digifind-it - carteret press · 2014. 2. 22. · ha d attacke his son , henry jr. an beaten him...

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centtxefa ynomofe s Paper CARTERET PRESS cXltTERET, N. J., FRlbAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1926 to"the plans tor the big i this , f . 8 nniv*r»i«r *tfctam$Bn h«re Ubor Day ander tkfe anijfce* of the Car teret the *>mpte. The DU 4 > coBHllittee. oh, arrangement* held neeting* nesday ftlfc*ht». arrant** day, wo rt of this ««• Wed- compete and well- t** P t R . «0Ifti» the entire is the w w l t of the week* of hi rtWift The open I a! RATlOmEREMOMAY Detail, of Organization Inline. Many tad Airplane, Feature*. Big Display ; at Night. "Mia* Carteret" To B« Announced Tomorrow Night The flnUWttt tonehea werl added dentorc Italian Society, the Rahway Ex-Chief's Association with a drum corps of twenty pieces, the Exempt! Firemen's Association of Rahway! with their famous old time piece of fire fighting apparatus, one of the oldest hand engines in the state. Fire Company No. 1 of Wood- bridge with an eighteen piece, band, Fire Company No. 1 of Avenel, Fire Contpany No. 1 of Port Reading, the UnoUutnville Fire Company with a band of eighteen pieces. The combined membership of the Carteret Exempts and the Carteret Fire Department led by the Westmim ster Cadets fife and drum corps, of Perth Amboy. A notably feature of the afternoon nrogram will be an exhibition by the Slovak Gymnastic Sokol under Drill Masters S. Bulan, M. Polacek and I. M. Ondrijka. This exhibition will last two and one half hours and will con- sist of nine special numbers. Concert, Dane* and Fireworki Two Say They W e * Robbed Police Uncover Evidence . Jose Murelles and Leonardo Mor- e»», Spaniards, rooming at 45 Persh- tng avenue, reported to the police Thursday that while they were at Work fn one of the local plant* some one broke into their room at the Per- shing avenue address and, after breaking open their suit caws made off with money totaling $78 and two valuable stick pina. PRICE THBBR P ° llCe ^T an was carried on most of feature of tKe program is the rade which will start from Brady's Kield between 9 and 10 o'clock in the forenoon, Tk* l i a e o f March The line of ma«h as decided upon ; ,t the meeting Wednesday night, is ,< fallows: Beginning at Brady's 1 lekl. along Roosevelt avenue toward the ferry as far a* Lafayette street l( ,uniermarch and back over Roose- ^eit avenue to ftrshhig avenue, to ( ,,fke avenne, to Washington ave- mif, to RoosevtH avenue, to Hudson '-trevt, to Union street, to Salem* ave- nue, to Roosevelt avenue, to Central aver.ue, to Perching avenue, to Waah- i, 1R -Jn'sveniie, to Brady's FieW and disband. The many group* and societies that take part in the parade have :iro to |>e«i assl igned place* to form read in ess to get into line. When resulted last nlghj in uncovering evidence that indicat- ed that ooie of the men had robbed the other. The caw wilt be heard tonight in police court. Carter* Man Injured On Local Ferry-boat Gate jftriket Loui» Kapuoy Frtttoifa Hia Skull A* Boat %>cks At Staten la. Taken to Hospital Boy Strikes Child With Baseball Bat Little Henry Schroeder Left Unconscious On Ball Field. Other Children Afraid To Tell Name of Assailant Andrew Kish IS Arrested The evening program will begin g pg gin with a concert at 6 P, M. from the sUnd at Brady's Field. Ernie Kric- kett, well known as a leader will lead the concert. At 7 P. M. there will be speaking at the stand and at 9.30 the block dance will begin in Wash- ington avenue in front of the field. The display of fireworks will begin about the same time. This exhibit the parade i» o W »nd disbands, each' f fir «. W01 . kS| the cnmmittee Kro.;p is requested to go to the place where it formed before the parade. At '.hese poinU the groups will be en- t. ruined by special committees of firemen. Th* delegations of visiting firemen from the department* of ,,ther towns will be entertained in the (;,rman Lutheran hall in Roosevelt announc es, will be exceptionally fine and will last about one and one half hours. The fireworks will be set off from Brady's Field at a place roped off from the crowd so as to insure abso- 1 lute safety. The actual firing of the pieces will be done by experts. aa4 Movie*. T>ntative plans have been made !,y the committee to add two very int<rating features to the program: One is to haw the motion picturei tak.-i of portion* of the parade; the othi r is to hfv* an airplane present duri-it the Ay, It ii proposed to hav«- :hv lirplane land and give short ride t>. thoae w*o wish to fly. Thei Ian.: i; :ield, will probably be^ Brady's ti. ;,i •WIM 'Cartarat" f of tee most interesting feat- L: ff the anniversary celebration : :i<) eontett to decide who is the > •• popnlar girl in the borough. Th, winner of this contest will recei- On complaint of Henry Schroeder, of 309 Washington avenue, Andrew Kish, a 15-year-ald boy, of Lefferts street, was arrested Monday night and locked up pending Investigation. Schroeder declared that the Kish boy had attacked his son, Henry Jr., and beaten him until he was unconscious. The Schroeder boy is under seven years of age. Kish, according to in- Louto Kapucy, aged about 28| years, Of Charles street, is in St. Vin- cent's ftospttftl, West N«w Brighton, S. I., with a slight fracture of the skull at a result of an accident Mon- day on the * Carteret-Staten Island ferry-boat, Hi> was unconscious for three hours after the accident. Kapuck ia*m ployed as a deck hand on th« beat He and another deck hand were Working on the boat as It entered the slip on the Staten Is- land side. The heavy iron gate acroes the end of the deck did not open readily and the other deck hand gave it a vigorous wronch. The gate came more readily than the deck hand ex- pected and swung about striking Ka- pucy behindj the right ear. Kapucy fell on the ifeck, unconscious. The accident happened at 3.30 P. M. Monday. When ordinary meas- ures to revive the injured man failed a doctor was summoned and had Ka- pucy sent to the hospital where an examination revealed a slight frac- ture at thft base of the skull, accord- ing'to reports reaching the Carteret police. Kapucy recovered consciouB- PUBLIC SCHOOLS TOOPEN ON WEDNESDAYMORmm, S&t. Smallar PupiU To Go To Report At Nathan Hale hm$ land School*. Big Enrollment Expected in High Suggestion* To Parent* The local arhools will open for the fall term on Wednesday, September R at the usual hour for opening. Children of the school age who of th* increased ment in High School mOM that building will be requfrijfj commodate the High School have never attended school before' than last year. . ,,, may be registered during the Un A cordial invitation Uf *{#' day* immediately following the open- schools at any time is e x M f e l ing of school. parent* as these visits mar Reception Clasa, First and Second very helpful to both studelit (liade pupils in Chrome section teacher. , should report to Cleveland School; Parent* may assist the , , while Third to Eighth Grade pupils their children in school by inclusive should go to Columbus' carefully all noftces and School. which are sent home from i In the Carteret section the Reeep- encouraging pupils to tion Class, First and Second and, their weak points as revealed Third Grade pupils should report to monthly report cards; by setting I Nathan Hale School. All Fourth to a definite hour in the day for Eighth Grade pupils inclusive should study and by insisting that pip go to Washington ipening day. School for the be punctual and regular In atten ance at school. Opening of High School Stir* Interest In Football ness about 6.30 o'clo* Monday even fl , g U 111 r . formation gathered by Mrs. Schroe-I' n ? L der, struck the child with a baseball bat. Cruel Father Gets Year in Workhouse Five Year Old Girl With Mark. On Back I* Evidence Againat Walter Sotnotki. Oilier Charge* ;he title of Carteret". She ill he awarded a beautiful new Pon- JC Coupe and will ride in the coupe uar the head of the parade. The ' untest will end tomorrow night and the winner wl|l be announced. At his writing Miw Gertrude Armour -.*the leader in the contest with a to- tal of 306,000 votes. Miss Frances lUrrington i» second with 166,000. These a n the figures as they stood last n|ght after the girls had turn- ed in reporti for the week in accord- ance with the rule* of the contest. I livid wheal three inches wide across the back of a five-year old child helped to send the father, Wal- ter Sonnoskl to the workhouse for a year at a hearing in police court Wednesdny night. Sosnoski who lives The alleged attack by Kish took' place on Saturday, August 21 in Brady's field. ' Several weeks pre- vious to the attack, Kish took a base- ball belonging to^the Schroeder boy. On the day of the* attack the Schroe- der child saw Kish playing with hia ball in the ball field and wanted to take tt. He said that a boy struck him over the head with a bat. That was all he knew for some time as he | was knocked unconscious. Mrs. Schroeder learned that other children picked her unconscious son up and placed him on a bench in the ball field. Kish fled. The child lay on the bench some time and the other children became frightened and went away. When the little boy recovered consciousness he staggered home and said he wanted to go to bed. He was in such fear of Kish, his mother be- lieves, that he was afraid to tell of what had happened. Little Henry has a heavy head of light hair. It was not until his mother tri«d to wash much improved and was able to talk and joke with the nurses. Kapucy gained considerable fame and publicity about three years ago when he' «nd some other youths left CarteMt «n bicycles bound for the There was a little the boys left the old in Roosevelt avenue. Pacific eoast. ceremony as borough hall The four wheelmen started at the Bhot from a policeman's revolver. The others in the group dropped out of the race in the middle West but Ka- pucy carried on. He endured many hardships and was injured slightly in one or two accidents, Once he nar rowly escaped being bitten by a rat tlesnake which cuddled up to him on cold night as Kapucy slept on mountainside. 'at :il Mercer street was arrested fol-l his faee t h a t s h e discovered the ugly lowing a quarrel with his wife in which, it was alleged, be beat the wo- man. He was alto charged with be- ing an habitual drunkard. He pro- tested that his wife did not attend to her duties and that she too, drinks. When the wif» and one of the old- er children^were asked if they want- ed the father sent away the reply was that if he was not sent away he would kill one of the children. Then The parade will be headed by a b i g | the re< . or d er was told of how he iuad of police, "MUs Carteret", mi 3truck y tnn \ e the 5-year old daughter her priu car will follow, and just be- :•,;nd her, will be Grand Marshal Rob- ert Jefferyi with his sides, William J. Uwlor and Charles Ellis. Following the Marshal and aides will be Martin lUck, the oldest living ex-chief in he borough; and the executive com- mittee of the celebration. St. Mich- with a heavy razor strap. The police car was aent to the Mercer street house and the child was brought to the police court. She had to be carried as the appeared to be too wtak to walk. The child's back was bared in the court room and the marks of the Strap were re- Boy's Btnd of Hopewell, a splen- j vea i e) j lid musical organisation of thirty-j ^ rom the story t0 |j by t h e little girl and other members of the fam- ily Sosnoski came home and missed his wife. He aaked Fanrlie where her mother was. The child aaid she did not know and th« father is a! g y-j -ix pieces will follow and will leadl gir) ihe borough council and mayor, and "ther borough officials. These will be followed by Roo*evelt Post No. 263, American Legion, Other organisations that will be "i line «r«: the Boy Scouts of Amer- ;'.ii, the Carteret Business Men's As- sociation with a fife and drum corps leged to have attacked her then, with the strap. Sosnoski has been arrested several times for