. That got me sore,"
It was one of them swell days with sunshine an'everything so I says: "Let's take a walfc out in thecountry."
"Okay by me," .says Soroggins. "What direc-tion will we go?"|
"Let's stroll up 'round the Boulevard . , . > ""Nix. No Boulevard for me. Especially when 1
got this here cat along.""For cripes aake. You an' that cat. What's goin'
to hurt hini in the Boulevard?""The road gang. Last time I was up there they
of professional organizers who move |Bcare(1 botl1 m e an' t h e cat- Honest"m one place to another for publicity and j "Whftt WHS t h e vo&i s""1* d o i n ' t 0 *f!*r« you »«'• private gain. It is seldom that we agree;toto with the erratic Thereon MeCamp-
Cllt
^ but we think that he know his audience their wuy but I don't think they even saw me."^mately when he told the squattera the
1 day that they wouldn't go to work ifwas offered them. They don't want to
pi. They want merely to incite and to! trouble, even bloodshed if the better
Jl serve their dastardly purpose,ernor Hoffman and the legislature
bi to know better than to fool with thembe compromised by them.
A Free PressWilliam Randolph Hearst taunt haveongue in his cheek when he yella aboution of the press because the press la
; to freedom only so long as it main-i decency and honesty,
fet, Mr, Hearst's newspapers perpe-outrjtjfeoua violences
and h»h case <a4 iu oth
Ijecat
"Oh, everything. Schap)blin'a all over the placeyou might say. Had all I could do to keep out of
"I don't never see 'etn act! anyway funny aroundhere. They just go about their work nice an' easy."
"I know but youinaver saw 'em in the Boule-vtud."
"Well. What waa wrong with 'em up therot""Blames if I know. N?ver seen 'em act that way
before but they was a (fuy named Andrew Petrachup there with a bottle, ,It might have been that.Anyways I ain't tukin1 no chances," '
It gets a gay nuts to travel with a pill like Scrog-gins, He's always ertbbln' an' contrary about some-thin'. I told him so, too. "Guys like you makes me•tek. between yuir an' the high cost o* iivtn' tJwyain't nothin' pleMant to think ah,eut no more,"
high cost o' livin' i s makin' people smwt,
The rcsturntlon nt puliM.: confi-dence In banking lias |i\it It in theposition wlipre It ran function iuiiyanil vlKnrmisly in plnylng Its fulleconomic part In the progress of re-covery, said the American HankersAaaoi'lnllon In its annual convention.
"Die passage of a generally con-structive banking law in the Bank-Ing Act of 1935 has stabilized th«hanking situation ami enabled bank-ers to dsvote undivided attention tothe normal administration of theirInstitutions In ITOIIHIIIIII; the buul*ness and public welfare of theircommunities," the resolutions said.
"We feel that it la a particularlyImportant feature of this law thatIt aims to create through the revi-sion of the Federal Reserve Board aSupreme Court of Finance which,with the non-political appointmentof exceptionally competent m«n,should constitute one of the greatestforward steps In building a soundbanking and credit system,"
The Government in BankingAnother resolution said:"Wo particularly eniBliasiM the
desirability of the retirement of gov-ernment from those fields of entend-Ing credits p£ various types whichcan be adequately served l>y pri-vately owned institutions. We rec-ognize that the exigeneie.i of thenow passing depression made neces-sary a large participation uy govern-ment for a time In the task nf moet-Ing emergency financial needs.
"Those conditions have beenlargely remedied and th« obligationnow rests upon the banka and otherfinancial agencies to demonstrate tothe people of this country that theyare fully able and willing to meet alldemands upon them (or sound creditcooperation. It Is our duty UB bank-ers to facilitate lu every effectiveway the retirement of governmentagencies from credit activities bypromoting public understanding oftha proper function of privatelyowned banking."
BOOKS AND THINGS• • •At The Borough Public Library
llv I?. W. IIAHHI\<;T(I\. Librarian
p Wfc. A n OMflom» people »t 0lghrj ar* »cto-
nlly jonngnr, phyilcallj, than oth-tn «t ulity or <>vpn forty. P*op1«who «re retlly old nr« thwe whonohortlM are no longer «n strong oractive n» they were, penpte whowith their yeoin hnra rnvnmc worr.Infirm, dlnnhlpd or nlfk. For Peo-ple In middle life or Intor, who uromerely not BO active n» they were,the «n«wer mny t>* different
• (
- t•(
• t
OrlfiaThe nnmfl "disutsoaoa," (tni ,|M
piled to th« (she In western N,,'1 'Tork, Is from the Seriec* langm, "and ts Mid to Mfrlfj' "h*e on. i,,,caiinht nsh." It became th» nninft
of the siiinmer educational iRHnm
Wj Urst held on the shoreg Of i)mtlake tn 1874, and then of the P,i,,national anfl entertainment svntOmpatterhed after the Lake ChniiUu-qua " '
414,444;
ARTERETA
OMMENDABLEOMMERCIALOMMUNin
! ELIZABETH GOMBOS, Age 14 Colambui School Jpupil, lays: 4
"Don't Slip Down-Shop fat Town" ;" [ The peonle of Cnrteret do not realise th«y are 4• (slipping in the line of patronizing their merchants. JM If they did patronize merchants, savings would *.' l accumulate, conditions continue to improve and pros- if, | perity would romr back. 4
CARTERET CHAMBER OF COMMERCES( • ** • •* •* •+****•**+***********
- School Savings
During the school year watchclosed June 30, 1935, American'school children to the number of S,-826,383 deposited $11,575,901) Idschool savings, reports to the Ameri-can Bankers Association show.
Faulkner, Virginia—THE BARBARIANS.
This is the story of that groupof younK artists and pseudo-artists that, enlivened the Parisianyears of Marie Manfred, heroineof Miss Faulkner's former novel,"Friends and Romans.'' The plotis chiefly concerned with the loveof Andreas Vauban, an artist, andLise Fabner, a well brought upGerman (jirl. who introduces unforseen complications by fallingin love with Andraes' friend Tavo,a gigolo.
"The Barbarians" is an un-commonly entertaining book, wittyn ml impertinent, and liRht-hearted. If the Barbarians has_aiiy fault it lies m the fact that'Miss Faulkner, at times, works alittle too hard in her effort to studthe pages with laughs.
Bates, Ernest Sutherland—THESTORY OF CONGRESS.
When on March 3, 1933 theAmerican Congress took a backseat It became evident to Mr.Bates that Congress has alwayshad a back seat as (ar as publi-cations were concerned. This isonly the second history of theAmerican Congress that was everwritten, the other having beenwritten in 1895.
Congress as an institution, as apart of the machinery of repre,sentative institutions, rarelyemerges from the shadow. Welearn what Congress has done butare told little or nothing of whyand how it was done. Thus weare still in doubt as to whetherthere is any point in the hoaryanecdote of the Congressman'sson watching the House of Rep-resentatives Assembly, listeningto the chaplain, and then asking:"Father why does, that man lookat you Cer.;;:-e.'-:!ien and thenpray for the country?"
Lundberg, Ferdinand—IMPERIALHEARST.
It is not at all strange thatsuch a savage biography of Will-iam Randolph Hearst should ap-pear at this time. It representsa timely counter-attack by liberalsentiment upon one of the worstenemies of social and politicalprogress the country has known,
Within the last five years Mr.Hearst has made systematic ef-forts to declare war upon everyleader who argues for political re-form and the correction of eco-nomic abuses.
This book attempts to tell thetruth about Mr. Hearst since hewas expelled from Harvard to hispresent championing of predatorywealth wherever it Is challenged,
This is an inetersting book.Readers will find Mr. Lundberg'schapter on Hearst's use of gang-sters in promoting his Chicagocirculation, very engrossing. Whilethis book is lar from final It is avaluable aid to understanding notonly one of the unhapplest figiiresin American Journalism, but oneof the unhappiest sides of our na -tional life.
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SOL SOKLER & SONRoosevelt Ave., Cor. Pershing CARTERET
Truwmittiai Sound 1Physicists b»ve shown that air
at th« imtecfl temperature of thesun should transmit »ound at least,nix tlmw u last as the earth's at-mosphere, Th ft temperature of tb4BUB'B surface Is variously estimated"to b« between 6,000 and 9,000 tie-
Fahrenheit
Dorr".Dorr's rebellion wai an
tlou lu Bbodw W i t * headed b{Tnomss W. Do,W, 1841-42, Lavingfor it» object ttw extenslou of tt>»suffrage, wbicfc, tccordlng to tttcburter of W8S, «M restricted aholdttrs of r«al e«t«te and to tlieifeldest sons. Dorr, bbj un lrr%g«Jar election, seliedstate hoOM at Providence.forces, hovever, were dispensedhe was tctoi for treuot andtenced to life linprosonweut.
^ w » T»lea»#i Xba
Bjl4
n Inunt resulted ID UI« adoption, l»1842, of a conjiUtnttpn providing forattended ff
Tha OcotilloThe ocotlllu la a thornj shrub vt
tho tunjarlsk family, sometimescalled candlewood. It branches atthe base Into severnl Intensely spin;•Wenm, 10 to 25 feet hl^li. These areleafy only near this top, and bearat their uuper end narrow ell|»ters«f bright scarlet (lowers. Tlie oco-tillo Is a clmructerlstic shrub orrock inosaii and deserts from -west-ern Texas to Culiforiiiu. li'rom Itstharny appenrnnce It la often misUtken f(jr cactus, Mexicans weaveocotillo fttems into fences.
C L A S S I F I E D A D SFOR SALE- -Nash Sedan, 11)30model. Apply between 5 ami (i:30P, M., at K9 Washington Avenue,X3»rteiet, N. J.
though," he cornea back."How do you mean, smart!""Why, they work out ajrs^ms to save money.,
I know one «uy haa worked o u t » system that s*v«sthirty-three »n! a third on one item alone,"
That sounded interwtin'. "Who b be &n' wh*tJ"
"He's a, guy run* a eandy sto*e « |•vejiue an1 h j i fo^nd o t th« kid'H
*#"*•
WATCHES REPAIREDU.00
EXPERT WORKPROMPTLY DONEMATERIAL AT COST
EDWARD HOPPAv«nue
CARTERET, N, J.
Hit the Bull.eye with
MAMMOTH WEEKLYBINGO SERIES
HEART CHURCHMAY 5th
1935 CHEVROLET STAND-ARD COACH—R«d that price.See thii practically new car,beautiful, original green Duco,completely equipped ready todrive «w«, for %A EfVOOonly *K>U
EVERY CAR A REALBARGAIN
1835 CHEVROtJET STAND-ARD COACH—m$ ii .netherone lik. tU •borni mlf u i a t c din black Duco. Practically oeW.To the firit lucky %A ( " f\.00buyer for only * « O U
LOWEST PRICES — MOSTCONVENIENT TERMS
1935 FOR* V-8 TUDOR SE-DAN—Only eleven monthi oUAll .teel U y . 3af«tr U !Excellent condition l j
ALL VITAL PARTS CARE-FULLY RECONDITIONED
1931 OLOSMOB1LE 6 WHEELSEDAN—Gr.ip tau opportun-ity to enjoy Oldimobile'i fan-oui beauty, performance andeconomy. A realbargain at
$285ALL POPULAR MAKES AND
MODELS1
1931 OLOSMOB1LE COACH —Act today if you want a goodui«d (is cylinder «ar at 10 towa price. Thf lovrost price w«hare been able to offor thi« type
•265 °°
1931 CHEVROLET « TONPANEL TRUCK—Entire truckhas been reconditioned and r«painted a beautiful green Du< 'If you need a panel truck dou'lfail to >e« thii one. %"t I 7C- O ( I
A real bargain at i. I O
BUY IN CARTERET IT WILL
1931 CHRYSLER S SEDANA good fuaily car, Flo* appear-ance and a wott4srf«| perform•r , « M 4 paiwt. motor and rub-
*" •9l^()0A buy at
SAVE MONEY — BE SUREOF SATISFACTION
im BUICK SPORT COUPE -A 'nappy car la ywr sood con-<HtI»n. j u , t U«, | 1 C A.OOthing lor the.u«me> lOV
IF YOU D c l f T SEE WHATYOO W A W WE BUY
SOQN HAVE |T
W< RLYMOUTH M UJKBCOACH—CleaB imiiU w 4 out
You'll b* proud. 61It. iWMriM, .aJ p,tlorn.•»<:.. A real Ur- Mf«in at
T « « " V o o e " , » 1929 CHEVROLET!• rpght C&W UOAN
>, ,;
SAVE MONEY SEE U3 FIRST) SEOAN
Wir in roa a i m * vuxm~TODAr.ECONOMY
Hi', v i n TRIMMED
, „ „ „ •NICHOLAS
ANCIENT SKULL ISFOUNd IN NEBRASKA
Said to Prove Antiquity ofMan in America.
Washington—The "upcond cons-Ins" of the fnraoin Npnnilerthnl men-those Hnlf-iipe, hnlf-hnmnn bringsthHt preceded mankind In Europe--nnc« niny Imvp rnfinifd th<> Nchrai-kn pin Inn,
After an exlmtmtlve study o( anIndian Rkull fragment fouml In thet r « c t o r of music at the church,' hnamidwest state, Jjr. Alex Hrdllcka,curator of physical anthropology ofthe Smithsonian Institution, soldIt had decided Neanderthal charac-teristics, nlthniixh obviously of fnlr-ly r«oent nrljrln.• The fragment was discovered by"fearl.H, Bell nf the University of
nnli! trimmed dresiea,n,.-Hnhle!>. They ar»ihick nnd fust In the.... .-nuwtlon*. Flat„! «.v«ry sort of braid-„ new aB|n>ct to tht
Soutrtrhf, of course.. ii-iiil. for It leorts It-i,, vi'isntile treatment. ii»' siiuirl ensemble
l
HI,, wny, 19 a wordi, rnr II Is going-tondiinw the season,.iv xiik prtWrfline,
n. r,.r tin) swankyiiiis which promlne
,:;,: this spring. The„ mi thl« white gabaiti:i,y t>iu« silk Jersey.,•11,. irinifl yoke a d
,ili pnttcrnlng. The,.iiiy new In cut, espe-
;olors for Millinery Ar«
Copied Front Ancient Urai, ',"in pottery made by
, .II«I 2,000 years ago willin'ii
lI'T Mi,y
of fashionable Jfiss
H [,- Wilson, of the British Col-'.•,,,,11,-ii, has been working at to«
„„,.,„„< in South
ts,.
Remington.NiiUtie slisdes from Chi-
many of them datlnc
while excavating In aInrite mound of undetermined agenp.nr the site of a prehistoric In-dian village.
The skull frnument couplet withthe recently found Folnorn arrow-head points proves conclusivelythat the America before Columbusextended back for thousnnAs If notten* of thonsnnds of year*. * TheFolsom points are distinctly Amer-ican In character and date from thearly glacier periods approximatelythe aattie time at that of the skullfragment..
Doctor Hrdllcka found ttint tbiiknll fragment had belonged to amiddle-aged male Indtin and wsanormal. Wcept \a one abnormality.t had large bony ridges over th»>yes. one of the prominent chnrac-:eristlcs of the true Neanderthalsknll and those of Erent ripen. Theserl<lge» tmve tlrttinlty degeneratedin modern mankind.
In the Nebraska Indian skull theridges were pronounced and abouthalf as prominent Aft those of the
a« rnnipnrpd withmodern mnn, the nnthropologlstsaid.