drunkenness and for beat- thirty pWoes from St. Michael's j in ^ ^fo w j fe A t o n e timc w h en the Home In- Staten Island, Court Car- f am n y lived in Passaic street Sos- noski was beating his wife, and her screams attrasted the attention of neighbors. Two men rushed In and gave Sosnoski a sound thrashing. Prom that time until the family mov- ed to Mercer street, he behaved. The Middlesex County Vocational Schools will open next Wednesday, September 8 at 9 A. M. * ' wound on the top of his head near the left temple. He then said that some boy had hit him. The following morning the child's head and face were swollen; he had two black eyes— great areas of dis- colored tissue beneath each eye and the white of the left eye was clotted with blood. He has been under the care of physician since that time. Henry was able to tell his parents that a big boy had hit him with a baseball bat but he did not know the name of his assailant. Other children who had been in the field at the time denied knowing who struck the child. It was learned later that they knew who struck HenBy but were afraid of Kish, who, it appears, is a bully among the children and fear«d by all of them. Finally one boy told and then others corroborated the atory. It was also learned, at this time, that the children who had seen the attack upon Henry thought that he was dead. When the case was reported to the police Monday and Mr. Schroe der swore out a warrant for young. Kish, the police were told to arresi the youth. He had bee a keeping out of their way. When officers went to the Kish home other members of the Rah way Man Says Chromite Threatened Him—Arrested )f Louii Kapucy, Carteret Man Who Wai Injured In Accident on Ferry Boat. Miss Armour Leads As Contest Nears End Final Result of Race For "Miss Carteret" Will Be Known Tomorrow Night, Winner To Get Car As the contest for "Miss Carteret" draws to a close, interest in the out- come is intense. Returns were mad« last night by f pur of the six girls who j entered the race. Mis Gertrude Ar- mour not only still retains the lead but has increased the ratio of her leadership above Miss Harrington who is second. Miss Armour's total With the opening of school Wed- | morning, an immediate call i for football candidates will be I made. The dashing warriors of the niue and White gridiron will be up and ready as soon as the signal for candidates is given. The high school gridders have waited impatiently for their oppor- tunity to put Carteret High School on the sporting map even bigger and better than the marvelously success- ful eleven of last year. The foot- bal men of the first Carteret High eleven, established a record worthy of much credit, in rating a good distance in front of Woodbridge, Perth Amboy, Metuchen and numer- ous other surrounding high schools when the pfficial state rating was given out last year. One of the big advantages of an eleven is the backing of an alma mater alumni. This will be enjoyed by the. '27 gridiron when the grad- uates of last year come out an hun- Democratic Women Pit* For BiggMt At a meeting of the Wo Democratic Club Wednesday nigfct I was announced that at leatt two dred prises will to awarded to ceseful players on the night of OetOpf ber 9, when the organitation wUt| hold a big euchre and dance at Dtl>| ton's auditorium. It it planned make the affair one of the social events of the season, lire,' ward J. Coughlin is chairman of ' committee in charge of the arrange*! ments. The meeting Wednesday was business meeting followed by c a n | | games. Arrangements were made : an euchre to be held on the date • the next regular meeting Septemb 1C in Fire House No. 2. This en will follow a short business < Mrs. O'Brien is chairman and be assisted by Miai Margaret He*. 4 mann. last night was 305,000 as against! dred per cent, strong to root for the Blue and White. A big help to this year's machine will be the experience received by several of the players in last year'B exciting tussles. Although a num- ber of the creditable stock of last 236,500 last Thursday. Miss Fran- On complaint of James Cosby, colored, of 11 Haydock street, Rah. way, Henry Williams, also colored, of 63 Bergon street, was arrested yes- terday by Patrolman Bradley, When the officer searched Williams, a knife with a four inch biade was found in his pock<>t. Ooaby alleged that Will- iams had threatened him with bod- ily harm. The men had been employ- ed in a local 'plant and had trouble I "T™..™ there. Cosby said that Williams fol- wiu ^ madc and the winner wi|] 101,000 and last night she Iffcreu.-md it to 166,000. Miss Helen Donnelly jumped from 36,000 to 51,000. Miss Fern Cheret made her first return since entering the race, 5,000. Miss Madeline Kasha and Miss Olga Babenchick made no ret.ur.nB to date. the final returns ! yenr were graduated there still re- good supply of the best in these partx. I Perhaps the greatest crowd ever to attend a sporting event of any borough will witness lowed him about and made several threats, and that he, Cosby, was afraid Williams would attack him. Tho knife bore the stamp of the U. S. Army. It was sharpened so as to have a double edge. , No. 48, Porwrters of America, Middlesex Grove No. 36, Ancient Or- der of Druids,' Slovak Catholic Union No. 324, Assembly No. 235 Slovak Uymnastjle SoVql with a band of thirty pieces, the United Polish So- cieties wttwi'tand of thirty pieces, Hie Hun4*rtaW'Societi«8 with « band "i eighteen » & • * , the Ukrainian So- '•'«ti*s irttJ»Prwtive piece band, the (ireek Catfcdalociities, the?. S. Re- family expressed the hope that An- drew would be sent to some institu- tion. They told , the police that he had been beating his mother and had attempted to attack his step-father, and a sister, it is. 1 reported. The buy was arrested Monday night at 10.30 after he had tried to 4lude the police. He denied strik- ing the little Schroeder boy, calling God to witness the truth of his de- nial. He cried and broke down but stuck to his denial. Some months ago Kish and another boy weR; m rested for stealing metal from one of the plants. At the Kish •homo the police were told that An- drew does not sleep at home. It is said he sleeps in a barn. He ia big and strong for his age. be announced. Returns are made 1 at Mullan's Garage and a bulletin board there shows the results each week, (t is expected that the -final results of the race will be known about 10 i o'clock tomorrow night. The contest was launched by the firemen and\ exempts of the borough as 'part of the celebration of the thirtieth anniversary of the founding of the department. The winner will receive as a prize, a new Pontiac coupe and will ride in it near the head of the parade here Labor Day. Lin* From Old Play This expression, "When Qietk meet* Greek," gllgtitly altered, is derived from the ime, "When Greeks Joined Greeks, then was (lie tug of war." The quotation Is from the drama of "Alex- ander the Great." by Nathaniel Lee and refers to the •tub- bum resistance offered by the cities of Greece to Philip aud Aleiauder of —K»n«i,» n t y Stnr Labor Day Activities WANTED* wers on Coats •41LLS-SL1CKER CO. & Hall Bldg.. Carter**, N. •!• Estate Exchange, 'Awlue, Carteret, N. J. of all Kind. tnd Plate Glass t and Sold For Quick Reeulti ^ T\ 9 the opening game against Rahway High School, the Class B State champs, of last year, at the local field. The defeat handed out to the Maroon and Black nine last year has made the Spanktown represent- atives eager for revenge. The local high, school licked Rahway 8 to 5 in the first meeting of the two varsity baseball nines at Riverside Park. The PRESS will follow every step of the Blue and White eleven, through TED. One Negro Slashed Othar Both Are. Locked W William Burke, colored, Of 44 , Essex street, was attacked by Ben Reynolds or Randolph, a Warren' street negro yesterday and his leg J was slashed. The wound three inches j long required several stitches when he was taken to the office of Dr, Jo-; seph Wantoch for treatment. Both men were placed under arrest. From information gathered by the, police it appears that Burke follow- | ed Reynolds to his home and attempt- ed to break into a shed when the; trouble started. The arrests were made by Patrolman Bradley. Carteret Tailor Causes Arre*t of N. Y. Picket Morris Bossin, of 1816 Madison avenue, New York, was arrested yes- terday on complaint of Max Green- span, a tailor.' Bossin is one of the many pickets that have been sent to Carteret by the Coat and Suit Mak- er's Union. Greenspan said that the picket threatened him. Bossin was released under $25 bail to appear for a hearing tonight. All-Cartertt Team To Play Woodbridgo A. A. T; Carteret and Woodbridge are U! terested in the meeting of the Altej Carteret's of Joey Elko and . thev Woodbridge A. A. at Brewster"»- J Field in Woodbridge, Sunday after-.f noon. This contest will be the first | of. a three game home and home series between the two team*. Sunday the local tossers travel to'. Woodbridge for the opening, gamf and fans will be pleased to know that _- the youthful Jess Sullivan will bf v| on the mound for the Elko nine,; Jess is traveling like a house on fire,''] having won an exciting S to 2 vie* •* -tory over the strong Newark NM tionals after ten innings, at Brady's Oval, Sunday. Fans are taking a great interest! in the. doings of the Carteret star. :| A large crowd is expected to be S hund to "root" for him and the A1U | Carteret combine. DeVoe Favor* Road . c . For Heavy Truck. A " - " * ^ * Fred W. DeVoe, of New Bruns- wick, Democratic candidate for Con- gress in the Third Congressional DIB- trict who advocated in a speech be. fore the Rotary Club of South Amboy a cross state concrete highway for heavy-duty truck traffic has written Senator Arthur N. Pierson, of Union .House: An alleged disorderly house at 2T-|i Mercer street was raided yesterday "| and two women and two men were J locked up. One of the women, ola TinBley, has been arrested here-1 several times. She gave her residence f as 8 Brown street, New Brunswick. > The other, woman, Cor* Ovries, II* County requesting the Senator to set at 9 Bergen street, this borough. forth his views on the proposal: I The men arrested are Sam! Wa Sepator Pierson has taken a lead- j lace of 27 Mercer street, and ing part in the road discussion und Oglesby, of 43 Eswx Btreet. his criticism of Mr. DeVoe's plan will,were placed under bond of |25 e* be awaited with interest. for a hearing tonight. Lay Theft pf Valuable Automobile To Well Organized Robber Band; Raid Garage of Emil Koyen, Taking Packard and Strippi Nash of Wheels and Tire*} Neighbor* Heard Noise in Night Similar Thefts in Carteret Believed Significant WOODBRIDGE'.— Thieves stole the Packard sedan of Smjl Koyen from his garage on Free- man street, and stripped the Nash joupe of William Koyen, stored inj .be same garage, of live wheels and tires some tipie Wednesday night. The theft was dUeqvered yesterday tiorning wh«n the men went to their {wage to get their cars. Police bellfM $ • work tu H **' were forced open from th* permit taking the car out. values the 'Packard at $2, the parts taken from the 1376. The to nature ot the that at the 'iyt experienced car thieve*. , „, ve Sergeant Jaawt Walsh WM «JF to the tyjte tad •floadttoteil Frank Lawson, of Green sr eral months ago, when his was stripped »f its wheels Persons in the household 1 Koyen a»d Mr. Campbell,» i bt>t]ev«d. they h«ard a ndi b 8 'l y at «buut the o»r was nwrnW the »r a tb«ffbt nothing of H at the f « t th were mad* in «f M

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  • centtxefa ynomofes Paper

    CARTERET PRESScXltTERET, N. J., FRlbAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1926

    to"the plans tor the bigi

    th i s , f .8nniv*r»i«r *tfctam$Bn h«re UborDay ander tkfe anijfce* of the Car

    teret the *>mpte. TheDU 4 >coBHllittee. oh, arrangement*

    held neeting*nesday ftlfc*ht».arrant**day,w o rt of this

    ««• Wed-compete and well-

    t** P t R . «0Ifti» the entireis the w w l t of the week* of

    hi rtWift The open

    I a!

    RATlOmEREMOMAYDetail, of Organization Inline. Many

    tad Airplane, Feature*. Big Display; at Night. "Mia* Carteret" To B«

    Announced Tomorrow Night

    The flnUWttt tonehea werl added dentorc Italian Society, the RahwayEx-Chief's Association with a drumcorps of twenty pieces, the Exempt!Firemen's Association of Rahway!with their famous old time piece offire fighting apparatus, one of theoldest hand engines in the state.

    Fire Company No. 1 of Wood-bridge with an eighteen piece, band,Fire Company No. 1 of Avenel, FireContpany No. 1 of Port Reading, theUnoUutnville Fire Company with aband of eighteen pieces.

    The combined membership of theCarteret Exempts and the CarteretFire Department led by the Westmimster Cadets fife and drum corps, ofPerth Amboy.

    A notably feature of the afternoonnrogram will be an exhibition by theSlovak Gymnastic Sokol under DrillMasters S. Bulan, M. Polacek and I.M. Ondrijka. This exhibition will lasttwo and one half hours and will con-sist of nine special numbers.

    Concert, Dane* and Fireworki

    Two Say They W e * RobbedPolice Uncover Evidence

    . Jose Murelles and Leonardo Mor-e»», Spaniards, rooming at 45 Persh-tng avenue, reported to the policeThursday that while they were atWork fn one of the local plant* someone broke into their room at the Per-shing avenue address and, afterbreaking open their suit caws madeoff with money totaling $78 and twovaluable stick pina.

    PRICE THBBR

    P° l lCe ^T anwas carried on most of

    feature of tKe program is therade which will start from Brady's

    Kield between 9 and 10 o'clock inthe forenoon,

    Tk* l i a e o f MarchThe line of ma«h as decided upon

    ;,t the meeting Wednesday night, is,< fallows: Beginning at Brady's1 lekl. along Roosevelt avenue towardthe ferry as far a* Lafayette streetl(,uniermarch and back over Roose-^ eit avenue to ftrshhig avenue, to( ,,fke avenne, to Washington ave-mif, to RoosevtH avenue, to Hudson'-trevt, to Union street, to Salem* ave-nue, to Roosevelt avenue, to Centralaver.ue, to Perching avenue, to Waah-i,1R-Jn'sveniie, to Brady's FieW anddisband.

    The many group* and societies thattake part in the parade have:iro to

    |>e«i assligned place* to formread in ess to get into line. When

    resulted last nlghjin uncovering evidence that indicat-ed that ooie of the men had robbedthe other. The caw wilt be heardtonight in police court.

    Carter* Man InjuredOn Local Ferry-boat

    Gate jftriket Loui» KapuoyFrtttoifa Hia Skull A*Boat %>cks At Staten la.

    Taken toHospital

    Boy Strikes ChildWith Baseball Bat

    Little Henry Schroeder LeftUnconscious On Ball Field.Other Children Afraid To

    Tell Name of AssailantAndrew Kish IS

    Arrested

    The evening program will beging pg ginwith a concert at 6 P, M. from thesUnd at Brady's Field. Ernie Kric-kett, well known as a leader will leadthe concert. At 7 P. M. there willbe speaking at the stand and at 9.30the block dance will begin in Wash-ington avenue in front of the field.The display of fireworks will beginabout the same time. This exhibit

    the parade i» o W »nd disbands, each' f fir«.W01.kS| t h e c n m m i t t e eKro.;p is requested to go to the placewhere it formed before the parade.At '.hese poinU the groups will be en-t. ruined by special committees offiremen. Th* delegations of visitingfiremen from the department* of,,ther towns will be entertained in the(;,rman Lutheran hall in Roosevelt

    announces, will be exceptionally fine and willlast about one and one half hours.The fireworks will be set off fromBrady's Field at a place roped offfrom the crowd so as to insure abso-1

    lute safety. The actual firing of thepieces will be done by experts.

    aa4 Movie*.T>ntative plans have been made

    !,y the committee to add two veryint. thoae w*o wish to fly. TheiIan.: i; :ield, will probably bê Brady'sti. ;,i

    •WIM 'Cartarat"f of tee most interesting feat-

    L : ff the anniversary celebration: :i •• popnlar girl in the borough.Th, winner of this contest will recei-

    On complaint of Henry Schroeder,of 309 Washington avenue, AndrewKish, a 15-year-ald boy, of Leffertsstreet, was arrested Monday nightand locked up pending Investigation.Schroeder declared that the Kish boyhad attacked his son, Henry Jr., andbeaten him until he was unconscious.The Schroeder boy is under sevenyears of age. Kish, according to in-

    Louto Kapucy, aged about 28|years, Of Charles street, is in St. Vin-cent's ftospttftl, West N«w Brighton,S. I., with a slight fracture of theskull at a result of an accident Mon-day on the * Carteret-Staten Islandferry-boat, Hi> was unconscious forthree hours after the accident.

    Kapuck ia*m ployed as a deck handon th« beat He and another deckhand were Working on the boat as Itentered the slip on the Staten Is-land side. The heavy iron gate acroesthe end of the deck did not openreadily and the other deck hand gaveit a vigorous wronch. The gate camemore readily than the deck hand ex-pected and swung about striking Ka-pucy behindj the right ear. Kapucyfell on the ifeck, unconscious.

    The accident happened at 3.30 P.M. Monday. When ordinary meas-ures to revive the injured man faileda doctor was summoned and had Ka-pucy sent to the hospital where anexamination revealed a slight frac-ture at thft base of the skull, accord-ing'to reports reaching the Carteretpolice. Kapucy recovered consciouB-

    PUBLIC SCHOOLS TO OPEN ONWEDNESDAYMORmm, S&t.

    Smallar PupiU To Go To Report At Nathan Hale hm$land School*. Big Enrollment Expected in High

    Suggestion* To Parent*

    The local arhools will open for thefall term on Wednesday, SeptemberR at the usual hour for opening.

    Children of the school age who

    of th* increasedment in High School mOMthat building will be requfrijfjcommodate the High School

    have never attended school before' than last year. . ,,,may be registered during the Un A cordial invitation Uf * { # 'day* immediately following the open- schools at any time is e x M f e ling of school. parent* as these visits mar

    Reception Clasa, First and Second very helpful to both studelit(liade pupils in Chrome section teacher. ,should report to Cleveland School; Parent* may assist the , ,while Third to Eighth Grade pupils their children in school byinclusive should go to Columbus' carefully all noftces andSchool. which are sent home from i

    In the Carteret section the Reeep- encouraging pupils totion Class, First and Second and, their weak points as revealedThird Grade pupils should report to monthly report cards; by setting INathan Hale School. All Fourth to a definite hour in the day forEighth Grade pupils inclusive should study and by insisting that pipgo to Washingtonipening day.

    School for the be punctual and regular In attenance at school.

    Opening of High SchoolStir* Interest In Football

    ness about 6.30 o'clo* Monday evenfl , g U 111 r .

    formation gathered by Mrs. Schroe-I'n?Lder, struck the child with a baseballbat.

    Cruel Father GetsYear in Workhouse

    Five Year Old Girl With Mark.On Back I* EvidenceAgainat Walter Sotnotki.

    Oilier Charge*

    ;he title of Carteret". Sheill he awarded a beautiful new Pon-JC Coupe and will ride in the coupe

    uar the head of the parade. The' untest will end tomorrow night andthe winner wl|l be announced. Athis writing Miw Gertrude Armour

    -.* the leader in the contest with a to-tal of 306,000 votes. Miss FranceslUrrington i» second with 166,000.These a n the figures as they stoodlast n|ght after the girls had turn-ed in reporti for the week in accord-ance with the rule* of the contest.

    I livid wheal three inches wideacross the back of a five-year oldchild helped to send the father, Wal-ter Sonnoskl to the workhouse fora year at a hearing in police courtWednesdny night. Sosnoski who lives

    The alleged attack by Kish took'place on Saturday, August 21 inBrady's field. ' Several weeks pre-vious to the attack, Kish took a base-ball belonging to^the Schroeder boy.On the day of the* attack the Schroe-der child saw Kish playing with hiaball in the ball field and wanted totake tt. He said that a boy struckhim over the head with a bat. Thatwas all he knew for some time as he |was knocked unconscious.

    Mrs. Schroeder learned that otherchildren picked her unconscious sonup and placed him on a bench in theball field. Kish fled. The child lay onthe bench some time and the otherchildren became frightened and wentaway. When the little boy recoveredconsciousness he staggered home andsaid he wanted to go to bed. He wasin such fear of Kish, his mother be-lieves, that he was afraid to tell ofwhat had happened. Little Henry hasa heavy head of light hair. It wasnot until his mother tri«d to wash

    much improved and was able to talkand joke with the nurses.

    Kapucy gained considerable fameand publicity about three years agowhen he' «nd some other youths leftCarteMt «n bicycles bound for the

    There was a littlethe boys left the oldin Roosevelt avenue.

    Pacific eoast.ceremony asborough hallThe four wheelmen started at theBhot from a policeman's revolver. Theothers in the group dropped out ofthe race in the middle West but Ka-pucy carried on. He endured manyhardships and was injured slightly inone or two accidents, Once he narrowly escaped being bitten by a rattlesnake which cuddled up to him on

    cold night as Kapucy slept onmountainside.