Doctor Hrdllfkn stressed that theSkull did Dot indicate thut Nrnnfler-thnl men ftctunily lived In Amer-ica, but rather (tint there wna somesort of ancpstrnl cnnncotlun be-tween prehistoric Americans andNeanderthnlprs somewhat outsideAmerica.
"We nre Justified In recnrdlnjsuch occurrences oj> reminiscences,more or leas, or enrly stall's In theevolution of the human skull, butnot as uninterrupted connection*:and especially not ns » snfe Indexof the antiquity of the SIMTIIIIIMISthat show such chnrncters," Doc-tor nrdllcki wmte In it report oathe skoll for the Amerlcnn Journal<»f Phjrsicnl AnthrcipoinKy.
— - — — - " - • ••--jflwtLjiLii, w ' " ^ ^ • O B B V n
St. Demetrius ChurchReorganizes Its ChoirProf. Kankiw Made Head
Of Group; Member-ship Now 30
More thun thirty yonnn peopleof St.. DemetviuR Ukrainian Churchhave joined thp npwly or(rAni7.orichoir, of which Basil Kankiw, <li
been elected president. The ne.wchoir will meet for practice twiceweekly, on Tuesday and Fridaynights, and an effort will be madeto increase the membership.
Other officers chosen at the reorganization meeting are: Vii-(.president, Demi Bohnnek; trensurer, Miss Sophie Mynin; secretaryMiss Helen Polehonky; coniptrolIWH, Minn Anna Shumny, A lux Tandyrak mid Willinm Wolansky, anmonitor, Michael Hamburak
A
Close Ones on theBy Barton McNulty To Andrew Fitzula
Ceremony Witneudl BylOOPerbrmedAtHoly
Family Church
Newark And Brooklyn MakeA Trade That Benefit* Everyone j
ONE TRADE WHICH HAS BEEN SATISFACTORY TO AM.oncerned and I should think partkularly to the Newark olnb is that,
whirh sent. First Baseman Buddy H,assett tn Brooklyn for BUM Hoyle, | . . . . . . . .outfielder, and Johnny McCarthy, first b»«omiin, together with 140,000 " r- *nH. Mr" J>^Pn<>n HnrvMh ofin rush. Buddy HnRsett has started out with so much promise that hel"'1 I * r 5 h s'reet, becitme the bndeis being hBilert as the best firm base protection the Dodgers have had:"; Andrew riUula, son of Mrn.in year*. I Mary FiUula of 27 Charles Street,
M l ! w «« ry Horvath. daughter ofH M h f
ars. I y C s S t ,As a matter of fact, he is supplyinE most of the WtinR mometi- Saturday afternoon. The ceremony
turn of the club at. present and playing the best (rame. The other day w " s performed at the Holy Familyhe reached over the heads of the ipwUtors in one of the field boxes Kriijrch by the pastor, Rev. Dr. Jos-and sUhheil a fly for an out. Severml ttaea he has saved his associates |pI ) h '«>a«osE. in the presence ofin the l)ndKer infield errors and his team run, by his spectacular catch- i m ? r e l™" ' 0 0 relatives anden of low throws and wild ones. And «t the same time, McCarthy is i fnends. The church was decorateddoinjr equally well for the Bears and Boyle is shining in the outfield,!"1 P*lm"> a m l «>,ter th« ceremonybth b i h i t f t i h l d i f h a ™cept«>n and dinner was held at
CHILD iffT BY CARRudolph Bodftftr, Ag«d 4, In-
jured On RooMV»lt Av*.
Michael T«a»c* of Holly Street,HnRitman Heights, reported to thepolii-e Sunrfay evening he was driv-ing his car in Roottevelt Avenue at"iCdwin Street when It struck Ru-lolph Bodnar, 4, who r*n into theoad. Tok»cg said h* took th« child
to the office of Dr. Joseph Wantochwho drosmxl lacerations on theforehead and mouth and directedthe child be taken back to his home
t Edwin and Mercer Streets.
both being among the most important factors in the e»rly drive of theBe.nrs in first place.
The other important ("OR* In tMl same drive are Ernie (Chief)Kny in the ont-fleM urnl Her«hherger b«himl the plnte. It in a pity that
a reception and dinner was held atthe home of the bride for close rel-atives.
l>n(l« wore » (town of white| d d d h b
Kny in the o.it.flel<l ami Her«hherger b«himl the plHte. It is a pity that i \ (tIhey have to belong to the Newark club since the Yankees are about ?"tin' P|e*ted, «nd made with bathe best fortified club in the leagut.for outfielders and catchers both ea« neckline and a veil of ros
• • • - - -
dren of St. Demetrius School, Sun-day night at the church hall. Triefollowing: took part: MichaelShwaylyk, Alexander Shumny,Catherine Dobrowolsky, Helen Ha-madyk, Nicholas Shwaylyk, AlexPolehonky. Joseph Markowicz,Mary Markowicz, Helen Wonarow-sky, John Bobenchik, Mary Wolan-sky, Stcphania, Szymonifka, AnnaFedak, Rose Wizny, Rose Wona-rowaky, Anna Hilinskv, Mr. Kaskiwdirected the play.
Mi mil Mr» Fred Cultyii ofElizabeth were the guests of Mrand Mrs. F. X. Koepfler of Per-ching Avenue Tuesday night.
NATIONAL SAVINGSMARK INCREASES
, . „. excellence of Koy andHeuhberge.r to competitors.
Dodgers Show Same WeaknessAs Of Yore—light-Hitting Outfielders
BROOKLYN IS SHOWING THE $AME WEAKNESS THIS KEA-son that they exhibited in pievoils «*SBons, that is a lack of outfieldpunch. It maybe that Eckhdrt and Coflley will pick up at a later date.Certainly their minor league record Would indicate that they can hit,but many minor league players fail to-make the major leiigue grade."" - - - - e ry j o w .n
way up inhe three hundreds, and that is all that keeps thqm in the race.
As a general thing it is just the other way around, the outfielderslupply the batting strength and the itiflelders while they strive toil»»sp, nev*r hit quite •• heavily, except first l>»««intn, for no goodeason. Casey Stengel is going to have to make a trade with someone
for an outfielder of established hitting strength. The Yankees havemore than they can use, and perhaps they could get one of them outof the league by sending him to Newark on option and then sellinghe opinion to the Dodgers. Certainly it has to be (lone if Brooklyn is tonish as high as fifth.
The current hatting averaee of the Brooklyn outfield is verythe two hundreds and the hatting average of the'infield is wa
i,.r,i .ire smne of tot colors takenpottery of ancient China:
r,».ii,. iin unusual tflM of Baie. uiik'ii tin1 coolie of China djeacU.tiies with to this daj.mti stalk, a golden fallow withdi i in- Chines* lotad to rjeoo-• their beautiful vases.
Sl:,ml,!'in blue, made specialty la-,• inr einort to China.
the red of the precioustun.'. inkM Iron) Chln«»»; MB*. "lutiis »i<l. > delicate pink, tha
line n'liT us the flower.
STYLE NOTES
mllnred suits arc the
I'll print frocks are la~ivie. parade.tn'iets and sailors ar«- 'iMwiied.
• •\ L'h'vcs and show are-,.[-) IL^ iirngrum." IUI tyiws persist In ad-i.v-s sliowlngs.
"ii (ires»e» display muchu :i rul Ingenious fabric
i ui'ceusuries are worn' new gray short-jacket
>ilted Dratt Popular- knitted dresses w«r*
n^irt'it fur fall wear.
Milliorts ol Big ToadsPut in HsAvaiian Fields
A million of tile breed of highest:oads In the world huve betn released In (he cinieltelda of Hawaii-luring the last yenr They haventwn bred und illstrliiuted by thenugar planters of those Islandswhere eugnr fnrmlnu Is more setentitle llinn anywhere el9e In theworld.
Fumed for their nppetltes theykeep down the Insect pcstn by dintof thrusting out their tongues andthus catching ticklers for their palstes. Hawaii tins extensive toadhatcheries. It sends their outputabout the Islands In tin cans. Themillion wurty lnhnbltantb of theterritory nre tleseemlei) from 148ancestors that were Introducedfrom Puerto Itlco They nre. In fnotcalled Puerto KL'iin lofids hy theproletariat, which is hardly right,for they hailed, hut a few genera-tions a£o. from Uuaieinnlfi. Thescientists In rhelr meticulous wn.vdesignate them "Bufo Mnrlnus.'
Bufo tins a voice like a "teamriveter. Hut only the mule Is noisyHe sings only when he enn ell withhis bind legs In water. Drain thepools or fence them with net rvlreand he remnins AS silent as a tortotse.—New Vnrk Herald Tribune.
_ A Classified Adv. Wilf Sell it—
NEW YORK.- Tho annual savluga compilation of tlio AmericanBanliem Association for the yearending June :l(t, la;i4, shows thai torthe lirat time since 1930 total sav-ings In till Amnrlenii hnnku rnnordedan (iiiinml Inticnsc.
A statement hy VV. EspoyDeputy MniiaRei- of thu !tn charge of its Savings Division.In the organization s monthly masazlne "Hanking," su. j that savings-deposllesl in bunks as of June11)31, gained 3.5 per cent as com-pared with a yenr earlier. '
"Tlia Aggregate Is an Increaseover last j*ur of $742,132,000. thefirst since the year which closedJune 3U, 19JU." he soys. "This In anotable achievement, for the declinesince l'Jili) hud hecu pruclpltaie andall-embrarlng. In that year savingsIsad reached the all-time high of »28.478,6Sl,t)«u. A year ago the aniuunwas f2L.12b.53-t.MUM, a loss In threeyears of $7.353,u»7.l)00. This year ih.figure stands at $21,867,666,000.
"Depositors, too, have gained 1number, going from 39.202,442 oJune 30. l!)33, to 39,502.171 on June30 this year, a gain of 290,732. Pouryears ago I hen; were 52,729.432 de-positors, or one depositor tor each2.1 persons In the country. Now
GRAND SPRING
MAPLE TREERahwRy Avenue, Avenel
SATURDAY, MAY 2, t t t t lHOT ROAST BEEF FRBE
TO ALL
DANCING from 8 P. M. to Z A. 1SUNDAY, MAY 3,1936
Dancing Outside In Fresh AtrFrom I P . M. t o l 0 r \ M.
A. PIOHALSKI, Pw».
g
Reds Grab Games From CabsThat Will Be Sorely Needed
THE EARLY SPRING TRAINING OK THE REDS IN PORTORlcn is standing them In good stead In their early games. They arebuilding up n tin f d ih th C b d t k i f th
h
>au neckline, and a veil of rose->oint lace arrange<l from a cap of•he nmr Uce. Her bouquet WM ofRaster lilies, gardenias and liliesof the valley
Miss Helen Fitzuln, sister of thebridegroom, was the maid of honor.She wore powder blue chiffon withnatchinfr hat, »nd carried lilacs.•Stephen'Horvath, Jr., brother o.he bride, acted as best man.
After their return from a wedtrip the couple will live a
he CharlcR Street address.
MISS BEFGERT IS CAST[H UNIVERSITY BENEFIT
Miss Irene Beipert of UnionStreet was a member of the castof "Pot Pourri" presented by theGirls' Association of the Univer-sity of Newark Saturday in Grif-fith Auditorium, Newark. The presentation was /or the benefit of theuniversity's library fund.
g y g yg p feud with the Cubs and taking frames from them
thnt they arc likely to need before the race is over. But then, such ajtart by either 1he Dodgers or the Reds h nothing to enthuse over,except that it, does msike the road of the real contenders more rocky.
The Giants better (jet a traveling hospital if they want to stay in jthe race. Why a hunch of men, called athletics and. kept in training,petted and pampered with trainers, rub downs and club physiciansshould contract the numerous ailments which have so beset the Yan-kees during this season is beyond me. If they don't get. a little goodhealth soon they are going to be out of. the race.
Presbyterian Notes
there Is on« account torpersons."
ch 8.2
— Please mention this paper toadvertisers. —
YOU GET rREE GAB
ONE MILE OUT OF THREE
James Burns will have charge ofthe Hible study period for themeeting of the Traims Society to-night.
Under the auspices of the. Men'sBible Class there will be a socialfor the members and friends of theCongregation tomorrow night at 8o'clock.
"Our Host for God" will be thetheme of the sermon at the ser-vice Sunday mumlng.
Truiteei OrganizeAt a special meeting of the
Trustees of the church Mondayening William Elliott was elected
president, M. I). Stewart, vice-president, August Perry, secretaryand financial secretary, Harry J.Baker, treasurer. The first Mondayof each month at 7:00 o'clock waaselected as the time for the month-ly meeting, so the nest meetingwill be this coming Monday eve-ning.
The Sunday school will sponsorii benefit movie Tuesday night,May iith ut the Ritas Theatre. TJiiswill be a double feature "Fung andClaw" with Frank Buck ami "The.I*dy Consents" with Ann Harding.
Plain for Children'i DayAt a meeting of the officers and
teachers of the. Sunday schoolWednesday evening the followingcommittees were appointed to beresponsible for the annual Chil-dren's Day program: for the. Pri-mary Department, Miss IsabellaColquhoim as chairman, she to se-lect her own helpers; for the; Jun-ior, Intermediate and Senior de-partments, Mrs. Dewcy Stewart,Mrs. James Burns and Mrs. Benja-min Smith. They will select otherhelpers
Bci>ded.
of bad weather theweekly meetings of the Light "bear-ers were discontinued but will berasumud on next Thursday, May 7at :i ::i(l with Mrs. William Kleiberas superintendent. She. succeeds jMrs. Winfred Nelson who u"-taken on the Girl Scout Work
CAR• • Y D U I cot nprtunt i
a ivbltemiial talk in~v«rim«nt—vi» it ai col-lateral w h i n c t r youn*«d rtady caih. Youcan get mon«y rtcr«quickly—at any time—en yow cat. Ho other••currty required. If yotfor* buying a cat now,
w* will refinance Ikebalance U providel**r«r paymnl i .
PENN PERSONAL LOAN CO.
N. J. Banking Dept. License #676COR. SMITH * STATE STREETS
Over United CWhelan'a Drug Store)Paom- Fer«» Amboy 4-0O8T
Y KATE
W
TheDoctorSays:"I Always Recommend
JUNIOR ARCH PRESERVERS (For Growing Children"
Mill,I Sprclnl-Ui« nitrer thnt.11 Mull AIM'llI' II HSKItVEHSHOHM are «ct-•'tiiinra.ll)' dr-HlKnr-ri -to UB-ttirnlly f o r mn n (1 prt-iterv*the tou) krnllnof K r * w 1 n Kfhliarrn. A • ky o u r Doctornhuut then.
BOSTON SHOE Co.182 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY
JjSBS?1^ .yf*'.-^^
Call 100 miles for 60/ -110 lor n.75-Si[itiou-to-stationday laics. Ailtr / at night and all day Sunday, rales are
reduced \0"l to 40ft on stalicn-to-staiion calls c' over 42 miles.
^ . MtK1"« you ht* « u <», mile In thne. Low
A MONTH•Mat lwn •>•*•» »•*'mr»t b«fl »•• • »•""1 9 * «»*»» • " — *
H««l«a>daBimui
\ ,
I ':': Ji f:
1 ou can do It bv telephonetoday, more depwwhbly than cter. Evenditwten such M floods cripple service to'dUuuit pointi only for » »bort time.