    'at :il Mercer street was arrested fol - lh i s f a e e t h a t s h e discovered the ugly

    lowing a quarrel with his wife inwhich, it was alleged, be beat the wo-man. He was alto charged with be-ing an habitual drunkard. He pro-tested that his wife did not attendto her duties and that she too, drinks.

    When the wif» and one of the old-er children^were asked if they want-ed the father sent away the replywas that if he was not sent away hewould kill one of the children. Then

    The parade will be headed by a b i g | t h e r e < . o rd e r w a s told of how heiuad of police, "MUs Carteret", m i 3 t r u c k ytnn\e the 5-year old daughter

    her priu car will follow, and just be-:•,;nd her, will be Grand Marshal Rob-ert Jefferyi with his sides, William J.Uwlor and Charles Ellis. Followingthe Marshal and aides will be MartinlUck, the oldest living ex-chief inhe borough; and the executive com-

    mittee of the celebration. St. Mich-

    with a heavy razor strap.The police car was aent to the

    Mercer street house and the childwas brought to the police court. Shehad to be carried as the appeared tobe too wtak to walk. The child'sback was bared in the court roomand the marks of the Strap were re-

    Boy's Btnd of Hopewell, a splen- j v e a i e ) jlid musical organisation of thirty-j ^rom t h e s t o r y t 0 | j b y t h e little

    girl and other members of the fam-ily Sosnoski came home and missedhis wife. He aaked Fanrlie whereher mother was. The child aaid shedid not know and th« father is a!

    g y-j-ix pieces will follow and will leadlg i r )ihe borough council and mayor, and"ther borough officials. These will befollowed by Roo*evelt Post No. 263,American Legion,

    Other organisations that will be"i line «r«: the Boy Scouts of Amer-;'.ii, the Carteret Business Men's As-sociation with a fife and drum corps

    leged to have attacked her then, withthe strap.

    Sosnoski has been arrested severaltimes for drunkenness and for beat-

    thirty pWoes from St. Michael's j i n^ f̂o w j f e A t o n e t i m c w h e n theHome In- Staten Island, Court Car- f a m n y lived in Passaic street Sos-

    noski was beating his wife, and herscreams attrasted the attention ofneighbors. Two men rushed In andgave Sosnoski a sound thrashing.Prom that time until the family mov-ed to Mercer street, he behaved.

    The Middlesex County VocationalSchools will open next Wednesday,September 8 at 9 A. M. * '

    wound on the top of his head nearthe left temple. He then said thatsome boy had hit him.

    The following morning the child'shead and face were swollen; he hadtwo black eyes— great areas of dis-colored tissue beneath each eye andthe white of the left eye was clottedwith blood.

    He has been under the care ofphysician since that time.

    Henry was able to tell his parentsthat a big boy had hit him with abaseball bat but he did not know thename of his assailant. Other childrenwho had been in the field at the timedenied knowing who struck the child.It was learned later that they knewwho struck HenBy but were afraid ofKish, who, it appears, is a bullyamong the children and fear«d by allof them.

    Finally one boy told and thenothers corroborated the atory. Itwas also learned, at this time, thatthe children who had seen the attackupon Henry thought that he wasdead. When the case was reportedto the police Monday and Mr. Schroeder swore out a warrant for young.Kish, the police were told to arresithe youth. He had bee a keeping outof their way. When officers went tothe Kish home other members of the

    Rah way Man Says ChromiteThreatened Him—Arrested

    )f

    Louii Kapucy, Carteret Man WhoWai Injured In Accident on FerryBoat.

    Miss Armour LeadsAs Contest Nears End

    Final Result of Race For"Miss Carteret" Will BeKnown Tomorrow Night,

    Winner To Get Car

    As the contest for "Miss Carteret"draws to a close, interest in the out-come is intense. Returns were mad«last night by f pur of the six girls who jentered the race. Mis Gertrude Ar-mour not only still retains the leadbut has increased the ratio of herleadership above Miss Harringtonwho is second. Miss Armour's total

    With the opening of school Wed-| morning, an immediate calli for football candidates will beI made. The dashing warriors of the

    niue and White gridiron will be upand ready as soon as the signal forcandidates is given.

    The high school gridders havewaited impatiently for their oppor-tunity to put Carteret High Schoolon the sporting map even bigger andbetter than the marvelously success-ful eleven of last year. The foot-bal men of the first Carteret Higheleven, established a record worthyof much credit, in rating a gooddistance in front of Woodbridge,Perth Amboy, Metuchen and numer-ous other surrounding high schoolswhen the pfficial state rating wasgiven out last year.

    One of the big advantages of aneleven is the backing of an almamater alumni. This will be enjoyedby the. '27 gridiron when the grad-uates of last year come out an hun-

    Democratic Women Pit*For BiggMt

    At a meeting of the WoDemocratic Club Wednesday nigfct Iwas announced that at leatt twodred prises will to awarded toceseful players on the night of OetOpfber 9, when the organitation wUt|hold a big euchre and dance at Dtl>|ton's auditorium. It it plannedmake the affair one of thesocial events of the season, lire,'ward J. Coughlin is chairman of 'committee in charge of the arrange*!ments.

    The meeting Wednesday wasbusiness meeting followed by can | |games. Arrangements were made :an euchre to be held on the date •the next regular meeting Septemb1C in Fire House No. 2. This enwill follow a short business <Mrs. O'Brien is chairman andbe assisted by Miai Margaret He*. 4mann.

    last night was 305,000 as against!

    dred per cent, strong to root for theBlue and White.

    A big help to this year's machinewill be the experience received byseveral of the players in last year'Bexciting tussles. Although a num-ber of the creditable stock of last

    236,500 last Thursday. Miss Fran-On complaint of James Cosby,colored, of 11 Haydock street, Rah.way, Henry Williams, also colored, of63 Bergon street, was arrested yes-terday by Patrolman Bradley, Whenthe officer searched Williams, a knifewith a four inch biade was found inhis pockt. Ooaby alleged that Will-iams had threatened him with bod-ily harm. The men had been employ-ed in a local 'plant and had trouble I " T ™ . . ™there. Cosby said that Williams fol- w i u ^ m a d c a n d t h e w i n n e r w i | ]

    101,000 and last night she Iffcreu.-mdit to 166,000.

    Miss Helen Donnelly jumped from36,000 to 51,000. Miss Fern Cheretmade her first return since enteringthe race, 5,000. Miss Madeline Kashaand Miss Olga Babenchick made noret.ur.nB to date.

    the final returns

    ! yenr were graduated there still re-good supply of the best

    in these partx.I Perhaps the greatest crowd ever

    to attend a sporting event of anyborough will witness

    lowed him about and made severalthreats, and that he, Cosby, wasafraid Williams would attack him.

    Tho knife bore the stamp of theU. S. Army. It was sharpened so asto have a double edge.

    , No. 48, Porwrters of America,Middlesex Grove No. 36, Ancient Or-der of Druids,' Slovak Catholic UnionNo. 324, Assembly No. 235 SlovakUymnastjle SoVql with a band ofthirty pieces, the United Polish So-cieties wttwi ' tand of thirty pieces,Hie Hun4*rtaW'Societi«8 with « band"i eighteen » & • * , the Ukrainian So-'•'«ti*s irttJ»Prwtive piece band, the(ireek Catfcdalociities, the?. S. Re-

    family expressed the hope that An-drew would be sent to some institu-tion. They told , the police that hehad been beating his mother and hadattempted to attack his step-father,and a sister, it is.1 reported.

    The buy was arrested Mondaynight at 10.30 after he had tried to4lude the police. He denied strik-ing the little Schroeder boy, callingGod to witness the truth of his de-nial. He cried and broke down butstuck to his denial.

    Some months ago Kish and anotherboy weR; m rested for stealing metalfrom one of the plants. At the Kish•homo the police were told that An-drew does not sleep at home. It issaid he sleeps in a barn. He ia bigand strong for his age.

    be announced. Returns are made1 atMullan's Garage and a bulletin boardthere shows the results each week,(t is expected that the -final resultsof the race will be known about 10 io'clock tomorrow night.

    The contest was launched by thefiremen and\ exempts of the boroughas 'part of the celebration of thethirtieth anniversary of the foundingof the department. The winner willreceive as a prize, a new Pontiaccoupe and will ride in it near the headof the parade here Labor Day.

    Lin* From Old PlayThis expression, "When Qietk meet*

    Greek," gllgtitly altered, is derivedfrom the ime, "When Greeks JoinedGreeks, then was (lie tug of war." Thequotation Is from the drama of "Alex-ander the Great." by Nathaniel Lee

    and refers to the •tub-bum resistance offered by the citiesof Greece to Philip aud Aleiauder of

    —K»n«i,» nty Stnr

    Labor Day Activities

    W A N T E D *

    wers on Coats•41LLS-SL1CKER CO.

    & Hall Bldg..

    Carter**, N. •!•

    Estate Exchange,'Awlue, Carteret, N. J.

    of all Kind.tnd Plate Glass

    t and Sold

    For Quick Reeulti

    ^ T\

    9

    the opening game against RahwayHigh School, the Class B Statechamps, of last year, at the localfield. The defeat handed out to theMaroon and Black nine last yearhas made the Spanktown represent-atives eager for revenge. The localhigh, school licked Rahway 8 to 5 inthe first meeting of the two varsitybaseball nines at Riverside Park.

    The PRESS will follow everystep of the Blue and White eleven,through TED.

    One Negro Slashed OtharBoth Are. Locked W

    William Burke, colored, Of 44 ,Essex street, was attacked by BenReynolds or Randolph, a Warren'street negro yesterday and his leg Jwas slashed. The wound three inches jlong required several stitches when hewas taken to the office of Dr, Jo-;seph Wantoch for treatment. Bothmen were placed under arrest.

    From information gathered by the,police it appears that Burke follow- |ed Reynolds to his home and attempt-ed to break into a shed when the;trouble started. The arrests weremade by Patrolman Bradley.

    Carteret Tailor CausesArre*t of N. Y. Picket

    Morris Bossin, of 1816 Madisonavenue, New York, was arrested yes-terday on complaint of Max Green-span, a tailor.' Bossin is one of themany pickets that have been sent toCarteret by the Coat and Suit Mak-er's Union. Greenspan said that thepicket threatened him.

    Bossin was released under $25 bailto appear for a hearing tonight.

    All-Cartertt TeamTo Play Woodbridgo A. A.T;

    Carteret and Woodbridge are U !terested in the meeting of the AltejCarteret's of Joey Elko and . thevWoodbridge A. A. at Brewster"»-J

    Field in Woodbridge, Sunday after-.fnoon. This contest will be the first |of. a three game home and homeseries between the two team*.

    Sunday the local tossers travel to'.Woodbridge for the opening, gamfand fans will be pleased to know that _ -the youthful Jess Sullivan will bf v|on the mound for the Elko nine,;Jess is traveling like a house on fire,'']having won an exciting S to 2 vie* •*-tory over the strong Newark N Mtionals after ten innings, at Brady'sOval, Sunday.

    Fans are taking a great interest!in the. doings of the Carteret star. : |A large crowd is expected to be Shund to "root" for him and the A1U |Carteret combine.

    DeVoe Favor* Road . c .For Heavy Truck. A " - " * ^ *

    Fred W. DeVoe, of New Bruns-wick, Democratic candidate for Con-gress in the Third Congressional DIB-trict who advocated in a speech be.fore the Rotary Club of South Amboya cross state concrete highway forheavy-duty truck traffic has writtenSenator Arthur N. Pierson, of Union

    .House:An alleged disorderly house at 2T-|i

    Mercer street was raided yesterday "|and two women and two men were Jlocked up. One of the women,ola TinBley, has been arrested here-1several times. She gave her residence fas 8 Brown street, New Brunswick. >The other, woman, Cor* Ovries, II*

    County requesting the Senator to set at 9 Bergen street, this borough.forth his views on the proposal: I The men arrested are Sam! Wa

    Sepator Pierson has taken a lead- j lace of 27 Mercer street, anding part in the road discussion und Oglesby, of 43 Eswx Btreet.his criticism of Mr. DeVoe's plan will,were placed under bond of |25 e*be awaited with interest. for a hearing tonight.

    Lay Theft pf Valuable AutomobileTo Well Organized Robber Band;

    Raid Garage of Emil Koyen, Taking Packard and StrippiNash of Wheels and Tire*} Neighbor* Heard Noise in Night

    Similar Thefts in Carteret Believed Significant

    WOODBRIDGE'.—Thieves stole the Packard sedan of

    Smjl Koyen from his garage on Free-man street, and stripped the Nashjoupe of William Koyen, stored inj.be same garage, of live wheels andtires some tipie Wednesday night.The theft was dUeqvered yesterdaytiorning wh«n the men went to their{wage to get their cars.

    Police bellfM $ • w o r k t u H * * '

    were forced open from th*permit taking the car out.values the 'Packard at $2,the parts taken from the1376. The

    tonature ot thethat at the

    'iyt experienced car thieve*. , „,ve Sergeant Jaawt Walsh WM «JF

    to the tyjte tad •floadttoteil

    Frank Lawson, of Green sreral months ago, when hiswas stripped »f its wheels

    Persons in the household1

    Koyen a»d Mr. Campbell,» ibt>t]ev«d. they h«ard a ndi

    b 8 ' ly

    at «buutthe o»r wasnwrnW the »r a

    tb«ffbt nothing of H atthe f « t th

    were mad* in

    «f M

  • FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1926. t JLJ ... J M

    THi G9CATIST PlAY If*BASCB4LI IS COfllHGHOMt.-THE GREATESTPUV IN LIFE IS T H tSAM£ - IF IT IS VOORHOME.

    Yon know 1h« thrill i)f watrh-injr ynnr favorite plnyor reachhome !>ut (In you confine that,thrill ID hn^'tmll? l>on't youexperience unythinp like thosame sptisntion on reftohinp yourown home? If not, thorp's some-thing wrnnR! Wo specialize inhom; and in theevening and nijfht period rlurinR

    seen i whily, are nnliroad nminced by the New York Telephone

    hnrs heof these:ind fin

    couln taciwere the vogue.

    1 was fortunate

    hM(,enough to get

    flanges. There are haU cf this typein velvet, satin and moire or combi-nations of these ftbric* nnd then

    Company, The changes nre effectiveOctober 1. They nre made, the com-pany states, for the hene/H of USCTS

    .lust the of interstate Ion? distance servicemnke n and to , eliminate Rervic* difficultien

    >n have which trie present, schedule hasbrought about.

    Thc net results of the readjust-ment in interstate rates will he a

    are .mlrt as .mart cln » day. I found that the brin, w « ^lvet. P**n>all,- 1 W no a.th *\wuntry o f approximately three milare imarc as aman can a t^ th reports that wom ll " " " T ' • "'• i " K S . ^ \ l n e y a r c « i i > r i u s o r o n r i c a n • - " * • - - - - - - - - . .

    be. but, for every one of the sai.ora. ^ / e l t _ ^ ^ H^i ^ . ^ . u Lsi(i« ftn

  • '(fertBttBER&'ltlt

    Avenue GarageHALL BROTHERS

    Repairs and StorageAutomobile Storage $5 a Month

    Accessories - - Towing ServiceTelephone 209 ,

    4 Railway Avenue Woodbridge, N. J.

    SENSIBLE-Ninety per cent of all the cars Dodge

    Brothers built in the last 11 years

    at* still in service. That is because

    they are built to last! And that is

    why there is no more sensible in-

    vestment in the world than a Dodge

    Brothers Used Car.v FRANK VAN SYCKLE

    438 Rarlten Avmue, New BrumwickHighland Pairlc, N. J. P,,th Amboy, N. J

    Pfcoa* N. B. 2721 Phono P. A. 591

    A USfrD CAR IS ONLY AS DEPENDABLE' AS TH£ DE-ALE-R WHO SELLS IT

    AUTOMOBILE SECTION

    f

    STOP AT NYCHAPH'SHIGHWAY GARAGE

    Gasoline, Oil, Auto Supplies

    Cigar*, Cigarett* and

    Soda Water

    Cor. Lincoln Highway and

    Correja Ave., IHPHTI, N. J.

    DAY NIGHT

    CallWoodkidge151

    UP-TO-DATE TAXI AND

    GARAGE SERVICE

    WHIZ ALEMITE

    Service Station

    G. Lucas, 240 Amboy Ave.

    Free Crank Case Service

    —Please mention Woodbridgjc Iluli'pendent when buying.

    FIRST SPANISH WOMAN AUTOMOBILE DRIVER

    I

    Road Commandment*1 Thou nhiitt I earn t" r*rof

    nl*» rtllnxil rromlnfl irid *\iprnnrh thwn with «xtr»m« . »r«

    - Thon nhnlr |Onli rxith W«T«»nn)oTm»nt of' h y ''or i-nnlinunim

    fl Tltmi uluiit nnt kill th« pin-

    »n|pr i within thy r»r».

    » TIMHI . lull kp«p thy b r i k nKlnled with clYiM-llve tirskft lln

    7 Thou nhnlt nut fopmQdupon thu drlvpr t.f the car ahaad.

    8 Thou shun, wh»n In doubt,tak« th» nnfi> r,,Urse alwsyn.

    9. Thou (halt cross c r o n l n p'•HUtLnuNly.

    10 TIIMI nlinlt ke«>ri thy curunder control, sn IhRt It c«n »!•wsyg l>« Mopiicil In the clear•pace »hfail -Wyoming lloads.

    The photiiKiniili shown Hwiorlta Pitmrlnln Benlto, who Is (lie firstwoman to take imrt In an automobile rare In Spnln. During u rwtmt 1'2-hourrace against men Mn< ipri'lvoil a high ruling.

    60% JUNE Sales Gainover greatest previous Nash June

    Rounding into the last month of thehalf year period Nash sales and pro*(faction raced thru June to pile up a60% lead OVER the greatest previousvolume of June business in all Nashhistory.

    And this record-breaking total also *. made June 1926, the 22nd consecutive

    month —with one exception — to sur»pass the mark set by the same monthof the previous year.

    The reason Nash is getting the busi-ness is simply because people arebuying where they get the MOST

    " ' for the money—in greater VALUE,in greater QUALITY, and in finer

    .PERFORMANCE.

    THOMPSON AUTO COMPANY

    Easy Means Provided forOiling the Rear Spring!

    By drilling u Vi inch hole throughthe floorbpards mi cither Hide of bisoar at the point Indicated In the(Rawing, 80 automobile owner pro-vided an ea«y menus of oiling therear iprlngi. He found, however, thatdirt Boon c l o s e d the holes, i-audngthe oil to JWp along the undersideof th« floor and over th« outnidft of

    Tire Resiliency Much

    Increased by InventionA Hungarian Inventor has perfected

    a new method of attaining n 400 percent lncrentie of resiliency In pnen•patic tires without changing diameter,cross Motion, »haiie, form or generalappearance. An extra cushioning e(feet la attained by tiling a double dinkwheel and 1>J converting the entire hoilow ipare between the two walla Intoan airtight compartment which hold*air under preiwure as permanently innervlie as that accomplished by th«Inner tube of thu tire. Commnulc*-tlon between the lire and the airchamber In the wheel makes the Utter

    Irtually an extension of the former IDIOIIU of muhlonlng effect.

    Weary Waiting"Every rloml lias n s i l \ r r l i n i n g "

    quoted the W l w (iuy. "lint In m:itr1-

    tnuny 'J." ycin-s Is n IIMI^ Him' tn wait

    for Hit' S I U I T vii'dilliiK iinnlvcrsnry."

    replied tin- Slni|il>< M m ,

    lluto Suqqe&tioruBY A. SNYDti;

    For the h»ivy haulyou »uto call

    T HE tiros we sell areconstructed t 0Btnnil the wear andtear mused by heavyhauling. You'll findthem hor at pricesyou'll like,to pay.

    "Snyil^r't i-t nlwmyx •

    (food nntn

    SNYDERSGARAGE

    AUTO SUNDRIESAND REPAIRS354 AMBOY AVF

    to Oil Spring.,-

    the apron, which accumulated dtutand presented a dirty appearance.This trouble he remedied by Insertinga short length of brass tubing, flaredout at the top, Is each hole. The tubeextended about V, Inch below therunning board shield and was bentto come directly above the spring•hackles. Short nails were used toplug the boles between oUlnga,—R. C.Tarr, Gloucester, Mass., In PopularMecbanlci Magazine.

    ~£UTOMOBILE NOTES

    Keep your automobile license tagsclean.

    • . »

    The quickest automobile turnoversoccur at the grade crossings.

    • • *

    Tor every 86 telephones In the UnitedStates there are 100 motor cars.

    • • *"No matter how popular swimming

    may be, It Is best (or an automobilenot to dire.

    » • •After the collision (old style):

    "Why the blazes don't you buy a bellfor your bicycle?"

    • • »Evidently the speeder can't say that

    he was testing his car, and expect tog«t away with it.

    —Mention this paper to advertisers;

    it helps you, it helps them, it helps

    your paper.

    240 Madison Ave., cor. Market St., Perth AmboyChat. Loichl«, Manager

    o

    3GoodName

    priceless and therefore sjealously upheld* * vDodge Brothers have kept thefaith.