One reason ii that tie nation-wide tele*phone network is "patrolled" electricallyfrom hundred* of test centers at whichtrouble on th> line, can bo quickly lo-cated apd repair* rtarted while oalU are
routed OY« rt *
pnlto of every m>fe. If a cable "fails",tha last d»«k «ri)>«rt if abl« to nifaaurr.electrically the distance to the [joint oftrouble, whether 3 or 30 miles away, andto teU the repair foice juet wfacro to go—to within a few feet.
Time needed to clear up cable troublesin New Jersey ha* been cut in half in thelast ton years by improved testing and
U thdn naiji ajnjpnwot ^ u c h
Sealed-in-steel
G-E THRIFT-UNITNow Gives "Double the Cold"
and Uses Less Current
Than Ever Before I
Not only doci a G-E Refrigerator protectyour food by maintaining tomunt
h l f b iy g
Mow 30°" cold oa every »h«lf, but tinGeneral Electric THRIFT-UNIT ibo pro-tects your purse with lower operatingcoit thin cvet before.
roned-feed inbrlcitloBand 0U Cooliag!
FOOTMONITOR TOP
11 SQUARE FEETSHELF AREA
SPECIAL
Th« O-E THRIFT-UNIT is »h« onlyrefrigarator niichonUiri with th«M•xcluilv* faaluras that mtan quiatwoperation, longer llf« and lowtroperating <ost.bt ture you «o the new Qetwivl BlectticRcf.lBer»tor«. You will flod nttjmodern coDTcnitnco feature In thahciurifui new cabiaett. G-B TttlUTT-UNIT in both Monitoi Top and FlatopnioileU. 5 yetn performance prowctioa.
SERVICE APPUANh nj jp ^
mifie8theB»tt8y»tein's effortsHOBART$TREET
INCORPORATED
PERTH AMBOY OPEN EVENINGS
«eyno|ds Dent Store Dalton Motor*
FINNEY OF THE FORCECrossword Puzzle Kr4oW
MOW IT IS-BUTBODY
SEEMS To'BOOT
'•Tiff ASME DIDN'Tf A BROAD-CASTS' SET'STEAD O'
•lo-oiHe APS
By JARS MORRIS MRS. SNOOP<Scfl" A NEW
1—Flat plitaI—Tut uiii« fit rntqn§—Workt npnn with
literSHORT WAVES"AM' A L L —well ol
10 Puttoniihl11 floiith A
|«tm« of AnitaR»r«D
13—Arnn« Inn -Rumd itfip in
vomen'i arwiU-Qnoten-fitt chumn-Muunaf1
JO r-n«1«-Dnlti of wort)>-R«put1
I—Qfttnt of ehane«I—Turtllh burner
oararrlntf tool
onnding >V«nl
M~-Orratn-fltomuhuldltfI* D<TtTlm«t la
North rrN -AcU In lurlr nunnit70—Stront 4Mtm (Mil11— Raqulrt
STVIATTER POP— Willyum Taket the Whole Works1 -F.ili IB ichOOl
rtciutlog lllinf)I—Optnlni Into lauJ - Tounl suit of oi
Don't Crow 'EmTHE FEATHERHEADS . j L f e,PEAR—I'M WAVIN<J
A BRID6B MADE By-THE PENTIST AND —
POT VOIME To KEEP AMD WbiJ NEED
TVW MUCH TOEMTERTAIM AFLOCK OF MEMSAT A CARD
PARTY?
UP APPEARANCEWHAT IS IT
WOW?
Today's Short, Short StoryONE SWEET TIME
Wouldn't You Know It?MESCAL IKE ar &. u HUNTUY
"REG'LAR FELLERS"
Je was buck in an hour with a g allon can of antifreeze solution.
Barney Gredge sat dejectedlyoutside the barn at the abandonedfarmhouse, absorbing as much aspossible of the winter sunshine,
' when Mike Spermoni druve up in;' bis roadster.i "Listen," Mike said, as lie alight-. ed, "this ia the day, an' the chief
aayB have the big'car all ready by' ban past eleven. We make the haul
ist after noon, when there won'ti anyone around. Then we scram,1 hide out at the rimcli after weke the cops."
Barney blew his nose vigorously,la looked at Mike with bleary,
eyes. "Ogay," he said,"I'll hab'er ready."
ermuni regarded hia confed-anxiously. "Say, don't you
r.. so good?' 'gi1 "1 godda code," Gredge sneez-
j7filj>ermoni produced a pint flank.re, this ia the stuff lor a cold.y you have to work, but theP» got everything set."
sdra took a swig from the"I'll be ogay," he said,
iennoiii lifted a gallon oil cann his car. "The chief sent this
an' said be uure an' fix ther, He don't want it to freezen», an' it's gettin' pretty
_ney shuddered, aa he awal-I again.
.11 hsb'er ready by 'leben thir-f He waved ua Si>ermoni drove
swore vigorously aa lie; open the barn dour and car-he oil can inaide. It wan like
on, to keep him waiting atwolate place like this, for
^jl* of days. It was conifor*, at least, at the little uiounj-Wneutend, where Braxtun'nt f»Uier lived and kept b«e»,
one of the gang's hide •
The Sphinx Himself
c wan aa itingy as whenb«en a Kreenhsrn tarmboy,
0 of d ] the money they tookJ h»v« n«nt ioma radi
'lifted the hood of theek i«dw». He'd do his part,ry binff off without «
IkjMo one k o w Al Braxton wagtin the country wb»re he had
couple of days, they'd reach thecity again.
Barney drained the last dropfrom the flask. It was a mile downthe old road to the highway, thena half mile more to the nearestservice station where he could getthe radiator fluid.
Oil, gas and tires tested—nowthe radiator. It wasn't advisablefor the big car to be seen, so Bar-my walked to the station, grumb-ling at Al Uraxton's closeness.
lie waa buck in an hour, half ex-hausted, witli a gallon can of anti-freeze solution. He poured it intothe radiator, and the car wasready.
• • »
Shortly after eleven Braxtontnd Spennoni drove up ;n the roaditer. Barney bucked the big car oqtof the old barn, and they put theroadster inside. They'd pick it upthe night they left for the city.
"Everything okay, Barney?"asked Braxton, cheerily.
Gredge sneezed. "Eberythingbud me—I godda code."
The chief laughed. "We'll fixyou up when we get home."
There were only a few cawparked along the village streets,and almost no one on thu_ side-walks, liuruey- turned up his cuatcollar and pulled hia cap low a» hedrove.
When he parked the car, Sper-..uMii and Braxtou, faces coveredwith handkerchief*, jumpiid outand entered the bank, leaving the?ar door open. Barney waited, theengine idling.
In leas than rive minutes it waatill over, without u xhot fired. The
' and Spt'i iiioiu rushed out andjumped into the car. Braxton hadChe canvas bag, well packed withbills and silver.
Barney stepped on the gas, andthe powerful car roared down thenarrow street. Soon they were outof town on the highway.
Spennoni looked back. "Car fol-lowin* IIK, <hief." ha »aid. "Mustbe the hick nheriff."
"We'll «h»ke him," laughedBntxton. "That was easy, *n' boyit gave int a thrill to call on my 0I4home town folks, like that Step onU HarnAV t'1 •
t WONDER WHATMOMfe QONNA (A<VEME FOR NIY BIRTHDAY
'3/
i AIN'T ALLOWED JWAW, do AHEAD A N 'TELL! OOH'T BE ASTINGY OLE MISER
t'LL ftlVE YOU
T I N eucsseeBUT DON'T 6UE&
A CORNET CAUStTHAT'S WHAT IT Ifc!
"KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES"— Al Is Looking for Trouble Again By POP MOMANP]
X L»*JOe.R3TJVlD\ / Hf\YJ' -'•*e <£»OINCr I / M y Wlpf i
-mBm- 60 *ee HER,TRY It? ACT
\ "M A PlAV ' '
X 3A1D.WB <SlRL*>Y Tt>
OUR. |
A <iOUPt» Of*
ge frowaed. "I
you to havo her in »h»pel" j"I did. I checked oil »n' gtm an'
Urea aa' radiator an' everything."Suddenly the «ngin« coughed
miogly, »ud QH» of iU cylindersstarted miMinf. Th» c»r btbtndgained.
Bsrn«y axp«4numt«d with thechoke and ipadi t e m , but th« only
lt mm^ kuicarwof
fired back at the other car,within a hundred yards.
The answer w»a a blast front atotgun that sprinkled heavy D*1»
leU against the bullet-proof g | | pof the rear window.
The Mictae ot the big car coled a courie of times, then t'
"~t(ffii?t|otaeJ»ance,"t.« « t h ehai,
Braiton followed.A few mlnuUu later, the sheriff
and bit men had the bandits safelydiwrroed and handcuffed.
"See if you can »t*rt that carand bjruu It ID," the aherlff told
AW men.man lifted the hood andJ ' I I d " h l h d
chief with his manaoled hands, "Id to waljr do the serbice Btation
Brajrisn roared, "And whafdyou do with that can of alcohol Igent you for it?"
Barney blew hU note vkrorouil'•Thad wwT Th>d « « » - > r h e aa
Prom Readinc** dirt track tothe speedway aove the nation'!foremost knights of the roaringroad. Sunday, May 17, roaWp*their inaugural bow at Balpi A.Hankln»w»Ts Unihorno me««t ofEastern auto racing.
thrat-A unctloned evenU,
Elltworth VJiWa, Jr.,1 worW'fessional t«nnls cljamplon i
i K l i b r t h Apew in
'a i"
j p willAnnory on
i *•*
Calif'-J t
Will
• i i
{ayComedylBhtfrank Copra, (' .
•,11,rn ia coming to town. Well, not acUiiilly.l(- djrf productions, always enjrerly awaited, is
,,iicn tonight at the Majestic Theatre. ItslU'Oflfl floes to Town," and it stands a veryaccording to reports that have preceded it, of
ll '['lapponfid One Night," which Capra also di-h i n j'ictureB. — — — — — — — — — —
;,,,,,r,l,nnry array ofI,,, lu.li.iK Clark Gablfl,•,,|l,erl. Warner Bax-
Mnv Kobson, W«I-•'•'1;,1 pnrlifir, Barbara,;,,. whom this directori h l , mn(cic touch, mnrt,L(, ,,r Cnry flooper and
ivlio arc
: 'nf "MV. Deeds Goes
.,,„• S..ppn"-lmg C.it,.„, i i n , l , probably m *
[ h ( , i r wny to please l h«, . , „ , „ , a,-., sticii p ' » y « «I,.,„,.,•,,ft, making nU
' ' ,,«pf>nrance after ft; j , , , . , , , . , . ; Lionel fltander,
'" j , , ,m i r who was seen] f you <'ouW Onlyi n,,. Music Go««
''l'i,,,,!;]»•(« Piimbrille, vil-l'iM'iii-y; Raymond Wal-
,„ ('-iprK brought to thei; Iwiiy Bil l"; M m e -M.lt/».nniM>r, the famous
II it Wnrner , War ren,MI| many others of like
,i, nnn.OOO Fun Fei t; '.,,„.,, ,,nf of Hollywood a
,. ,1,,'iic plnrs, is seen ini l.nnefflllow Deeds, a,H t , ,w n hoy with, neV-, i : rif ii'iiinion sense,
,, Hie lidy sum of $20,-...,,„ an orccntric uncle.
- „!„,„ Now York City isI |nr newspapers and,., .•nnip snapping at his
Gary Cooper and Je«n Arthur in"Mr. Deedi Goe* To Town,1' open-ing a leven-cJjiy run at th« MA-JESTIC tonight.
\WA1THY SPINSTER SISTERS OWNING OIL WELLUSED IN 'BLACK GQLVREALIZE LONG AMBITION
TODAY A T DIHarold Lloyd, Comedy Star,
IK Hailed As Great InPantomime
Director I,eo MfCnrey believesthat Harold l.lnyd belong in thePfrnnd trndition of comedy artistswho have nppcnled to millions withtheir pantnmime.
Mci':ir«-y is cortnin that the spec-tacled comedian, whose new Para-mount comedy, "The Milky Way,"fipnns tonimht nt the Ditmns Then-tre, ranks union); the most talentedpant.nmimists of all time.
He cites, in pnrtinl ennfirmntionof his conviction, the action of theRockefeller Foumlntinn in requestinir Hie privle^e nf preserving exnmples of TJnyd's screen nrt. forfuture frrnorntinna. Kulnre histor-ian?' of our nrn will atmly Lloyd'searly And current pictures us (in-paralleled examples of rnmfdy.
"Kvery URO since the Greeks,"nays Mr. McCiiroy, "has relishediPiinloitiime, which has the virtue oflioinjr tin1 universal language. Itnppouls to a!] types of people, fromI he pimple to the sophisticated.
"Harold I.loyd was recentlyquoted in a nntiolinl magazine assnyintr tlint n viaunl gnu a laughyou apprehend wholly through theeye is better thnn a line png, onethat must he rend or heard. He isright. Pnntomime causes the he-holder to think, nnd allows him thepleosant privilege of interpretingthe humor as he wishes. The com-edy of the future, even when usingtnlk aiul snund. will be founded onthe same principles."
'The Milky Way" recounts thehilarious adventures of a timidmilkman who ducks his way intothe prize, fight ring. In the sup-norting cast are Adolphc Menjou,Verree Teaailnle, Helen Mack, Wil-liam Gargan, Dorothy Wilson,(Jeorge Barbier and 'Lionel Stnn-der.
Harold Lloyd, Dorothy Wilao n and h*len Mack • • i«enMilky Way" opening a leven-ilay r'un tonight.
"Th.
I ini:mini
n.ing nf "Black Gold."pic of the oil fleld«, com-
. descent Th«»tre today,,,,*<ible for two wealthy,.ter» to realize their life
Wli
Icall"!
the company w on lo-tlic oil field* at Newhall,
„ , ,,,i, a scene waa n*«de<l«hci«-inp a (rusher coming on. Thefomi'-uiv waited for aeveral days(or „„/ of the drilling companieato <trik.\ but with no auccew. On,hc morniiiK of the fourth day ofwiiiinit. news came that ft well lo-rlll( ,1 iilmiit a mile from where thepicture company waa, would breakam minute. Equipment w»a ha»-tilv loaded and the company movedto'the new location. Upon theirarrival, the foreman in charge ofthe ilrilline operationa informedDiniiur Hopton that nnleia per-mi iim was obtained from theutvnrrs he could not allow the picturr rnmpany to reman.
Just us thing's looked the dark-est, two kindly looking, little, oldladiis walked up and informedHiiptim that it would be quite allright tn shoot the scenes he needed.Hopton looked at the foreman who
confirmed the perinissi^yj, andshooting WHS immediately begun.When several hundred feet of filmhad been taken one of the Indiesapproached Hopton and quietlyasked if it would be possible forher and her sster to work as extrapeople while the company was us-ing their oil well.
Hopton gladly granted their re-quest, but thought it rather Btrangethat these two, obviously well offwomen, wished to work for threedollars and fifty cents n day asatmosphere. Allowing his curios-ity to get the better of him, Hop-ton asked them the reason for theirrequest. He then learned thattwenty-five years ago the two sis-ters left their home in Kansas andcame to California to get into thethen infant motion picture indus-try. Even in that day it seemsthat d<"H|ipointment was the voguein Hollywood, for they did notmeet with any more success intheir quest than many another girlwho came later. After sufferingmonths of privation the sisterswere left a legacy and turned tothe oil fields with their investment.
'HEROES OF THE RANGE'STARS KEN MAYNARDRoaring Picture Of West
Painted On ScreenAt Crescent
A roaring picture of the old westwas painted on the screen of theOrescent Theatre today where KertMaynard's "Heroes of the Range"began a three-day run, with an ap-preciative iiudience thoroughly en-joying the Columbia picture.
"Heroes of the Range" revolvesaround the capture of June Gale,Ken's lendinp lady, and her broth-er, played by Harry Ernest, by theoutlaws who hope to make theyunff man reveal when a largeshipment of gold will arrive in anearby town. The boy is an em-ploye of the express office in thetown and thus knows when themoney is expected to arrive.
Maynard, posing aa Lightning*Smith, a notorious border gunman,in admitted to the gang, and work-ing with them upsets their nefar-ious plans and brings them to jus-tice.
PREVBE TONITE!Continuous
2 to 11 P.M.
Telephone
P. A. 4-3388
ON STATE STREET at tk. FIVE CORNERS. PERTH AMBOY
PREVUE TIME TABLE
:.;iu "i.litl*::n "Milk? W«j"H'"> "Mllle U N FauMe»7"io,s:i »Mllkr W*r"
NOTICE
No Early Birds Fridayor Sunday Nites
Other NiEht, Until 7:30 P.M.
Entire Week Starting with Prevues Tonite
Franchot Tone Insists He LeadsA Double Life-At Home, In Films
HASHTTATS1Voice Of Bnyie Ann' Bated
On Kantor'i NovelOf Fox Hound |
Can n mnn ho «n loyal to B <IOR
ns to rommit nuirdi'r for it? :This stranjro trick in human psy
oholnKy i* (lie r u n of nr\e of thp;HtimziiiK hniinn rtorument*:
«>v>'r In romp to the screen, "ThP!Voire of I1n(fle Ann," with Lionel!Rnrrymorp in the principal role,pominK Woilnpsdny to thp jtrnniiThontre.
Baaed on MncKinlny Kantor'snovel, whirh in turn was haned onnn actual court easr in Missouri,it tplh the story nf n veteran Mis-smiri fox hunter and his favoritedog, to avenue which tie kills «man and (toes to prison. It is heldthe greatest tribute tn n Ang slm1*Senator VPBI'H fnmoun speechwhich fiRiires in thp trial scene.
The HI nn and doc episode is setin a romance of younif love, feudsand other interesting angles. Acomplete psek of Missouri hounds Ki>n M«ynard, h e r o of hundred* of "W«atern»"was taken to the Metro-Gf>ldwyn . . , . , 4 , , -.- —• n ,, • • «
j Mayer studios nnd actui«l fox friend, appear ing m Heroea Of T h e Range, whichhunts stnjred, just as is done in t he | a th ree-day run at t h e CRESCENT today. "B lackhill country of the Mid Western , . . ,, t a t e and Flash Gordon a r e other p ic tures on the bill.
Several members of the rast of"Ah Wilderness!" npnin appearwith Itarrymon?. Kric Linden iSjm Turn
FEATURESALWAYS
Franchot Tone And Loretta Young
Franchot Tune wants to go onrecord as the. man who leads adouble life, and is mighty insistentupon it.
He's a devoted husband half thetime, he says, and a "hard-work-ing bachelor on the movie sets" theother half.
It was on his set at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, during the film-ing of "The Unguarded Hour,"coming tonight to the Strand Thea-tre, that he was asked why henever talked about Joan Tone forpublication, or why Joan Crawfordnever mentioned him.
It's an agreement," he said.
sionally, we must each stand on'our own feet. What we. do do-mestically is nobody's business butour own. So we confine our inter-views to other subjects."
In his new picture Tone plays afiery English prosecutor who istaught in a hazardous personal ex-perience the dangers of circum-Btantial evidence.
Loretta Young is opposite aR WBwife, and the featured cast in-cludes Lewis Stone, Roland Young,Jessie Ralph, Dudley Bfgges andothers.
The mystery play is based onthe stage play by Ladislaus Fodor,
ybis son, Renjy, a Missouri farmhoy, nnd Spring Dyington is againin the mother role. Maureen O'Sul-livnn has the feminine lend nprni-':iti> tiiidi'ii, nnd Dudley OiKtc****.Cliiirl<"5 flrnpewin, .lumen Macklin,Rilly Newell, Henry Wadsworthand others are in the eftst, i
The t\ti\r<* brought hack are theiroperty of Sheriff Tom Hash of!Kansas City, ft noted sportsman.Among them nn1 the champion'lounds of the stale nf Missouri.
Dramatic highlights in the pie-ure include the fox hunt, the birth
nf tin1 puppy iimid the thunderilorm anil i(s v^-ne, the coming
of the itmnjrer fnun the North whobuilt the hurtled wire fences, theo"i<; of "Hugle Ann." the desper-ite efforts of the heroine to prevent trouble as the infniiated farm-ers gather, the murder, the trialwith Rarryinore's dramatic tributeto the dog, and the denouncementin which the rape of Hugle Ann Iis settled in the hills to which theold fox hunter returns.
CREtCENTPERTH AMBOY
CONTINUOUS'1
SHOWSDAILY
FRIDAY - SATURDAY . SUNDAY
FRANKIE DARROGLORIA SHEA in
"BLACK GOLD"AN EPIC OF THE
OIL FIELDS
BUSTER CRABBE"FLASH
GORDON"
I OF THE RANGE f
"We're a married couple but we're English version by Bernard Meri-ulso professional folk. Profea- vale. Sam Wood directed.
GREENHOUSE DISPLAYSRUINED MINK COAT
An unusually mpressive exam-ple of the damage moths can effectn a perfectly good fur coat may beseen in the show windows of (Jrecn-house's, Perth Amboy furriers, lo-cated at Smith and McClellanstreets, where a Mink Coat sold or-iginally at % 1,500 is totally de-stroyed by moth«.
The garment had been placed ina cedar lined clonet and its ownerfelt the coat WHSI perfectly safefrom the ravages of moths. Whenshe saw the gannent after a Sum-mer in the closet she couldn't be-lieve her eyta, and neither canmany women who see it now.
PREVUE TONIGHT!PREVUE TIME TABLE
7:59 Newi and Shorti8:18 "Small Town Girl"
10:03 "Mr. Dcedi Goei To Town" MAJESTIC PERTHAMBOYCONTINUOUS DAILY
2 TO 11 P.M.
MONDAY - TUESDAY
DAVID HOLTFRANCIS FARMER
IN
'TOO MANY PARENTS'—Al.o
"WOMEN IN WHITE"FREE CHINA TO THE
LADIES
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY
BIGHU NGARIAN
PROGRAMTWO FEATURES
"KEEP SMILING"And
"Honor Among Thieves"
VII VN Iv f PERTI-t AMBCy • - /
SAT.-SUN.-MON.-TUES.
PREVUE TONITE
ENTIRE WEEK STARTING WITH PREVUE TONITE (NOTICE;Dot to Ibr length of theae nlcturei ther* will |
• >MI}' br uttf I'reviir Hhovf. Til* laat com*vlttr allow m a n . at 7iOO P. M.
YEAR'SLAUGH
SMASH!
'ADOLPHEMENJOU• P - v t«u i£E TEASDALE
m~ HELEN MACK - W i a i A M GARGANGEORGEBARBIER- DOROTHY WILSON
'•ASTTIMESTODAY
"LITHE LORD FAUNTLEROrW STARRING
Freddl* BartholomewDolor*. G j l B
The uproarious tale of
Mr. Deeds and his auda-
cious adventures . . .
eclipsing anything ever
seen for rib-cracking fun
. . . hilarious excitement
. . . amazing climax!
ARE YOUtWXllAe?"
Lovely Lomta M M Gap*turcd The Daihingof "Mutiny on the Bounty1', . . and she'll Met) I yourhtdrt too in thit gayexciting tore drdmo.1
YOUNGcPtonctwtTONE
RACE NITE
SATURDAYFrom tht Stuff PUy with
ROLANDYOUNG
IrEII
LAST TIMES
TODAY
JANET GAYNORROBERT TAYLOR
—IN—
"SMALL TOWN GIRL"
ARTHUR
ALSO 'SATURDAY and SUNDAY MATINEE ONLY
C T E R DARKEST AFRICA (with CLYDE BEATTY
WED. - THUR. - FRI. (Prevue Tue. Nite)
/Georg* Bancroft • Lionel Stemdtf,
i i DumbillU •_ H. B. Warn«r
L I O N E L
BARRYMOREMAUREEN
O'SULLIVAN 'F. R I C
LINDENIn
"THE VOICE OFBOGLE ANN" s
TRF TO THE LADIES f U I N AWED. N I T | VUIHW..
•I lUgfatrvtio^ Prlnary MM!(Uft*rml Election
I* ecniormic]*Mt of at a«t
awto awl am<
It, mmfonnity with the prottof at a«t entitled "An Act
' •" •Iwrtloni," approved,0, the smppl«nen*i
•an amendmenta thereof,tttd of the ltfialatiye ses-
MftT netlee In hereby givenL fhrtriet Board of Rstjs-
OWlon in and for theDhtftta of * • Boroughrtt will meet in the placet
dMlgnateri for till, n registering all p«mo«to vote at th« ensuing pn-
_JMI General Election.Ttfnday, May r.. 193«, the
^ _ _ J t Board of Klectionn willmet! to tbji pnrjiiMf of cnndiictinif
• t# houiw r«nvB».ihMdity, M«jr IC, IH3"i be-
I th» bourn of 7 o'clock A M.io'clock P. M.. (K A. M. to !i; Davtfrht Savin* Time) the
, j t Board of Klection,^ willI fet the purpose of rppistrn; sad conducting n Primary
S" JWioi 'or (lie eltM'linn of DeleWaltd Alternate* to the Nation
iblicail Parties f<« follows:„ , IWeeatci at Lniye fimnState of New .leriey to be,
[0"»pn by the Repiililirmi Party.Pour ' Alternate Delccnti's-at
;e from the State of New 3n-„ io he chosen liy the RepublicanParty
Eight IMfiRiites ntUrire fromI M State of New Jersey to bei Soften by the Democratic Party.' , ' A g h t Alternate Delegatesat
ftrgf from the State of New Jer-i w In he choien hv the Democratic! Krty
Two District Delegates from theWftli CoiiKieisioiiiil District, ofNew Jersey to be chosen by the Re-iioblimn Party.i Two District Alternnte Dele-gates from the Fifth ('iiiitrrr-ssionalDistrict of New Jersey to lie chon-•n by tlie Kepiibliciin Party,^ j f m i r District Delegates from theFifth ('onjrreiiiimal District i>"New Jersey to he chosen by th
Four Hist net Aliwnale Dele-ptf", f ruin tin- Fifth I onjjiessnDfatlict of N'eW .lel.-iey to lie I'hdS-en by Hie IViniHTMiir I 'ulty.
Also foi the pnrpnsi' of doct iugone County Commit tec-man andone County Cmnmilleewoman foreach political parly in each dis-t r ic t ; mid for the purpose of mak-ing' nomination foi the several Na-tional, State, County and Boroughoffices to be voted for at the gen-eral election as below mentioned.
O n e - U n i t e d States Senator .One Member of the House of
Reprc.-ieutat.ivps,One -State Senator.Three -Members of the General
AmemljlyTwo - - Members of the Board
of Chosen Freeholders.One—Coroner.One—Mayor.T w o - M e m b e r s of the Borouirh
Council of the Borough of Car-teret.
One—Collector of Taxes.•One—.Justice of the Peace.fOn Tuesday, October 3, 1936,
bjtween the hours of 1 o'clock P.M,, and 9 o'clock P. M. the DistrictDl»rd of Elections will meet fortl B purpose of registering all per-sAn8 entitled to vote the ensuing:Cjeneral Election.
• tOn Tuesday, November 3lth,1 36, between (he hours of 7 A.1 , and H o'clock P. M., the DistrictI >ard of Elections will meet fort B purpose of conducting theg neral election for the election0 ! candidates for the offices here-inafter mentioned.
'Sixteen—'Electors of a Presi-dent and Vice-President of theUnited States..'•One- United States Senator.'One -Member of the House of
Representatives.Three Members of the General
Assembly.Three Members of the Board
of Chosen Freeholders.One—Coroner.One^—Mayor.Two—Members of the Borough
Council of the Borough of Car-teret.
One—Collector of Taxes.One—^Justice, of the Peace.
REVISED POLLING PLACESOf the Borough of Carteret
DISTRICT NO. 1; (VotingWashington School), BE-
at the junction of Noe'swith Staten Island Sound;
inning thence (1) in a Westerly" _ alonfc said Noe's Creek
tt Pershing Avenue; thence (2)Northerly, along Perching AvenueW Roosevelt Avenue; tlience (8)Westerly along Roosevelt Avenuetft Westerly line of Charles Street;
, pence (4) Northerly along Chax-m Street and continuing in astraight line to tlie Hahway River• t a point where Deep Creek emp-
,\ tie* into said River; thence (5)^Southeasterly along the Hahway
t" l i ve r to Staton Island Soundd thence (6) Southerly alongaten Island Sound to the place
«f BeginnhiK.DISTRICT NO. 2: (Voting
ie, Columbus School), BEGIN-at the junction of StatenSound and Noe's Creek-
ng thence (1) Westerly,Noe's Creek to Peruhjng
,; tlience (2) SoutherlyPershing Avenue to NewTerminal Railroad; tlience"ierly, along the New Jer-
.Terminal Railroad and ucrosaof I. T. Williams Coin-
to the mouth of Tufl*/• Vhere name empties into' i ten Islantl Sound; and
••(t (4) Northerly, along Staknd Sound to the place ofing."" "CT NO. 3; (Totinif place,(U» School), BtXJlNNINGiunction of Tufts Creek utid
Island4 Hound; runningI (1) Westerly along Tuftsto the New Jersey Terminal
,,ud and continuing alongttilroad to the intersectionirBhlng Avenue and Holy
ce (2) Southerly,ig Avenue, and con-
,g in"a rtraWa line lo * «,n Inltnd Sound thtnee (A),erly and Northerly, along theStoten lo'and Sound to theof Beginning.
NO. 4: (VotingW O T W - d School). BKinN-at the intersection of the
\ corner of Urch Street(1) Southerly, alongAvenu* ap* continuing
,t line to SUten Wand2) West*-1"
,jund toline of thy
- direction
ntie;
Termi
t n u « v t YOU * * *
P-;;"]CAP-;;
Tin - TME KELLY KIDS - T 0 M
JSOCKS DWtHEO tXJD
|) W HERE BEFORE." 1 601D BED f
Q
0
0
S0MEBOCV5 PtAYIN1
A TRUTH 0 « ME, AHDHECK 1U FIND OUTALLRIflMT!
I'M TAKIN''EM OFF NOW
UNDER THE BOREAUAND 'TAINT UNDER
BED! WHERE'D
IT G
WEU.NOW:WHAT BECAMEOF T'OTHER ONEI KNOW I LAID ITON THAT CMIRTHIS MINUTE!