    Vf(ff after year their motor CM h«a

    continued* to mature Into a better

    Mid better product

    BMUty hoe been added to depend*

    iblity, comfort and silence to

    MMty. Endless refinements have

    S e n made, and the basic sources

    o f Dodge Brothers quality main-

    taiMd In every detail.

    M'-H- consequence, the NAME

    Dbdge Brothers is even more val-

    Uibte than the great D«KO

    BrpttlW plant itself, and eminently

    WOliby of the public confidence It

    everywhere inspires

    •••It* p«bBc may rest asaqred that

    • Oood Nwnc so priceless wiU H

    Mfanianl«d Jealously by those wpo

    bmh$ dcttinics in their hands.

    , / • .

    '$••''••

    FRANK VAN SYCKLE

    OP|N EVBN1NGS

    4M

    H

    wP«rjh Ambojr, H. J,

    Phon. P. A. 8*1

    ease i\ve pain

    Nothing bring! iuch com*farting relief »• the originalBaumeBenguJ. It t u n * todrive out pain M t o o n uyou apply It.

    GET THE ORIGINAL FRENCHGET THE ORIGINAL FRENH

    BADMEBENGU2( ANALO

    • REPPERMINTFLAVOR

    A tasting treatand gaSd forta«th° appetite,•nd digestloa

    THIS Studeb;iker Custom Sedanunites the smoothness and powerof the quiet Studebaker L-hcadmotor with a custom symmetry ofline and treatment that would beabsolutely impossible, at the Stude-baker price, without Studebaker One-Profit facilities. You will like itslong, low-swung cuftom body anddie completeness of its custom equip-ment. Come in and see it—today.

    Studebaker Standard SixCuStom Sedan

    •1385

    100NEW5 BKVWSW1CK

    J.AgTHURAPPLEGATES*^«t 363 DiTfato, 3«r«i

    « R T H AMBOY, N. J.

    The Money Saving Chain StoresLAST MINUTE SUGGESTIONS FOR I

    YOUR LABOR DAY TRIPHot or Cold

    JUGS

    Koeps foods or

    liquids hot or

    cold. Full gal-

    lon capacity al-

    uminum drink-

    ing cup. Odor-

    lesa, a a n itary

    and indestruct-ible. Value ?5.

    98

    $5 Automatic

    Windahield Cleaner

    $1771

    $2.50 No-Glare

    MIRRORS

    2 ' ;x7 inches

    Makes Ni(?ht Driving Safer

    STORAGE BATTERIESIn Hard Rubber Cases Guaranteed for One Year

    FOR THE AUTO

    13 Plate Special

    For ForJt 9.95

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  • PAGE POUR

    CARTERET PRESSSubscription, SI.BO Ptr Year

    Published every Friday by

    C. H. BYRNE, 44 Chrome Ave., CARTERET, N. J.

    Telephone, Carteret 813

    I! £ jr BYRNE Editor and ManagerEntered an second elau matter June 6, 1924, at Carteret, N. 3.,

    post Office, under the act of March 8,1870.

    foreign Advertising RepresentativesNew Jersey Neighborhood Newspaper*. Inc.

    American Press Association

    0

    TOO MUCH SENTIMENT• I

    Many educators and other thinkers throughout the land,are swinging around more and more, to the proposition thatthere is too much maudlin sentiment in our schools and in our:method of dealing with law-breakers. There seems to bea good deal of evidence that warrants this change of attitudefrom the ultra fdeal that was introduced generally into theschools and courts and prisons within the past twenty-five years,Perhaps the real trouble is to be traced to the charge thatAmericana are extremists; that they go too far either in len-iency or severity. A still more probable explanation is thatno law or system can apply effectively to all classes. Thereis too great a variety in individuals.

    In the week's news of the borough there are two storiesof unbelievable cruelty. In one instance a father beat his five-year old daughter with a razor strap, leaving her sick and•with great stripes of crushed, bruised flesh across the back.In the other instance a fifteen-year-old boy is charged withhaving struck a little boy of seven on the head with a base-ball bat.

    In the case of the man who struck his little daughterdrinking plays a large part. He drinks a great deal of badbooze—and gets away with it. He is the type of man whobecomes a savage beast under the influence of liquor. Ad-vice and giving him another chance have been tried manytimes but without result. In his case the old fashioned whip-ping post would be more effective and more just. He like*to inflict pain. He should experience a little of it. He wouldunderstand that better.

    The boy who used the baseball bat on a child is one ofa type that is getting more and more common in this coun-try. He and his kind are the direct and natural result of thegrowing practice of crippling" all law enforcement in rega.\lto juvenile offenders. Teachers in the public schools a gen-eration ago were permitted to resort to corporal punishmentwhen other measures failed and the result was that young reb-els were taught tha,t it did not pay to defy authority. Ourmodern methods ban all punishment. State regulations makeit a very serious matter* for a teacher or even a principal topunish a pupil. All kinds of regulations also tie the handsof the police and police judges in dealing with minors. Thenet result is that the offending, youngsters come to the con-clusion that nothing very serious will happen to them no mat-ter what they do.

    Is it not possible that this state of affairs contributes large-ly to the big national problem of the day growing out of thedoings of our generation of desperate young bandits and gun-men who are terrorizing the country? Of course the warand prohibition and many other elements enter into the sit-uation but it is significant that practically all of the desper-ate criminals are young men. The older generation of lawbreakers rarely took, a life; they weighed consequences.

    Respect for law and constituted authority is so essentialto civilization that where such respect is absent civilization rap-idly goes to pieces. The advocates of stricter methods both indealing with adults and juveniles appear to have the best ofthe argument. Some of the greatest characters in this or

    • any other country were aided in developing by a judicious useof the apple sprout.

    turning tourists say that German visitors m £aris getent than Americans. Anyhow the Germans are

    »Uch better treatment than they would have had?d back in 1917.

    Going Our Way? 0 Larkspur andLiliegUy RUBY DOUGLAS

    u Aa

    « * R H E N li a loveisom*spot-1' quoted Angela, Idly.

    She wan Sitting on a rustic benchtucked nwny In a blne-and-whlte cor-ner of tin1 garden. Larkspur andIllle* surrounded^ her. "It 1ft also «lonesome upot," *he idded, "whenove has hurt you,"

    Angela never walked In her gardennmong the lovely colors and fragrance

    Jack and tt*B«an Pol

    By DOROTHY DOUGLAS

    (C««rHh()

    the days when Tom \V»H hadlife's tWAiitlful thlDgg with her. Shenever stood In the glow of « wond«r-ful minwt, she coulii not step .out Into1 silvery moonlit night without beingHtnhhcd by haunlliiR memories of mo-menta wlrti him who hart gone.

    "I'm always believing lie will re-turn." she RHld whlmalcAlly to henelftoday. "It at If the paths of

    "NEWS and PROGRESS"ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE AND SERVICE OF THE AMERICANNEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING-Fnom latest volumein Manhattan Library of Popular ExonomUs, republishcd in serial form throughcourtesy of Bank of the Manhattan Company, New York.

    6SERVING THE COMMUNITY

    NE cannot travel about the country without be-ing stn.ck by the great individualityofitsctties,big and little. If there is anything which distin-guishes the average American, it is his aggres-sive loyalty to his own home town.

    Therefore, it is not astonishing to find thatevery community, save the very smallest, has at leastone voice—the voice of it3 newspaper..There are nearly14,000 such voices in 10,000 different communities,and in their printed columns the spirit of each placeis expressed. These columns focus what may be calledthe accumulated town purpose in realizing local ambi-tions. Whatever they may be, it is through the news-paper that knowledge of community purposes is dis-seminated and ideas are unified.

    Thus, while most vocations arc more or lrss private, newspaperpublishing i* necessarily charged with a public interest. This has beentrue from the earliest days. When one of the first j>a|)ers in the then(1804) wilderness of Indiana made its bow, tht editor stated its objectto be "to collect and publish such information as will give a correctaccount of the production and natural advantages of the territory."In other words, he proudly proclaimed himself a "booster," althoughthe word had not yet come into vogue. This ideal persists today; itexpresses itself in making the paper not merely 1 chronicler of thenews, but also a leader in organized movements for community bet-terment.

    For example, in one town a public-spirited editor labored for yearsto awaken his city from the spirit of apathy that checked all progress.This town was lagging far behind in civicadvancement, its roads were poor, itsschools antiquated, its business section

    1) liank of the aftnhattas Co., N. 1.

    The newspaper mobilizes the best tiu/cns of thecommunity into a force for progress

    woefully behind the times, and its parksI and public buildings ihabby. Wont of all,

    Belt devotes columns of his paper to considerationof the problems of wheat farm-ers. This newspaper prints for them infor-mation it has gathered from every available source, all as it may help them to

    its affairs wen in the hands of those who solve their particular problems and otheri seemed entirely lacking in desire for im-provement.

    Condition* like these might h^ve daunt-ed the bravest But an editor u not justone nan; he speaks through his news-paper. When the proper spirit animates it,

    1 a newspaper is a host of men, for it mobil-izes the best citizens of the communityinto * (one for progress. So in issue afterissue, year after year, this newspaper consiitently and constantly centered its cfforts to awaken the whole community toits shortcomings and its opportunities

    At last it won. Today the old stagnation

    A GOOD IDEA

    The jam of traffic that is everywhere present along theHighway Systern is distressing to everyone who has oc-

    jcasion to travel, and there are but few who are not abroad thesef days, but a peculiar fa.ct resulting from the situation is that

    tte very person who, it was thought, would most directly ben-! jeflt by the enlarged and improved Byatem of concrete highwayp s the one who is suffering most from the congestion.

    Before the advent of the hard surface road the farmerwas the victim of the bog and mire that was characteristic of

    ; the dirt or stone road and the paving of travel arteries with,concrete was hailed as the solution of his problem. But the

    jllfarmer soon crowded off this medium of conveying his produceJo the buyer by the large transportation companies who im-nediately took advantage of the opportunity to make them-ejves rivals^ of the railroad companies for freight carriage,

    brought about a double injury where only remedy hadsen planned. It made the farmer's traffic route hazardousid dangerous and also had the effect of causing the farmer

    pay, through taxes for the means that? brought about the in-Jury.

    A ray of hope, at least, is seen in the idea offered by for-aer Assemblyman Fred W. Devoe, of New Brunswick, who isae Democratic candidate for Congress for the Third Dis-

    c i Mr. DeVoe's suggestion that a through state concrete|$hway running from the «ew Hollands Tunnels in Jersey

    to Camden for exclusive use of heavy duty traffic and that'iff users of this road pay, therefor, on the mileage basis, seems

    a big step in the right direction and if given effect willbreathing space for the farmer and motprist as well

    juijring the foreign user to pay his share of road con-

    ties, new home*, new streets and parksand the innumerable other improvementsthat reflect an American community at itsbest, all attest the power of newspaperleadership.