MEWYAl DH>TjWl ] TH«IS61TDN1 PASTA JOKE! SOMEBOWIHTHBdfEERIT J I tAKEITT/ HOOSE PINtMED W SOCK BEHIND MY BACK
I F«)MTHIS CHAIR, AND I'M GONA FIND OUT W JTWASNT THEM-
TrlEVKE FAST^ ! NONE 6
YOUR 30KES! COUfiH
UP THAT SOCK YOU
60BACKTOBED'WE'RE
SUEPY1
AND I LAID T BEHINDME ON TME CHAIR AND I
GOT WAND TURNED *; WASKT THERE.1
POLICE STATION; WELL, SEND YOUR 8C«T |) DETECTIVE AND A COUftA COPS OVER I D ,
. ONCET) vEirr MYSTERIOUS OWE! (
">T->. I MM* I 111
\THEATnc!
ITAMTIN'ITHEMMOOMI
{"TAINT IN
l
10W HOWOB, HE'S EITHER AI KMH Nut OH HE'S KlDDINfi
• MAJESTY OF THE LAW'
Avenue whore the Southwesterlyboundary line of tho borough of(,'arteret ineeU same; t*\ence (5)Northwusterly along said boun-dary line to Larch Streut; thtneelij) Northeasterly alung I*r<:hStreet to the ulmc ul Ucniniiing.
DISTIUCT NO. 6. (Votingjiluco, Cleveland School), BEGIN-NING nt the corner formed Ly theintersection of the Suuthwesterlyline of Washington Avenue andPunJiiiig Avenue; ruuaing tlience(1) Southwly, idoog PurnhtngAvenue to Larch Street; thence(2) Weiterlv, «lonf Larch Streetto the Southwesterly line of theBorough of G&rteret; theuco (J)along said Southwesterly line ina Northwesterly and Westerly di-rection to Bkir Road; thence (t)Northerly Along Bltir Ho«d tn theMew Jersey Tenntaal E«ilroad;fbenca (5) Easterly, along theNew Jersey Terminal Railroad tethe Central Railroad of New Jer-tey; thence (6) Nortteriy, l
thu Central Railroad of Now Jer-ta the Southerly line at lands
of Mexican Petroleum Corpora-tion) thence (7) Westerly, alooir3tid lands to a point opposite Fill-iHore Av«au«) ttwftCi (8) fiuut)l-erly to Fillmora Avenue and alongtaid Street to Carteret Avenue ithence (9) SouUieaaterly. alonjfCarteret Avenue to L i n d e nStreet; thence (10) Northerly,along Linden Street to Washin*ton Avenue; and tbtflw ( i f tEasterly along W*»hlngto(i At*-nue to the place of Bttinnlng.
DISTRICT NO. 6: (Vtplace, High School), BEQlNtat the corner formed by tte lnter-nection of the Northerly lint ofWashington Avenue wltft We»ter-ly line of Peranlrur Avennaj run-nio« thence (1) W«aUrly alongWashington Avenue to LmaenStreet; theaee <8) 8ou*erly,along linden Street to CfcrtentAyenue; thence (8) N«*we»Ur-
y, along Carttret Avenue toFillmore Avenue; thence (4)Northerly, along Fillmore Ave-nue and continuing in a straightline to the Southerly line of land*
f & M i P t l Cofhe S y *exican Petroleum Cerporration: tneni* (fi) Buwrly, aloaf
aald Une of lands to the Westerlyline of lands «f the Brady Tractithence (6) Southerly, along stidtin* of lands to the Northerly Unaof lands of the Conlon Tract}tk (7) EMtaly, along M!4
l U f id t t tNortherly Una of said tract toWashington Avenue; thence (8)Southerly, alone Washington Avernue to the Northerly line of landsof the Hermann Tract; thence (9)Easterly, alone th* Northerly U Mof said lands to Noe's GreeJdthence (10) still Easterly. "the several oounes of aalato Vershln* Avenue j and them*
•long ~
place, Nathan Hale School), BE-1 easterly along 4f,id RooseveltAvenue to Pershing Avenue; an,4 ^ J Jthence (9) Southerly klong
GINNING at the intersection ofNoe's Creek and Perahingnue; running fence (1)W l d i t i l j t
Ave-nue; u g () in aWesterly direction ulo&tj the saidcreek to the Northerly line of theButnann Tract; (hence (2) stillWesterly along the Northerly lineoi saia tract to Washington Ave-nue; thence (8) Northerly, alongWashington Avenue to the North-erly line of the Conlon Tract;• B « } Mfesterly, along the
ierly line of said tract to theWesterly line of the Brady Tract;ifcence (5) Northerly, along theWesterly line of said tract to theSoutherly line of property belong
to the Mexicanr the Southerly line of said
; thence (6) Westerly.. to tbe Central RailroadJersey; thenc* (?) NoiUi-
along the lands of saidto Roosevelt Avennt;
(8) Basterly »nd " " '
ing Avenue to the place of Begin-ning.
DISTRICT NO. 8: (Votingplace, Nathan Hale School), BE-GlNNlilO at tb« Intenection titbe Northerly line of RooseveltAvenue and the Westerly Mne ofCharltg Street; running thence(1) Northerly, along the WesterlyHIM of Charlat Street and « * *tinuing in w straight l i M t« apoint In the Rahway River vhaMDeep Creek ehUirs Into same;thence (2) ta a wa«fti W< "'direction along the aerwal o^ H^ I**?1WV« to the W<—bwindwy Mae »f the Borough
*) In
i ( B ) NorttwriyRailroad Conv-
Company;along the Centalpiny to Roosevelt Avenue; andthenet («) Easterly and Soutsveasterly, ploag Roosevelt Aveno*to "
bouidon alongg tia«
of the
TakeNOTICE
notice that ANTHQNYBKECHKA intends to apply to tiwBorough Counci) of the Boroughof Carteret for « Pienary RetailConsumption license for the prem-ises situated at 64 Wheeler Ave,.nue, Carteret, New Jersey,
Objections, if any, should bemade immediately In writing to:Harvey VO, Ptatt, borough clerkof the Borough of Carteret, N. J.
(dined) ANTHONY BRE€HKA.
C«th«dr«l GruuuJ.The Washington cathedral ijruuiid
are 380 feet above se& levfl. '>'><lowest poliitB in the city are almuMat tea level
Nave far M*chiu«
traced to 1828 In Pajnsvllle, Ohio,where It was the name for the ma-CUM with which counterfeit muuey
TW f # ^"A «maU nun in U W r e s p ^
blUty," KM Hi Bo, § • sage of lChinatown, "I* llkel* to rattle loudly, as «ow • sbrhtHPM ta * d r y
pod."
TO MH«* W t Vm e t Is TO
-*•>
,J&..
KIlK/f
arteret High Defeats KeMeat long
fandi In Long GameBlues Get IS Hits, Including
2 Home Runs In 13-8 Victoryln>ol Win* Drawn-
8-7—Stop;,;:,. on Shore VM
Rally.School
longt e a m
l,al
won a
t i n ' '
at Longy afternoon
n threateningrflUy to f t
by theThe victory
ht
indication
..I' '( to V.,.,. .,M.on(l fltraiKiit.,„ ,|lf. last half of the',,,.,-,.( i•»»m bad acom-',,,. run l^ ' l . « t 0 B ',.i. from "ntlv w o n . ,I ,|M|, Brnnch team hadlin i,',,,,r yrX as Hazel,,.;..,v got on base on;:,rnr. Then Accerra.I, ,,.iief pitcher, bolUd
,., into center, scoring,. fanned Nichols lor„ , Rut McPhetson
line...»r at Dixon, who'allowing Accerra
Hammering out fifteen solidbase hits, two of which were homeruns by Terebeckt and Romanow-ski, Coach Prank McCarthy's Carteret High School baseball troupewon Its third straight game of theseason Tuesday afternoon at Key-port by sinking the Keys underthe score of 13 to 8. The Blueshave yet to be beaten.
Virag and Lukasluk shared thepiWhing burden for Carteret. VI-r*jfit»rt«<1 nn the hill and checkedthft home team until the fifth,frame when he was the victim ofa four-run assault. Lukagiak wassent to the rescue and finished the
ame, holding the Keys to one runduring the last four rounds.
Keyport used two plfthers, too.Tice began the game but luted nolonger than the third frame whena barrage of bass nits setit him tothe shower^ He was replaced bySmith, first baseman, who started
ml run, Longrun to tie. Buthimself out of
if Ramsey for thethree outn were
ikrout route in this
the Keen
.'H onopuller:
l t , r ,l i
i.. Ir
:1ns time the game wai,trair, with Carteremull WM\ most of th<
n ,, t scon1 dtwo runs on,. i singles in the third,,n\ VI- Each te»m
.,P, in the fourth.h,,li Cnrterel tallied Oil
, ),„«,. on balls and aj,,,„.,•, to take the leac
innther run in the sixtnil White hoys made thi
.inch scored tingle mm-h and seventh to evt(ince more. But Car-
,•,1 it ngnin in the eighth.. M Kohora drew a base,;,| scared a minute later• iinely two-bagger.ninth Oarteret put the
in hitting with three btngles inthree chances. Ho walked, twice
d scored four runs.The box score:
CARTERET HIGH (13)AB R H
Paszlowsky, 2fo 8Dixon, 2b 3King, 2b aCowalsky, 3b 2Elko, 3b 3Terebeckl, cf 3Roman, lb 3FrankowskJ, cD
J ,Donovan, n .. / . i ftKohora rf - ¥Kohora, rf
j \ i , f i.'
pi'rf
I (tie | '« -
I out ten
literally speaking,"AH run outburst. JackII iid the fireworks with ai i.walsky struck out, butki walked. Dixon w«nt toi ., passed ball. With onei- -i nice was set for a 'bunt.'
I:iimiin ilid just that aa he1 in ii perfect bunt to scorei Then Lukasiuk came,h ••nil another timely hit toT.•! i licoki. Lukasiuk was putin: sci'iind,,i;v, who went the route forrit. turned in a creditable
HC. His control was al-i-ri as he rave not a ain-
out well but hit the bumps alongtoward the seventh and eighthinnings.
Carteret scored its first run inthe Becond inning when Terebeckthit a home run with no one onbase. In the next frame Carteretdrove Tice off the mound with afour run attack.
With one away, M. Virag singled,and his brother, Andy,, was safeon a fielder's choice. Then Paszlovsky unacked a three bagger todrive in two ruas. He scored him-self on Klko's one bast hit.
Keyport scored two in the third,one in the fourth, and four In thefifth to tie the score at 7-7,
The Carteret bats began boom-ing in the seventh heat. M'lkeVlrag opened the ceremonies witha base hit. Lukasluak broughthim home with a three bagger lodeep centerfleld. And with twoaway, Dixon, batting for King,drove out a single to score Luk-asluk. Dixon scored with thethird run a minute later.
M. Vlrag, If gA, Virag, p 2Lukasiuk, p
42 13 15KEYPORT HIGH (8)
AB R HBanks, 3b 5 aRapolla, ss 5 2Smith, lb-p 4 1Yankowstd, If 4 1Septen, c 5 lHudley, rf 4 0Waivers, cf , . 5Merrill. 2b 5Tire, p-lb
The score by Innings:Carteret
PUT SALT ON \BIRD'S TAIL
Straight WiSt. James Win 2 Games
Over Weekend, fr-1,
Keyport014002
002140
330—13001— 8
The Summary—Home runs,Tarebeckl,' Rotaanowski. Threebase hits, Paszlowsky, Lukasiuk.Two base hits, Vankowsky. Doubleplays, Pazlowsky-KlngRomanow-ski; Septen, Merrill. Struck out byTice 8, Lukasiuk 9, Vlrag 4. Baseon balls oft Tice b, Lukasluk 2.Hit by pitcher, Smith by Virag.Umpire Smith.
first basa.batters.
He struck
11:;outhit the home team,
PLACING SAUT BEFORE STRAtWrtWWAS AN ANCIENT PL.EPGE OF
FRIENDSHIP MEDICINE MEN PLACEDSALT ON A DUMM~X BIRD IN A TRAP,CHANTED INCANTATIONS AND THENEXPECTED THE REAL &1RD5 TOFLY IN —BELIEVING TKEY WBRBAMONG FRIENDS. HENCe/'SALT ON ABIRD'S TAIL TO CATCH "CR.Ginsix#g,Son C
DOZENIN EARLY LONDON) A SEVEREPENM-T^r WAS PUACeD ON&AKER5 WHO CHEATED, TOAVOID THE STK3MA, HONtSTBAKERS GAVE AN EXTRAkOAF WITH EVERY TWELVE,BO THAT A^'BAKER'S p01ENrt
CAME TO MEAN T I K T R E N
Ukes Divide TwinBill On Home Field,Beat Perth Amboy Liberties
In First Game, 14-6, ButLose Second To IrvingtonNorwoods, 6-4.
The Ukes divided a doublebombardment in the eighth frame 1 header at. Brady's Oval Sunday
afternoon, defeating the PerthAmboy Liberties In the first game,
enabledby the
count of 10 to 7. Not content,however, the Blues began another
This three run rallyCarteret to pull ahead
that netted three more runs and Isewed up the ball game. Terebeckl Istarted the fireworks by hitting to ;left. Roman drew a base on balls.: l* to 6, and losing the second toPrankowskl got on first on an j the Irvtngton Norwoods, 6 to 4.error which enabled Teiebeckl toscore. And with two away, Lukasluk smacked a one-bagger toscore both Roman and Prankow-skl.
Terebeckl led the Carteret team
Tin box score:Carteret HlfJl I•5ft.
[Pa.-zlim-sl(y1BS . _ T B 11 l>ixn»u lib - . , 1 1I|Cow»lsky, lib 4
ri'bi'cki, cf 4I Romanowski, lb SI Lukasiuk, If 'iKrunkiiwski, c 4I Donovan, rf 0I Kohiira, rf
01
. 0602020
H.21311012021
E.11011001001
37 8 13Loag Brtnch (7)
AB. R. H. E.NirhuU, 2bBura, cfMd'lm-son, cf .
Itiniifii ,
Miuza, cHKV. !1>
Ha/, I
Nun
". If .rf
!, rf
52
.24444
. 4I
. 2
I
200012020001
Card* Organise ForComing Baseball Campaign.
The Cards A. C , championsof the JuntorBaseball Leaguein Carteret last yenr, are re-organizing for the comingcampaign. The team has ac-quired two new players, PeterKostikevicz and Walter Mali-no-wski. Among the regularsfrom last year who are back inharness this season are JohnBrorowskl, Lefty Prokopiak,John Mosdnski, John Biulow,Adam Gluchowski, WilliamFinn, Joseph Pieczyski, LeaNovak, Walter Dumanaki andStanley .Martenczuk.
Che team expects to haveanother successful season. TheCards are,at present bookinggames with heavy juniorteams in this vicinity. Stan-ley Martenczuk, of 41 Persh-ine Avenue, is manager.