    Again, the publisher of a large cityI newspaper in the heart of the Great Wheat

    wise improve their economic Condition.Not satisfied with precept, this publisherdevotes his own j,(oo-acrc farm to practi-cal experiment. Whatever knowledge hegains, he makes available to the agricul-tural section which his newspaper serves.As a result this entire community hasmade definite and visible progress.

    In l y i j a Community Service Contestwas held under the auspices of the Wis-consin Press Association and the awards

    n e conspicuous service of editors in the following order: first, for "wak-ing a community consciousness and pur

    has been transformed jnto a wave of pros- pose;" second, for organizing ao area tu-pcrity. New schools, new stores and facto- bcrcular test for cattle; third, for giving

    effective support to seven different com-munity projects; anil fourth, for perform-ing thirteen separate services.

    How the newspaper finds its own reward in joint expansion with its own com-munity is indicated by another instance.Toward the end of 1915 a newspaper in a

    southwestern city issued a special editionlo conimeiimr.uc its twenty-fourth anniersary. That issue was devoted to a sum-

    mary ot the contrasts it hud witnessed andhad helped to bring about. When thepaper first appeared the town was small,its streets were mud holes, vice and graftwere rampant, scluxils and churches werefew and scarcely a building was of morethan two stories. The newspaper itself wasof small size and practically withoutmoney. Twenty-four years later, as theedition shows, the newspaper occupies itsown sixteen-story building, which it isalready outgrowing, and the city, with apopulation of 225,000 inhabitants, has alltheevidenccsofcultureandwealthpaved—streets, parks, good govci nment, abund-ant schools and churches, comfortablehomes and an imposing business district.

    ' Similar examples of reciprocal contribu-tion to a common prosperity might becited endlessly. They all indicate thatAmerica's newspaper publishers havelearned, as American business as a wholeis learning, to read self-interest in thehigher terms of public service.

    {Nixt artule, "'Diitriiutini thtNatton' 1 Gotii")

    fJBome t«lk of a European boycott against Amerverjr |«uch whether they will "boycott ue sd)

    spend money over there.

    • . • %

    tells that Wf

    Come in—and pay the! over-due subscriptionaccount

    Don't wait until thtpaper stops.

    v« of All Carterct Borough in tbePrtH, tba tu«t widely read

    paper in C«rt«r»t

    WANTED!Your Job Printing Business

    If W e Can't Please You

    Don't Come AgainCARTERET PRESS

    Spend Your Mone;with yomr home merchants*

    They help pay the tnea,keep op the echoola, taild

    roadi, and make this » com-

    munity worth while. Yenwill find th« adrettlting ot

    the beat ones in thia paper.

    sMigXwramiM' IM am an »MI MM *ar »w m i

    The Man WhoSAVES

    h the Man Who Wins

    Perhaps in /jA ĵftryn experience you can poinj \frtime, when, ffiw|ad saied you%coftlji have,in an opportunit^Hg^buld have made you m*ny times tfinancially, than you a » now. There is only one answer—**•«$»•£ing now for tbf n«xt t ine opportunity knock*.

    >' '' *!.

    The First National Bank\N.J.

    thoie who have been is close a a wewere must cross again."

    A soft iumraer breeie stirred thefragrance of the Miles. She coveredher fa.ee with her hands. "Oh," sheBreathed, "nothing ao vividly recallsmemories to me ai a fragrance.Those 1111 fa—"

    It had been In this »ery corner thatthey had flrnt admitted their love-nearly sli yearn ago. She had aeenlove become visible in hla eyea, likeaome tangible thing, as he Bloodwatching her among the tall blue flow-ers of her garden. And ih« hadknown then that ahe, too, truly lovedhim.

    Tor two years they had been happy,the two wonder yean of her life asshe looked back. Then, aa they trodcareleinly the pathway that shouldhave led them Into eternal happiness,they bad mumbled. The obatucle wasnot a hlddvu menace but one thatmany had fallen upon before them.They fliould have seen It. It was theold, old rock over which lovers fromtime immemorial have Rtumltled Intolonely uathwity*. JenlouBy, It iscalled

    J ACK WEBBTKn had been In th«American unban? in London fnrtwo and a half year* and there was andenying the fact that, while he WMrising financially In Ue world »niimost happy In hi* pott, yet-wellhome wag home and he waa more thana bit homesick for hi* own land AndIlls own coantfy folk.

    **• :living on his Inheritance. I : ;:. [know be had come to London mi I nusmaking good at the embass.v \>>usee, Anne, I—I loved him very mui,and when I finally refused to marryhim I was m unhappy that I've H.itbeen roaming about the world writingatorle*. He doesn't even know wherelam."

    It was not an eaay thing to arrangea dinner In a strange bachelor's tintwithout coining in personal contn-iwith said bachelor until the very ulgMof tbe dinner, but that I* what Ninryand her ally Anne wera trying to d»They wanted a most complete surprintfor Jack as well a* hi* friend*.

    However, the houMkorpar who tookinch excellent care of Jack was aready third to the scheme and helptil•com about London for com meal andother necetaltley difficult to obtain.

    There was no slightest doubt thatAnne and Nancy had prepared « dinner (It for the goda and what's morethey were about the daintiest tw»Balds that ever carried a tray.

    Six hungry men were *lt(ln( aboutJack's hospitable labl* when Anne entered with steaming,dlthea of clamchowder.

    Jack opened wide hla eyes at lightof the lovely serving maid. His dinnerwas being served In royal tfjle. Tinfellows nil opened admiring eye* andwhen a second maid mired to help.

    called. .Neither had been jenlons of the

    frlenda or aenociates of the other.Their faith seemed too firm for that.It had been a selfish lack of under-standing of Just how much a manshould mean In a woman's life, whattime should be his. what thought,what effort. He had believed withmany of Ills male forebears that whena woman loved the should care (ornothing else bat to plena* the manche loved.

    Angela had ttlwaTS been an artistof a sort. She hud readied a suc-cessful position In the Held of den>ruIon—flowers were her Inspiration,

    and It was In floral deulgns for fub-rlcs that she hud succeeded.

    Tom Wall h«d felt that this wasonly a temporary passion of hers iiudthat she would drop her work entirelywhen she married him. He had tuk-en It for granted, so thoroughly, old-time male was In1.

    80 tUey had quarreled—a little atflrat, then violently. Angela wouldnot give up work that Involved thegift that hud been given her and thattier father Hod mother bad fosteredand through which she had enjoyed agreat measure of success.

    "Then," Tom had tald, sadly butdefinitely one night as the/ atood bythe gate, "I may as well leave youto your art—your career."

    She had never heard from himagain. Friends told her he had goneto France to take up wurk he hadbecome Interested In when lie was Inthe war.

    Many of her motifs traced longspikes of larkspur and, mingling withthem, Madonna lilies. It was with thismotif, that she worked in her studioday after day on a Qoral deslgu for anAmerican allk that was to be eihlblt-ed In farlt that autumn.

    Week* passed by and she did nothear from the governors of the Part*exposition who had charge of I he for-eign designs. She begun to be dl»euuraged.

    On a chilly moonlight night she satIn the window of her studio lookingnut over the now leafless garden. Thelate post hud arrived and a letter hadbeen brought to her. She had scarce-ly looked up as the maid had placed Iton her table. The niuld had longknown that she need not expect a nodof itiBBku or even of recognition whenMiss Angela seemed to be thinking Inher studio.

    After awhile she took up the letter.It had a French atawp. In the goftlight of heY studio lump she read ItIt was from Tom. He had beeu atthe exposition and hud Keen her work.He had recognised the flowers from"their" garden, four years had taughthim much of life and lonellness^audthe need of her love. Hqw hud heever been selfish etiuugh to want herto submerge a laleut that was sowonderful? Could she-would sheforgive him? Did the mill cure?

    The letter went 011 to say limuythings that were as music to the earsof Angela. He hud glveu her a cableaddress—so hopeful ImJ he been aft-er seeing that she had made theirflowers the motif for such wonderfulirork.

    Angela, far from pensive ipdthoughtful uow, dashed down thestairway and to the telephone. She•enl a cable at once to Tom, forgiv-ing him In more words than were neeetMfy.

    Incidentally, her design took a prlit«nd helped to make famous the Amerloin exhibit of silk. Hut (hat w uoolj a secondary consideration to

    ' Ditcovmrnd SomethingA man wa* sentenced to five j e a n

    lit prison for forging a will. Aj bepaused through the prison gate* tobegin to serve hi* sentence- he am»M4prison official* by breaking into loudb«jhter. "I've Just discovered" th,eforger explained, "that I'm the victimof a. proverb. My plight Illustrate* theOld saying, 'When there'* u will there'sa way.'"

    Jack Jumped up wltha apring that almost upset the entire table.

    "Jack," cried Nancy, "you almost npset me and the tray—don't be silly.'she added a second later when ear!:and every soul In the room had turnedsurprised eyes on the remarkable pi<ture that Jack and tbe maid weremaking.

    There was no donbt that an es»enttal and missing iwrt of Jack'*life tn«>suddenly returned, Al»o there was litlie fear that she would ever be missIng again. Jack was seeing to tint.

    "Jack I Please," cried Nancy lookIng diyly at all her audience, "tliereechicken Maryland, corn pone, bukedbean* and mince pie and—"

    "Hut nothing In- the world, count"but you, Nancy," Jack told her.

    "Oh, ye* It due*," uld Numv"Anne and I have spent lot* of tlumon this dinner, go you all lit rightdown and eat It."

    And after a moment Jack came '"hla sense* and obeyed.

    VntaithhUBdna-Bu you and Jack hate spin

    1* What w«* the rea»oo—Jealousy iM«e—Yes, In a w«j,' The wreti1!'

    w u always talking about a girl nau«

  • Men GainingFAG,

    .ea, r m n oy Club Trim.