Da Prile Fans 20As Buddies WinGives Only Four Hits In Bril-
liant Performance As Bud-diet Beat Amboy Ukes inOpener, 8-1
Mike DaPrile struck out twentybatters as the Buddies SocialClub opened Its 1936 season on Itshome field Sunday afternoon bydefeating the Ukrainian CatholicClub uf Peith Amboy, a to 1,
DaPrllc gave a brilliant per-formance as he allowed only fourmeasloy hits. He hurled shutoutball for seven innings and It was
The first game went only fiveInnings riup to the late arrival ofthe Amboy team. J. Halukopitched for the Ukes and held theLiberties to five scattered hits. ( o n ] y a f t e r h e e a s c d u p t n a t t n e
in the fmal which developed u l u , s s c o r C d t h e l r ] o n e t a l l y l n
Into one of the most excitinggames witnessed this season, theUkes threw away at least two op-
the eighth frame.The Buddies hoppi'd on Iioniin-
. .. . . . sky, Ukes pitcher, in the secondportunlties to win the game in the r o u n d a n d s c o r e d tW() r u n g T h e yclosing innings. In the eighth r e l a x e d u n t i l t h c s e v e n th whenthey tilled the bags with only one t n s c o r e d a n o t n e r b r a c c o f t a i -out but failed to score. Again In
Carteret Baseball ClubTo Open Week From Sunday
The Carteret Baseball Club,reorganized this summer af-ter a fairly successful cam-paign last year, will swing in-to action a week from Sundayafternoon at LeibiK's Field,Messrs. Trosko and Cnmba,co-managers, said this week.The opponent hns not as yetbeen booked.
The team will play Sundayball, for at least the first sixweeks, it is said. Many of thertiKiilars from last yew archack in the lineup togetherwith several ncweomcra whohave been signed up.
Amontf the players this yearwill be Toney Baranczuk,Sam Smolenski, Kid Hagen,Jack Dixoo, Mike Resko, JohnHarbarczuk, Stan Kosel, Din-ni'.V Comba, Buddy Mullen,Jcsa Sullivan and Mickey Mig-
36core by innings:
•t 002 111much... 110
Tin|z ; i
Sm
h'I'*" busi hits—N«
hits-Franerra.Mazankoww.
ome runs—M»l*«r/ljHrmen.uui—By Na«y lOrftr Nor-Kase on b»IIs—Off Norton
jQ|Tourney Results
Ii,.]I;.,
•'•oond round games in thetourney sponsored by the
••• Education Department'Uyed this week and the re-i i l l o w :
|Hi grade results A WaBjiIng-
nstein 0-19'"> 21-21
ii^ii l « 4 l|.ui«k 21-21
li>» i! 1-21 ' '"iiiehik 11-17
<"k 21-21'•k 13-8
- i i 21-21
Bobel 18-21-16Kostikovetz 21-17-21
Busctk 21-21Stewart 1-14
Johnson 21-21SUubach 18-19
Kish 1B-21-18Perry 21-18-21
Kondik 14-10Nagy 21-21
Cheimar 21-21Toth 16-14
Orban 21-21Vargo 0-0
Kurdyla 0-0Mesaros 21-21
Eighth grade results (ColumbtJ*School:
Hoffer 21-21Messinger 8-8
Ukos 9-21-16 ,Tokarciuk ^1-19-21
Holoob 0r0Eavaliof 21-21
B»U«r *8-14 1 .Svringler 21-jtl
Truck 21-16-2116-21-16
the ninth they loaded the sackswith two away. But it didn't doany good as they didn't score thistime, either. In other words, theUkes lost because they couldn'thit ln the pinches.
Next Sunday the Ukes will en-tertain the New York Ukes atBrady's Oval. The game is sche-duled to start at 2 o'clocji.
The box scores:(First Game)UKES (14)
AB R H EW. Bobenchik, c . . . . 4 4 1 0M. Kezo, lb :. 4W. Zap, 2b 2M. Bobenchik, ss . . . . 1D. Bohanek, 3b 3W. Karmazln, If . . . . 2N. Hamadyk, rf 2J. Wadiak, cf 2J. Haluko, p 2S. Bodnar, ss 18. aural, rt 0C. Bohanek, cf 1C. Oregor, If 1
18-10
•' ^"benehik 21-215|l"b-uk 12-0 ;
16-14D«no 21-21
Clark 0-0Cupsic 21-21
Kol 21-21Qavor 8-9
Bftnjlorno 1 9 - "/(uiiotowtky 21-21
Subo 17-21-U8abo 21-18-B1
ky 21-11R-17
lies. But this didn't compare tothe shellacking Lomlnsky took tnthe eighth inning when the Buddies pushed foui markers acros.the plate.
The Buddies will play the PultoiA. C. of Newark, here next Sunday afternoon. The game is scheduled to start at 1:30 o'clock.
The box score:BUDDIES (81
ABC. Bylecki, c 5S. Hadyk, ss 5J. Patrick, If 4W. Blrl, lb 5
Softball Leagueormed In School
Seventh Grade Boys' LoopOpens Next Thursday—Four Teams To Compete—Schedule Listed
S. garbarczuk, cfS. Hegedus, 2b 3M. DaPrile, p 4
J O, Hormth, 3b 2"iP.Koi.rf 1
25 14P. A. UBERTIES (6)
AB RFelix, rf 2 0Andrew, 3b 3 0Hoyt, If 3 0Johnson, lb 3 0Andraah, 2b 2 3Molnar, p 3 1Medwick, ss l 2White, of 2 0Stanley, c 3 1
1 \ z. Yuhasz, rf 2 1 l
34 8 9UKRAINIAN C. C. (1)
AB R HHaluko, 3b 4Parlniak, cf 3
n | M . Pedy, lb 4a C. Stezak, ss 3_ M. Raab, c 4E ' J. Fedy, If 3
Bomanetz, 3bM. Lomlnsky, pW. Lomlnsky, rf
12 fl 5 »The Summary—Bases on balls
off J. Hajuko 6, off Molnar 3.Struck out W J. Haluko 8, *y Mol-nar 3. Twp base hits, P. Bohanek.Home Rum, W. Karmazln. Um-pire, T. Berger. Scorer, John Zap.
(Second Game)XJKES (4)
AB R% Boteflchlk, c . . . . 5 2M, Kwo, »b 3 2C. .sBoliajiek, If 1 0M.: Bobenchik, p 4 0N. Hamadyk, rf 2 0W. Kjmnaain, d .... 2 0
32 1 4 3The score by Innings:Ukrainian 000 000 010—1Buddies 030 000 24x—8
The Summary—Two base hits,Patrick, Biri, Y«hasz. Three basehits Bylecki. J. Fedy. Struck outby DaPrile 20, by M, Lominsky 6.Bases on balls off DaPrile 2, offLomlnsky S.
D, Bohanek, 3b 4 0J,; Martwwltj, lb ' "8. Bodnar, ss . . .W. Zap. If
422
J. H»luko, cf 3j . Wadiak, If 08. (Jural, «s 0
31 4NORWOODS (fl)
AB RFtencb, ss — 4 1Bena, 3b 3 3Al«,e •••; I \
1
1 3
Al«,Buruell, M
aSk«r, lb
B j w , vtM$,tiBdWds, 3D
On the strength of twosparkling pitching perform-ances, the St. James baseballteam came through with adouble victory over the week-end, defeating the Perth Am-boy Adanacs, 6 to 1, and thendowning the Perth Amboy DanishA. 0., B to 2. Both irames werepl»yed in Perth Ambny. The twotriumphs extending the St. Jameswinninjf streak to three straightgame*.
"Runt" Rusnak did a commend-able jab in the opening g»m<i »» h<>held the enemy bstsmen to fivewell iwnttered hits. He struck outten men, and gave no bases onhulls, He put the game on "ice"in the seventh with ft single thatdrove in two runs.
The Adanacs drew first bloodscoringone run in the first inningAfter that they were held to 1string of troose eggs.
The St. James didn't score untilthe third inning. In this framePossoby opened with a single toright. Kolesarich followed withanother hit to the same sectionKrankow.iki'a onn hnpe blow Mintboth runners across the plate.
The St. James scored anotherrun in thc fifth. Kolesarick. firstman up, was hit by a pitched ball.,!oe Krankowski bounced a sngUthrough thpi infield, advancing Ko-lesnrick to third hnsc. Both Jack-son and Pencotty popped to theinfipld and it looked like Kolesarickwould remain strnnded on thiribase?. Hut Sumntka was of another opinion m he lined a hit overthe infield tn score Kolesarick.
In tlui seventh successive hits byKmnkowski, Jnckson and Pencotty,a base on balls to Sumutka, andanother hit by Rnsmik netted threemore runs.
In the second jfame "Ceasar"Nagy waa the whole show as heheld the Danish Club to threebingles.
The home tenni got one run inthe first inning. St. James tied
le score in thc second when Jack-son reached first on an error andscored a minute later on Sumutka'sthree-bagger off the right fieldwall.
The Danish Club forged aheadagain in the thir Hind remained
mt in front until the sixththe Carteret team icoredWth two sway, Jackson wallSumutka hanged anotheragainst the right field wall,second straight, three-ba(Hc«T,score Jackson. Nttfy then.mt an infield hit to score Sumutl
In th« seventh the St. Jk.iddpd another hrnce of runs
no good reason lit nil exceptmako the score decisive.
Joe Frankowski wan the hitstar in the first game. Heperfect day at bat with fourin four chances.
No-it Sunday the St, James v«play the South Pltinfleld C*rdl |rlamilton Boulevard Field in TPUinfleR The game U sehtdto start, at S :80 P. M.
The box acoves:St. J i n u
AB.Marcii, 2bNagy, rfPossbly, cfHatfen, ssKoiesarick, cf, rf....Frankowski, c .
422
. 4S
Jacksfln, lb '. 4Pencotty, If 4Sumutka, 3b ZRusnak, p 4
6 12ToUls 85AtUnnei
A B . R. H. <1 1Wirgillio, 2b .
Borsuk, BS 8Z»nlacky, c 8Dobrowaski, lb 3Brusdowski, cf 3Bakowski, If 3Totin, 3b 3Balut, rf 3Desk, p „, 3
Twilight LeagueHas Four TeamsLegion, Clovers, Athletics
And Harmony Entered-—Final Meeting Next Thurs-day.
The Senior Twilight League inCarteret this summer will consistof lour teams, namely the Harmony Club, the Athletics, theCfovers and the American Legion,Harry Oleckner, head of the eom-irtittee announced this week.
This committee together withrepresentatives of the teams willhold a final meeting in theborough hall next Tuesday atwhich time the set of by-laws andi schedule will be drawn up..The iMguo will in, al) probability
get under way about the secondweek in May. Qwnes will beDliiyed on Ieach week,Friday*.
Joe Resko's HitBeats Amboys, 4-3Resko'; Seventh Inning SingK
Drives In Two Runs AClovers Triirrnph.
Joe Resko hit a single inthe seventh inning to drive intwo runs and beat the PerthAmboy Cubs at the local fieldSunday afternoon, 4 to 3, asthe Carteret Clovers regis-tered their second straightvictory.
With the Clovers trailing by 3to 2, and Paszlowski on third baseand Masluch on second, the stagewas set for Mr. Joseph Resko ashe stepped up to the plate in theseventh frame. There were two outat the time. So he politely pokeda one-bagger into the green pas-tures over the infield to enable bothPaszlowaki and Masluch to crossthe plate with the tyin^ anil win-ning runs.
Yot the first livti innings 'Pitchy'Terebecki did tlio piti-hing Heheld his iiwn dining that time, al-lowing only five scattered hits.But he weakened in thu sixthframe as the visitors pounded himfor three hits and OIK: run. At thispaint Manager Joseph Mirnola useda bit of John MeGriiw's strategyby yanking Tcrebecki and sendingin HGipN Kt'sko.l
This change turned out well asMr. Resko put a stop to the suddenCub outburst and retired the sidebefore any further damage wasdone. This same Mr. Reskocredited with the victory.
As has been previously related,the Clovers scored two runs in theseventh to come from behind andwin the game.
The (Hovers have two open datesnext Synday, May 3, and the Sun-day following, May 10. They arewilling to book gameB with teamsin this vicinity. Mr. Stan Masluchm manager. He may be reached at:i5 Randolph Street.
Th» box score:Cloven (4)
AB. R. H.•astlowski, Sb 4
Masluck, cf 4Joe Resko, ua ,... . 3Roman, lb - . 1 8Jim Resko, 2b 8Jobrpwsk, c 8'. Terebecki, p 3
A Softball league has been or-ganized among the eseventh tfvadean the public schools under the au-erviaion yf the Physical Educn
tion Department. Four teams areentered.
The league will open next Tues-day with two gnmes. The Aces willmeet the Robins in the first whilethe Orioles will play the Piratea inthe second.
The official schedules for boththe first and second halves togetherwith the players' lists follow
Fir.t Half
May 7—Tueiday
Aces vs RobinsOrioles vs Pirates
M»y 10 — Friday
Aces vs OriolesPirates vs Robina
May 14 — Tuetday
Aces vs PiratesRobins va Orioles
Second Half
May 17 — Friday
Aces va OriolesRobins vs Pirates
May 21—Tuetday
Aces vs RobinsOrioles vs Pirates
May 24—Friday
Aces vs PiratesOrioles vs Robins
The players' lists follow:
1 5Totals 27Score by innings:
St. James 002 010Arlanacs 100 000
Runs batted in—FrankowskiRusnak 2, Sumutka, PencDobrowaski.
Two-base hits—Jackson,browaski. Left on base*James 10, Adanacs 5. Struck <—By Rusnak 10; by Deak 9. '.on balls—Off Deak 3. Hit 1
Eastern SpeedwaySeason Opens Mayl7Inaugural Hankinson Races
To Be Staged At Langhome Track
rlarczi, 2b 4 0'encotty, If 3 1agen, sa 4 1olesarick, cf 4 0
Frnnkowski, c 8 0Jnukson, lb 8 2Sumutka, 3b 3 1Nagy, p . 3 0^ossoby, rf 3 0
Acei:KuznakKonowskaMarkoSorokaSlomkoKopilTedeacoGeromeitua
Golaszewski
'« Field,Mondays and
T&« committee which consistsof Councilman Clifford Cutter andDennis O'lWtfte, Xmim Harry
Hta la ftlso'organising inWd Junior lMRues.of m J
to
PiratatiKutcy (Cspt)D'zurilla (mgr)SuboPalekoskiGindaBarnaHrycunaKondaeKrossChobanKucabaPencottyTrosko
Muaxyka, If 3C, Resko, rf,p 4Bobenchik, rf 0
RotiiniMalinowskiBatoriBongiornoHluJi '-HorvathMurachDonnelly ',focsiPutnowskyBeechBeechChereponBrown \ 'RominowiczKriminMateySirakChobaninCatriSpolowiti
Oriolei:J'. Paul (mgr.)Konda (capt)MaskarinecKrupaTimkoStaubachKovaciBensonMelmckAndresMarko witzSkalangoKlein
4 6 426P. A. Cub (3)
AB. K. II.Morgan, 2b 6 0 0Kozfowski. ss I 0(I. Lorfin, lb 5A. Kutcher.' p 8li. Lorfln, 3b .(iallos, eKonikovich, rf.KubalKtarl
ala. i•%it
cf.
m b^ Innings,;Cuba ...i'™;.. 020CloviW,,.;...,... 001
;M hit
88
001010
3 1
000—fW4
WANT 36-DAY SEASONState Commiwaoo Reports
Gain In Jersey Waterfowl
Following a careful survey o|e waterfowl situation in Newbrsey the State Fish and Gam|ommission has recoiniiiendfrd .ilrty-slx day open season between
October 22 and January I) for NewJersey this year in a report to thUnited States Biological Survey.
An increase in nearly all »pecies of m,Wtitntl ewer formeryearn, with broadbill black duckand brant being the predominant evenings programspecies in th« AUlkntic Coast area,and black duck, pintail «ld blueand gruen wing teal in the Dela-ware River area, was reported.
Thirty-six days of shooting,three days per weak, Thursday,Friday and Saturday, beginningOctober 22 and anding on JanuaryI were upticiflcally recommendedor the 19318 season. TWn wouldIvt the sportsmen in the Delaware
twski, B.
her—Bysrick).
Deak (Sumutka,
St. JameiAB. R. H.
Thi! eastern speedway seasonwill make its debut at the popularmile dirt track at Lanfrhorne, Sun-day, May 17, the Hankinson Speed-ways announced this week.
Perrenial scene of the East'foremost speojl conflicts, Lang-home will again offer the choicattractions in thc New Jersey, New"ork and Pennsylvania sectors, ncibrding to owner and operatolalph A. Hankinson.
Situated along the Lincoln High-ray, midway between the neigh-oring cities of Philadelphia and
Trenton, N. J., the Larighornerack has become ii favored mecca'or thousands of Eastern speed de-rotees. Last year, a capacity;hrong of 41.6U4 witnessed the in-ugural events here.
With the majority of America'sIriyers harbored Cast of the Mis-isaippi river, Lan^hovne has gain-d constant popularity among
members of tlie .speed profession.Annually, a Kc»<lly representationf midwestern performers dot the
Langhorne entry lists.Universally recognized feats of
uch noted stairs us Kelly I'etilloind Cieoiye "Doc" Mackenzie have
established Langhorne as one ofAmerica's outstanding speedways,rivalled only by the master courseat Indianapolis.
Petillo, current national cham-pion, last October hoisted a newworld record for 100 miles atLanghorne. Mackenzie, the 1935monarch of the East, possesses theexisting qnnlifying mnrke here, 3fl-second mile established in934,
During the eoason of 1935, fouroutstanding epeed events were con-ducted at the Lincoln Highwayoval. The inaugural was capturedby the lat« Johnny Hannuii; thisecond went to Ben Shaw, of Westville, N. J.; Mackenzie annexed tinlions share of laurels in the AUKUSoffering, while Petillo forged t<triumph in the 1935 national cham-pionship finale.
AecordiiiK to Hankinson, siThree-A sanctioned events will innugiiratc the current speedwayseason here, line hundred miles ofauto racinK will intlude time trials,four 10-niile sprints and a iiO-milefeatured final.
Totals ' 30 5 8/Diniih A. C.
AB. R, H<Peterson, cf S 0 0Ayres, 3b 2 1 1Webber, ss 3 0 0 ( |Fitzgerald, Zb 2 0 1,-Patten, If ..." 3 0 0 'Boyer, lb 3 0 0Reingle, c .„ ,. 8 0 fr ,Orsoe, v 2 . 0 0Thompson, rf ,1 0 0 'Gems, rf, p 2 1 1
Totals 24 2 3Score by innings:
St. James 010 002Danish A. C 101 000
Runs batted in—FitAyres, Sumutka 2, Nagy,ick 2.
Three-baBe hts—Gems, Sumut>ka 2. Two-base hit—Jackson. Baseon balls—Off Nagy 1; off OrsoeStruck out—By Nagy5; by Or«2; by derna 6. Hit by pitcher-y?*'By Nagy (Fitzgerald). Lostnf -Apitcher—Oroe. ' • *
Vines, Stoefen, BellIn Elizabeth Tonight
Tonight at the hupe armory inElizabeth, Ellsworth Vines, Jr.,world's professional tennis cham-pion, will meet Leater H. Stoefen,l«anky Cajifornian, in defenao ofhis title in the feature singlesmatch of the evening. In anothermatch George M. Uitt, of Chicago,will clash with Berkeley Bell, ofTexas.
Arranged by the First lialtalion,of the 114th Infantry, NutiormlGuard of New Jersey, the tennisiarnivnl has excited considerableinttrent throughout North Jersey,Another interesting fact is thatLott and Stoefen, four-times DavisCup doubles winners,* and twiceconquerors of the field at Wimble-don, will o|)|)'i»ii Vines umi Hull ina doubles mutch to complete the
Eighth Grade BoysStart Softball Loop.Opening Game Next Tuetday -
—'Seven Teams Entered—«•Sponsored Under Phy»ic«|,iEducation Department. , '\
The Eighth Grade boys in U » ,Public Schools have organiewj • isoftbali league under the direc-tion of Joseph Comba, a raemiw jof the physical education depaffe*,*ineiit. The league will get undWi'way next Tuesday with two gamakf'In the first the Columbus A. tXwill play the Clovers, while Insecond the Eagles will clashthe Boys Club. The Ukes andGrants, the two remainingin the loop will meet onafternoon.
The players" lists follow:Columbus A. C : Kol,
Cupsle, Lukusluk. Sabo, King,fer, Lokas, Messinger, To:
Boys Club: Muchi, K<Szoke, Qerraak, Bodnar,Oluhoski, Dumansky, Orban,bitsky, Kondak, Slotwhukl
Clovers: Paaslomki,Campbell, Rockman, K<Palehonkl, Berg, Kosklew,vetz, Witkowskl, Hoffman.Eagles: Sarchak, Skiba,Sony!, Karven&ky,Weinsteln, Reldel,han, Witkowskl, Puslllo.
Ukes: Bohanek, Spolowit«,rak. Tiuck, Bohaoe.gus, Waynarowsky,Hasek, Sklba, Bobenchik,
Bears: Mohmr, Tylka, O.kulinecz, Perimeter, Jaroslk,lineU, Petty, Hopp,Raskullnecz. Skramko,
oiants: Raymond Sldon.Boos, Kokolus, Williams,Elliott, Pendro, Johnson,Hreko, Vozar.
s*«t4ou duck•part of the
advp p ucvail fill the
attraelioiiB, and advance reserva-tions indicate an attendance olearly 5,000, it was said today;
they may be obtained at Levy Bros,department store.
High School Team PlaysG Ota R<*d N e . t r
Tb» y fAny tiff t»U qftc» or apartmen
balldlnf, lactaiUnK one at % sto^11% m»y ba cflUed a skyscniwr.
Woudbridge away thisternoun instead of home 'urigiiiully scheduled, andtraveilng guni.es for next we _with New Brunswick and linden comprise the bill offor the hard-hitting CwtHigh School haseuail team,
Th« Bluea have yet to 'their first defeat, baring 'three straight gamesRosalie Park, Longand Keyport.
Pash Da-Ni and theSap;e Lily
ny DONNA THANE*J \(i
U M: H*rvlr*
STUDENTS SCOCT BOARD
TUB yonnii tmllun'M Inclusive jf « r n illil tint n l t P f ; R KIIKIII KIif-
f r n t n u of hl» h n n i i * » « « tl uly
S i g n h o tcuvf. T l i r r l i ' ih «IIH nut
l o o k i n g m h i m nnil !li': |>n-tIy ttlrl
w h o hai l enterrol illil not not lrp .
• h e en m e [n |pnn ni:) i ini l Ihi' rcnin
K r r1o«i- hoali lp h i m m i d IIIXMIMI
Continued frnm p^qf 01* ((nntinutd frnw page one)jRuth Giorloff and ffl**n hy th«"|flrM r | , M ae o n f Jofw-ph Rocky,Ijrronp orifrinxllr at an aMembly j M f e l y i p u b l | c h c R | t h | n r . t » idneiwlon after rn»rhin« l.y MIM nremnn-fip, reading civics and
|Cl»lr» Monahan. [award uf filar Scout.; Town««tidTho«e who will take part, anil the
characters they portray ate a* fol-low*:
Eva Hamilton, Rita Brandon.[Ion Hniniltnii, William Coug-h
lln.Betty Everett, Camilla EnolStephen Kverett, John
Am«« Y»*b, SUph#li Wtm Andraw OmMR, GeMftoJMr, frankDzJerznwiec, Inat Gflttar, Mar-, n't YuhaU, Robaftltnftaf«rt Lo7flV, Prank Pahew, Cfeaxle*Darorjy
Fourth Orade—Botarid Coland, Simon Galvach, Geotga (V
raj«tt, John Kirjalr, Jfhn KotitiM.Elmer Kuhn. Jullin «ol t t . WiltonStewart, William Swmiw.k, Maryiiok, Heton Cupid*, WinifredD«aU, Florence DeiMtcr, Harriet• irons, Anna KarnnaV, Elsie Ko~varn, 0)(!» Kurta, Bernadette Will-!ip*> Joaeph Merello, Joseph Slim,
Mary Antoslka, Helen Louise Hoc!nar, Marnret Jedllcka, PhylH* MeIj*rm. Helen Papowlch, Holer Suhar, Vivien Johnnon.
Thrd Grade—Annette Rnlomnn..Sarah Sinka, HPIPH Klinnky, JuneSchwartr., Rose Orhon, ShirleyMontcher, Gladys Mpltrerfpr, Irms
Mnrc*i, Kmma Koval, BOM Unart,Kovacs, Bernice Johnson,
Anthony R""0' ^f.Catherine Oonrrioli,
,ltv. Marria
HelenDoris
.phC a m rAndrew Oalvaili, j.Leonard Kahn. JoS.Wood, Mario 8uto, _Louis Zelman, Leona,Sioke, Scott Wdk
"H'ln, I'inh Mii-nl." (SharpKnife)
U P mmwered through u omstrict-•d thront. "Hello."
A IMM eurlyharcil hoy About the(trl'i ago omul' Into lh« (tore in<li an •rm around till' girl'*
. "An I livp nnil hicnlhr," \he drawlml, "It's Margaret, In |>or- |Mn I How lire yon, swwtnPSflV'. P«nh r>u nl IOVPII the Klrl. Mi'Wld nul »ant to. lip tried not tn.Nono Vncw bettor Ilinn he the gnirthat ynwni>i1 IIPIWPPH I'liJh Dn-nl,<he full-lilnoiloil NIIVHJO, nml prollyblond Murniirol, dntiKhtPr of tti«bounty nhcrlff
Thfi ciirlj- henil WB» wenrlngcream colored enrdiirnyn and R Am-allagly olMin white Hhlrt. I'aeh Da nlwore « rlicckcri'd calico shirt.Wll«l -In ml over-nils, rliimny eow-hllip «liof«; nml Ills long Murk Imlrwas knotted up In hm'k
The nun wns RPVITHI hours pantthe zenith when Hi" youth rode H|>to thfi hognii Ihiil WAR Ids hrmip.Up illaniinintnd, Htnxle limldP, Jionk• biiinllp from H 11 Mrk corner, Androrio nwny. Tomorrow lir wn« tf>marry Hn-spc dc (Dove), daughterOf Al suit (ICiU-lr).. Tomorrow, wlii'n Hie sun nil* (11-
1 ffwlly tjtrrttnt^, frt* f fieh4a •*•!"I Hi S|ic ill! would gnlli
„, hiking, handicraft, painting,wood turning, wood curving, »afe-
itv and award of Star Scout; Adamj/immerman, Unit aid and award ofiKtnr Scout; Robert Kloan, bookJiindinf, wood carving, woodwork,
lilr hwdth, clvicfl, rondin([, plon-rin(f and flrut aid.Michael Palinkan, bird study;
,< 'HHinilr Gftwronski, achalar«tli|),public health, first, aid, athletic*,pioneering, personal health andwoodwork.
The hoard of review met in thePresbyterian Church and wan inchance of Scout (lommimiloner Dr.
.Fritz Mipgf and Scout Executiveellen, Now Itrunnwick and I'rinc*-,(;porii;e Weinheimer. Besides thuaeton. Tlio prcnontatiorwi arc upon it|i(.r(> w ere present Rev. I). E. Lor-sored by the dramatic art ilrpnrt |,,,,|7ii William (iraeme, Franknintit of the hn«tuf)« roll»(fe illiiury and Knrl (iriihmsn. troop
Under the guidance of Min»|(.(,mMiiRnionera of Carteret; Scout-AKnose (iunderson a branch of the rnnstei-R Carroll Britton and HaroldJunior Ueil Cioas was organized «t |( 1 nuiwell, nenjnmill Sinitli actiHKJthe school Friday. Elected as rep dMiict coinmissionpr; Oswald Ne-
Maitjie, the maid, Doris Hcnlly.Other Play* Glvan Too
At the same afternoon perform-ance playH will he given hy schoolgToups from Chatham, PlainfleM,Rosellp Park and Hillside Atnilfht there will be pluys t>y school•tudents from Bound Brook, Dun , Frit^
er In the npcn njmrp heforp. hidfather's ho^nn. Ilii-s^in ilc wouldpour I bucket of wiilPr over hishands nml hi' one over hers In the•nclrnt t filial enromnny of mar-riage. A blanket would be Bprenil00 Hie ground and n liowl of imulimade of Ilio MUP Inilinn corn placedon It. He find Hn-pee-de wouldtquat cross 1PKK«II on tlje blnnkft.«( corn and then he would takaHi-ipe-de would Inko A mouthfulone. The oldest mnn In the tribeWould muke n cro«(i of pollen overthe miisli, nml iliey would he mnntod wife.
He loved Margaret, the white|lrl, but he would wed Ha-spe-de,the Indian muld, tomorrow.
He slid tu the. ground, otulkoilto the river Imnk nnd ntood withbowtil head looking down Into tliodepths, glinted t>y tlio moon. On1 inddun Impulse he cnimnenreilto *trlp hluiHeir or his clothing. Iluaired lightly Into the witter.
When ho clmnliered out he driedhimself with his hands, shivering abit In the ulglit wind, l ie pickedUp Ids clothfs and Hung thorn con-temptuously Into the water. Thenk* took the bundle he hnd broughtftom the liogan. It contained a.bockikln liroecliclout, a broalteadkd belt, a pair of maccaeluadecorated with silver (juarter-dol-Ian, a sliurt knife In a shentli, andtwo eagle feathers slalnud hlue andtied together with homehulr. Thuoutfit had belonged to hlg grand-fttber.
He turned upstream townrd thetown, watching the ground an hewent. Soon he found what ho was•Mklug, the pule gleam of a clumpOf »age llllen He picked a hand-ful of the frail lilosaoma and car»-fully \frapped their stems In damp
renentatives of the various homeroom» were the following;
Irene Kutay, Helen Sawczak,Pauline Sefck, Maiir- Popiel, finzella Price, Norita Rrandon, AnnaAlec, Esther Borrpson, Valeria Mil-ler, Veronica Bararol, Ann Shein,Irene .Incullk, Dong;la3 Kin(f, Dor-othy Schroeder, Albert Krasak,Aranka Barney, Charles .Szyrnhor-nici, ('ftsimir Karpinski, YolandaPaul, Claire Rrorkinarin, (MoriaHundiak and Alice Lewer.
Thi« group met and elected Paul-ine Sefcik, prasidnnt; Irene Kutay,vice-president, and Helon !>uwc7.ak,secretary.
The. Junior Senior reception willhe held on Friday, May IB, at theNathnn Halo School at 8:30o'clock. Parent* of the Juniorsand Seniors are covdinlly invited toattend this affair.
The committee in charfto of the.affair; Matkey Ouoduv»n, chair-matr, •Aflfhotif'TAIacn. HermanKivhert, Kmly (iuor|(t! mid Charotte Jepaon.
BOOST CARTEREr(Continued from poye one)
in all sulijt'cts. The officials electedare; Mayor, (Jeoree Sloan; mem-bers of council, Kdward Donovan,Walter Ilartz, John RNdifr, WalterTele, John Dixon, and Joseph Do-be). The members of the Honed ofEducation are: Edward Kamienski,Francis Magyar, Alexander Vazor-tky, Leo Hrudy, Marvin (!re,enwald, Joseph Karaczkowxki, Ku-Uene Wadiak, Walter Wadiak, andJoseph Szulmiowski.
Group* OrganizeThe council group mot and elect-
ed .John Dixon president of the
•I
IM'I, one of the RnriUn Council dis-trict commissioners ami EdwardWcM) and Frank Kearney, visitors.
WHATKRELIEF?(Continued jrnm piitje one)
pThe Board of EducationMarvin Greenwald, prcni
council,electedlent; Leo Brady, vice^nrcsidentand Kiiffono Wndialr, elerk
Tlie council iiuirmd the. following;i,pp<>intivt> olticial.i at a meetingyi'stiTtlay: borough attorney, Wil-liam CoiiKhlin; recorder, John Cap-r.zynsky; imildinK inspector, Wal-ter Bart/.; healtn inspector, PaulKoepfler; librarian, Walter Puchs;chief of police., Edward Kamienski;engineer, .Samuel Klein; auditor,Francis Magyar; street commis-sioner, Edward Carlton; boroutfhclerk, Frank Dolinich; Ux collec-tm\ George Lafkowite; assessor,Lilward Romanowski.
The idea of holding- Boys Weekin Carteret was Oripinsted and ad-vaiioed by tin: Recreation Sponsor-ing Committee as part of .theYouth Movement and is expectedto arouse the interest of the youthof the community in local govern-ment
Before a white huutiu on a buck((Met lie pauxui!. Mghtly he vaulted the picket fenea anil fitnoj bepMth a cottonwood trou that grewUnder Marguret'8 hedroom window.
ftlh-Dit nl iiiiiyi-rt out Into theIght to look at his flowers. Some•f the fragile things were drooping.ifcMe hi touk out and threw away.8«ven perfect Liloomu remnlned.Without difficulty he vaulted from« long branch of the trae to the•Hi WDd tteiiytd luilrtt the room.
PTe dropped to the floor like a'flMdow, tits heart ttiundiirlug HJHJ
If In his breast. If he should hetHOght ! An Indian, entiti'lng (hebedchamber of n white girl at night6y atMtlth! They wutild tear himto pieces I
He percelveil a umiill white bedIn (he fur corner nnil beard i[\tfOlllul of »l"\v luclllblllg.
The iflil lay on her side, one: J)»nd under her chert and the oth-ctjt thrown HI* over lior bend. Tier
curls Here tumbled on thefirblte pillow, her lips slightly part-|JM with h«r breathing, her eipreni'Oon tranquil n.s tbat of u Mndoniui.
Pash-Da-nl dared not attire furof waking tlie girl. CimtlmiH
*6 loaned over her, noting hnwmoon heblml him cast a loiii;Wing xhaduw of tlie eagle f««lb
Ills Imir
spread bin seven wig<(fan wise unit placed them on
pillow by the girl's face. Thenturned and swiftly and noiseless
.',#•» across tins room, on the__>fce gave a backward look. "Fun?p i , my little SAgu lily," he said
native Navajo. "It couldhove been."
stepped out and swung toBand. A shaft of moonlighthim and he stood motionless.
up. All the boy drulm'd|i hlfl face and only the bitter
remained.
although no brteie», he ahivered. It waa long |>ustiljht It w*M his woddlug day.
Terrier Police DogHellnolit, Mass, -Technically Itoxn
iniiy lie a Huston terrier, hut nctual-ly he la a police clog. Howi, the |>etdun of Chief John J. O'llrlcii of lleluiout, even wears u badge on hiscollar. He spends the (Uly In hiamaster's office, at hcadquorlera.
Tours Country atCost of 20 Cents
Pottstown, Fa.—It cost Stephen Kltlenhouse, twenty-four, ei-actly a) cents to take a 16iiiotitlid lour of the Unitedstates.
Ititteiilton.'jc left hero with %2In his poi'Lel. Ilia travels, ac-complished l.]iruiiKli hitchhikingnnil i ruin rides, took him as farnorth M Si'.iMli1 and na far southus New Mc\li:u.
He worked in ri'staiinintu foriiiui.ls mill panned nnltl In Call-.fornia. One time be had a strikeof two ounces of the glitteringmetal, which netled hliu $(U.
Iteceutly lie retunied with onefive cent piece and $1.74 worthof gold.
U..d Log JailLaw violators in earl/ Indianapo-
lis were housed In a Jail construct-ed of logs 12 Inched In diameter,saya the Iiidlunapolli Newt. Thelog jail was the lirat In the city. Itwas built In 1SJ2 and lasted until1833, throe yearn before the citywaa incorporated. It wtu set afirebj a prisoner and destroyed. Opthe lower floor of the' Iwo-storjrcauln-]all the only light admittedwas through a window, one footsquare, with Iron bam ncroas It. Aladder led to the upper story,another to a dungeon beneath theUrst tloor, where unrulywere kept.
j p )distress. In a small neighborhood)that is done by joint action of thelneighbors, This is charity. In aIvrnml fl«|i| nf dlitrnno thix taUiniTaway is done by taxation. This isrelief, as we use the jihrRS* today.
It is obviona th«t relief can be«iven fairly only when it, is givenlocally. When a man on your blockcan't feed his wife and childrenyou can aid him intelligently. Youcannot aid intelligently from yourblock a man who is suffering inCape May or Camden. You can'tdo it intelligently from Trenton orWashington either. You must givereliff in th<> town, ilixtrict or wardwhere the distress is Otherwiseyou will have waste, voti will havefraud; worst of all, yon will havesuffering not cared for at all.
Relief is a thing to be given lo-cally by neighbor to neighbor. Weiitl have known this all our lives,mid this emergency is not differ-ent. In many cases the neighbor-hood which mean:; Hie municipal-ity- -•can take care of its own with-out, too great K burden on itspeople. In some place,*, where therehas been wicked extravagance,public mismanagement, nnd gov-ernmental crookedness, it can't bedone entirely by the harrassedhome folks. For those there musthe funds found elsewhere.
If we had a Legislature thatcould legislate and a Governor whohad not squandered his leadership,New Jersey could set Up a statefund, to be raised by decently plan-ned taxation, to take care of theselocal relief deficiencies.
Relief upending is a neighborhood matter. It means better andmore help for those who need it.
BOYyWEEK(Continued from page one)
1 :.'iO and the Scouts will be readyfor the afternoon period of demon-strations of scout work and theprogram will merge with the gen-eral Boyn Week program whieh be-gins at 2 P. M. Saturday. From 2to 2:30 there will be a demonstra-tion of Cubs. Inspection of troopswill follow to 3 P. M. From 3 to1:40 there will be a demonstrationif first aid by troop 84 of the FreeMagyar Church. 3:40 to 4:20 sig-laling by Troop 87 of St. Marks/hurch. From 5 to (j the troops willncluding fire by friction by TroopSo. 82 of the First PresbyterianJhursli. From 5 to 6 the troops willLake down tents and clean thegrounds. There will be sleeping;cnts, a first aid tent and a tent In
which will be exhibits of Scoutraft.
The public is invited to witness;he demonstrations from 2 to 6
M, Saturday.
IWPTMY.(Continued from page one)
ihen Szemcsak, Eileen Cutter, AltaDeats, Agnes Hoffman, ElizabethOrban, Cecelia Medvitz.
Sixth Grade—Gloria Deats, JohnKolibas, Marco Papi, Carroll So-leld, Clifford Johnson, Stephen Kli-mik, Alfred Silva, Eulalie Beech,Eleanor Jacob, Esther Kielman,Helen Pallagi, Victoria Russalu,Evelyn Sager, Sophie Zubick, Irene"ipisak, Lillian Knorr, Gladys Chris-tenseu, Alligra, Donnelly, Margaretleneji, Rosalie Kloss, Olgu Korne-uk, Jean Snell, Agnes Szymbor-iki, Stella Szymonifka, DorothyWasylyk, George Misko, AndrewTash.
Fifth Grade—William Colgan,oseph Trdeyi, George Farago,
Howard Hertz, Stephen Kovacs,ulin Matey, Michael Misko, Helen
Antosiewicz, Evelyn Johnson, An-na Kopin, Stella Bamburak, Elsie;iors:eka, Lillian Brown, Vivian Col-mi, Nancy Gulino, Mary Orban,nna Sekosky, Sophie Shummy,
CALLING ALL SHOPPERS1
SATURDAY! SCHINDEL'S Bl^Your Dollar Is tongToDo Big Tilings For You At SCHINBEl'S Tomorrow. Note Carefully Each ItemBeknThere Are Hundreds Of Other Unadvertised C iporhinity 'Buys" Throughout Tlie Store, Come! Get Your!Of These Sensational Savings. Be Here Early! We Cannot Guarantee The Quantities To Last AD Day! Hi
HURRY I ONLYMen'* Broadclot
HIRTI
I Methods Are B«t,i a Veteran Teacher
, Mntw.-*A teacber retlr-yean. Jil«8 Sanli A.
*r, boWa that roor« ol«-fjifeli-method* are ueeded la the
li beta % flru belief 1B
» l of
»•>• •
i-uu u»e uar luitaipy (a p*tdrum, iiur>, hay «tt*li '<« wakebume tu*vrov«iHeutai ti» n«veuii>u«> uu VMvli barg-tilMf w nayullier i>ur|ioiie.
IVIV WB HKLf KOUtCome lu — m i l t — »r 'phone (or
lull .imtttlmlUI lnlminMl
INDUSTRIAL
Lostes in Battle of ShilpbiIn the two-day buttle of Sbtloh In
Tennessee durlag the war betweenthe states, the Union army lost 13,(M7 men anil the Confederacy 10,099.
ICeep Young and Beautifulwith New and Modern
PersonalityCroquignole or SpiralPERMANENT WATE
Self Setting Winding with End Up
No Extra50and
from 6 month*to I year ;.
Work Done fey BipfrtsAMERICAN BARBER and
BEAUTY SHOPS.BU
First QualityWomen's 29c and 39c
RAYON
UNDIES
Kxtrn * i i n 4 for 111.
FULL FASHION HOSE
2 PR.lrr and nbeer,ahAilcft. All «Ufii, 60c I
WOMEN'S HOSE
6 PR.qitnttly. Nrw(» 10H- 2»ei
Women's Acetate DressesWomen's X Size Wash DressesWomen's Lace Knit Dresses
Large Selection. Values to $1.98 Ea. 1CORSELETTES
GIRDLESCORSETS; ea. i
TAFFETA SUPS
2 FORHrnnllful nt j ln , lnr< trln)-nird «n4 tailored. Adjiial-• Mr slrapii. S l . c to 42 I
EXTRA SPECIAL FOR SATURDAYWOMEN'S NEW SPRING
HATSSmart •travin and•Ilk* In lirlma a ad
r b a n n. ('levrrly
N ft w HAll hraa
Value, to il.lU. 79HATS $1.00 TO $1.88
Women's Arch and Dress
S1HCESREG.
$1.69, $1.98VALUES
Owrj%, blnra, bclKn mid rlhltca
In all LK-I. aud . I j l c . Hlack
oxfurd ljl>r arvk ahu«a tor the
e i l ta nlilr fout. ISO palr< of
nlillr aud tau ayiwt aboea la-
t'ludcd. l lurrj! Ilaarnirut,
a to >
BOYS' STURDY ;
SNEAKERS
49Black, brown orwhite. Reinforced• * a m a, bumverToe«. »!•«• lafaulu'HV, to i, llora' 2V>
l l l «
NEW GINGHAM
SLIPPERSWith HMII
UemilKullu all tar mewcolvn aad vlalia.(Uae« 1 to H.
RUMMAGE SHOE SALE59
Be Here When the400 va in uf ntamro'a draaaprartlrall> «l>ru a»»«f liWaiUeH. llrokeu alaea irow $ ty Ptall«l>ll) aulled from hamlllua} Jfaawf«r beat aaleetlun,
2 Pairs PAIR
WOMEN'S BAGS
2 FORItr*. TB« V«1HC«. New calaaland ntylaa UolnAlaf a l f
UMBRELLAS
Sensational Sale9 TO It A. M. ONLY
Women's Batiste Gowns
2 FORh n n (1 rm
K In rrsuiftr nnil
BROADCLOTH SLIPS
4 FORmt and TT*U madr.
to 44. Bur now andiSUEDINE JACKETS
Only 60. Shop early.New style*. All colors.Sizes 8 to 20. Regular$1.49 values. i
JUST 100!WOMEN'S SILK
DressesWhileTheyLa*U
All better draisei reduced forSaturday only. Only one to acustomer.
WOMEN'S SILK
Dresses•:• s |to • ,
I tu•olid. Vi
forStarch rollam, non-wilt colt•oft i-ollnrn. Better get here ifor theiip. All alaea. $1
MEN'S WC-RK PANTSMEN'S WHITE DUCKSMEN'S STRIPED SLACKSMEN'S KHAKI PANTS
VALUESTO
$1.49
ea.
MEN'S DRESS HOSE
8 PR.Large Rrlevt.on of newU»(7 pjidrruii and colon.All alara. IVv valnr« i
MEN'S WORK HOS12 PR.
Better set kcre early for ,tkeae. Solid colon for nark.AIM tmatj n<te»a for
Ail alldreaa wear. ! alaea.
WOMEN'S SPRING
COATSSUITSOnly »-•. Value, to 5GIRLS'WASH 2DRESSES for *1INFANTS'DRESSES
SILK $1SOCKS andANKLETS
7Pr.
BABY'S SOFT SOLE
SHOES Pr. $1Special! Wool Flannel
COAT andHAT SET
lies. fl.»8. ttln.a 1 tu 4 iINFANTS' 3 PC.KNITTED SET( W , Matand Booties Seti
UNDERWEAR VALUESFOR MEN
SHIRTSSHORTS
6 for"lue enmbed e»tt«B aklrta, itell Hit1
l-a.t color braadclota aharta. II. ». ••>!« » • « « ! ataaaariL Imart »at<rra>, clatic aldra. AU d m . 2Se gnit.
l.SOO CUSTOM-STYLED MEN'S BROADCLOTH j
SHIRTS
Values
to $1.69
W« «oai4 talk about tht t>ll-|orlatr, keaatltal atatrrlala au4«•« aVtalllaft (or a neek. Hut]
van Klaoce. will pr*vc ta yoa tliry'raAMU«. Decatuaaa^ ffkltca. •olid eolura,]
en patleraa. Noa-wtM aaflara, atareli ««1-|lara. bullua dowa rallara, Keat collar*V . . r • k l " » r « H » r u k awl fast i-olor».|All alaea.
*MEN'S DUNGAREES
I tin- i m i i l l i j b l u eilrulm. H4*lufurt*cd atall pulula vf alraln.All alE«a.
WORK SHIRTS
2 FORfine trade eaaaabrar. Blue t lur urtf. Two asckata, triple '•tltea.d.All alwa
MEN'S "BIG YANK" WORK
SHIRTSA couutrj-nlde (avorita, WU1alaad kard w.ar and fra«n*ntlaoudrt-l»«. Hoe quality kla«aud H'tr ebambray. Slaea to IT,
69MEN'S "TROJAN" WORK
PANTS *auou nuke.
' b,tf 1.39
MEN'S SWEET
Overallsappall Wall., U M