    Liebig Baseball Team

    U U , w-veral addition* to their' l in,M,p, the Harmony Club trim-

    I ii,,. Uebig's baseball nine, 8 to, f,,ur inning contest, at Brady's

    |.,v night.wa» pounded for 7

    Field Club Wins InSouth River Came

    A throe run rally in Hie first inn-ing clinched the game fur the Car-teret Field Cluh against the BruiiR-wicks, of South Kivor, nt. that placf,Sd ft

    1 'THAT LITTLE CAME'^™tnc^.c^.T.-By B.Unk|

    t h r e e frame, by the hardlineup of th« club team.,

    d

    Sunday afternoon. The Field Clubof a 4 to

    Debotekey, of .Tameaburg, perform-

    i"?." linirhed the "Tatt" frame" of l « d o n tJl« sl for the local repre-rk for LteblgB. Mickey D'- 9 e n t f t i v i > s Hn'e "onsible for the hold-up.Although the H a r m o n y scored' T h « Brunswick succeeded in bang-

    ' I, nms on seven hits the fertil- '"« Deboskey for at least one hit inh-tllmen could no t aecount for, everV ' " " " " b u t the fifth in which

    ' than a brace of tall ies on four B t * n l t t t t h e y threatened to score on a"•", ' Five errors were made by w a l k ftnd « n "™t of Coplan's blow

    11 by Mickey D'Zurilla,'"M'rS" Besides pitching good ball after the

    A B . R. H. E. ^ r s t i n n ' n 8 Rogers got three hits forThe box score:

    l.irhigt1 liic-hy, If.i r.jllina, ,2b\V 1, c

    cf

    ..... 822

    i o , 2(, idllins, rf 2Simmons, p IK. Collins, 3b, : 2l: Kitchy, ss. 2]l;uwy, lb ... 2i in Iry, p 1

    01100lI000

    the River nine. Sabo and BruggyQ led the Field Club batting with two0 hits per. Earny came through with0 a neat double, knocking two men in0 in the opening stanza.Q The box score:

    t Field Club AB. R. H. E.

    3

    Harmony,i. !m Leshick, u . .,M L- i i -nHn, c f

    i liZ.irilla, p. 1\Y D'Zurilla, c. 8y Siibo, 3b 2

    Sullivan, lb 8, Leshick, lb 2

    linmiell, rf.ij, Sullivan, rf.

    120

    102112000

    19 2 4AB. R. H.«E.

    8 2 0 02001111

    2 Leshick, ss 4 0 1 02 Boutot, rf. 3 1 0 00 J. D'Zurilla, 8b 4 0 1 1

    W. D'Zurilla, cf 3 1 0 05 Bruggy, c 4 1 2 0

    Sabo, 2b. 4 0 2 0Kraemer, If 4 1 1 0H. Sullivan, lb 4 0 1 0

    Q Deboskey, p, 4 0 1 0

    \\ ' 34 4 9„' South River AB. R. PI.0 Johnson, cf 5 0n PerHne, 3b 4 0jjlCoplan, lb 3n Pollinsk, c 4

    Rogers, p 420 8 7 2 Gotch, If 4

    Summary: Two ba»e hit, J. Collins.[}|,,mc run, Masculin. Sacrifice fly,'

    D'Zurilla. Base* on balls off Sim-'1. Struck out by

    34 0

    1E.

    0 02 00 00 03 0

    0000

    0

    STAYSHANtsSREAb

    RULES

    Factory LeagueI. T. Wi l l i . m - T M m Only H«lf . Gam* Behind The U. S.

    Met«U PUyer*. Def«*t« Le.der, 1 to O. Li*big P l . y * «Ar» 50-50 With Four Each Way, Will P L , Tonifhl

    Factory Lf>«(u* Stm>Jin|

    u, s1. T.I.iehi

    M R .WilliamsITS

    Warner*

    I.Raaulta of

    T. Willinm-, 1,

    Wonft541

    Lout2445

    u. s. M. R.

    Ave..714.44n.500.167

    0.

    Cinid N*xt Wa*kToniRht, II. S. M. R. vs. Liebigs.Wednpnday, I.iebipi vs. Warner*.

    Probably the most exciting gameof the local factory league to date

    ' was the one in which thc I. T. Will-| inm? crept out in front of a 1 to 0

    b«ll« after g-Htinj on the sackswhen Kurtz dropped the last ball of

    strikeout for Barkalew.Ono other (tame wan played dur-

    ing the week, this contest howerw,was protested due to the ftet thatthe Warners, short of men, father-ed A number of illegible pl«ytn andwon out from the Copper Work* 6to 4 Friday. Protest van filed withWebb before play beiran.

    A large crowd i8 expected to SMthe U. S. M. R. machine and Ue-bigs battle it nut in their scheduledgame tonight.

    The box score:I. T. William

    nirninst the Copper Works atFlrady's Oval. The victory cut thelead of thc Copj>er Workx over theUinilxr nine to one game, with l,ic-liigs clflae at the heels ot thp Will-

    , iams nine, a half game in the rear.

    Ginda, cAH. R, H. E,

    000000

    - . , — - . . - u 0Above is the official standing a« H«H, 2b 2 0handed out by the league president,1 Rose, p 2 1Webb. I .

    Rose and Barkalew both pitched' i* igood ball. Three hits, which wan one \ 1). 3. M. R.

    Thompson, cf,Leshick, Rfl.Collins, If.Trosko, rf.Sielag, 3bLee, lb

    222212

    010100000

    IN LINE with the SPORTSMENBy the Sports Editor

    more than the winners scored, weremade by the U. S. M. R. crew. The

    1 fact that the winning run was scor-ed on three successive errors by Cole,Kurtz and Broachard explains thesuperior twirling of the respectivepitchers in this five inning go.

    Cromwell, the first man at bat,commenced services by connectingwith a double for the Copper Works.The three batters following them on-ly hit better than a single, retired inshort order. Neither team threaten-ed to score again, as the rival (ling-ers fanned their batters unmerciful-ly.

    The winning run was brought thruby Hall, who ran around on muf-

    Demp*ey Surprises

    222

    Cromwell, 2b.Dunn, rf.Wilhelm, 3bBoachard, ss 2Kurtz, c.Casey, IfGallowski, cfBarkalew, pCole, lb

    AB. R. H. K.0001000*1

    Score by innings:WilliamsCoppers

    17 0 3 3

    ... 001 00—1000 00—0

    Summary: Two base hit, Cromwell.Hit by pitcher, Rose. Struck out byRose 6, by Barkalew 10. Bases onballs off Rose 2, off Barkalew 1.

    zer. We'll have to send a magnificient teamjover there next time if we expect to bring

    Six weeks ago the impression was that home the bacon.

    Score by innings:Field Club 300 000 001—4

    1, V D - Z o r i l l T T by""sabo South River 000 000 0 0 0 - 0Summary: Two base hits, Bruggy,

    Rogers, Sabo. Three base hits, Krae-men. Bases on balls oh* Rogers 2,off Deboskey 2. Struck out by Rog-

    Jack Dempsey's absence from the ring,,com-bined with soft living,, had made it impos-sible for him to ever reenter the ring any-

    LASSIFIED ADSClassified advertiMmuiti only on«

    tent a word: minimum chare* 2&€.

    ers 3, by Deboskey 1.

    WANTED.

    3LEAN KAtlS wanted, site of hand-kerchii-f "r Urger, &c a pound.

    lksi \ I'II'SB, 20 Green street,

    ; Sullivan Play* Great BallIn All-Carteret Team Game

    KOOMS FOR RENT

    Once again Jes» Sullivan, Carter-et's sensation of this year's diamondcampaign, came through with a vic-

    , tory. J«M twirled Joe Elko's All-

    Ifii.-t

    af-rMr-.

    t e s m t o , t h r i l H t e n . i n n ;S f»r rent to teachew, break-crvea, if d*Bired. Apply . „ . , . . ., „ ,

    \\asday, September 8, t o " n « 3 *° 2 v l c t o r y o v e r t h e N e w a r kA M. Hafeman, 14 Green• Nationals, at Brady's, Sunday. Be-

    J sides pitching an excellent game theWoodbridge, N. J,

    |T\VII nr three rooms for light house-.•-• I'ing, all improvements. Phone1 M.

    WANTED

    C. C. Pyle let himself in for a lot of crit-icism when recently he announced that he hadsecured the promise of one of America's Davis

    where near the form he displayed in winning CuVpfayers'tolurn pro!" after "the" Davis Cupand defending his title. The champion's matches so as to provide Mile. Lenglen withappearance in training has dispelled that feel- an opponent in her matches here. Tilden,

    Young Yanks Play Well In | Local Colored Ball TeamTwo Week End Tilta Lose. To Perth Amboy

    1Two games were played by the

    Young Yanks, the fast going localjunior team, over the week end. Fri-day they played an exciting score-less tie with the Woodbridge Tigersat Woodbridge and Sunday they wentover to the island to trim the Stat-en Island Dodgers at Alco Park. Thelatter game was won. by a 5 to 2score.

    A tough battle was lost by theMohawk A. C, the local colorednine, to thc Good Hope A. C, also "colored, of Perth Amboy. The Car-teret nine, whicjh performs week-ly at the Tank Oval dropped thegamn by a 7 to 2 score.

    Neither team scored before thefifth, as a pitcher's battle raged."Bill" Flick hurled for the locals and

    mg.prise.

    Dempsey is turning out to be> a sur- Johnston, Richards, and Williamspromptly denied that they had made any such

    The Woodbridge tussle turned out Morando for the Perth Amboy ma.to be a battle between Mickey chine. The latter performed excep-

    each i Miglecz and Jimmy Vernillo, rival tionally well, fanning twelve Carter-1 twirlers. The Yank pitcher, with] et batters.eleven slrikeeuts, i was excelled by

    Tunney is not going to find Dempsey a promise to Pyle, thus making it apparent that' thVhome" te7mllm'g«*r who"fannedsoft, out-of-condition opponent. In fact, un- someone had either been mistaken or had lied. I three more batsmen. The locals how.less Gene proves himself to be a wonderful Pyle's announcement, coming as it did, just • «yer. outbatt«d the Woodbridge coacrapper, he may take a pasting just as did before the Davis Cup matches, cast suspicion j J;no

    e p ™J£ ^ J S * „ ? " ,

    Firpo and Carpentier. Dempsey's physical on the amateur status of the men America will j nillo and Miglecz, no batter couldcondition is one of the wonders of the age.

    Boulevard boy clouted a long homerwith empty sacks in the third frame.

    The contest was of intense inter-est all the way and the fans weretreatedment.

    to two hours of entertain-

    Superior fielding and pitching con-about 15 years of age to h e l p , t r o | WBs g h o w n w h < m t h e loM,, p e r .house work before and after

    'I. Apply at 151 Dunham place.

    HELP WANTEDL A I

    formers were held to three runs outof eleven safeties and the visitorsto two out of aix hits.

    Both Carteret tallies came in the"HERS, apply gate office, Fed-j a ™ w»™«™ »"»«» «.«»Masculin also secured three hits,

    one a double. Elko shot over two"•!••!,. and Double rooms nicely fur- ' t i m e l y 8i"K'es- Roherich and Voightlulled,' light

    i'ii'>', Telephone 791.

    pnv-led the olfensive with two

    tri-the

    FOR SALE

    •»ple with one on the paths infifth.

    The fans appreciated the gnme and

    Viater, cf 3

    Charlie Paddock, our best sprinter,trounced by Houben in an 100-yard race.440-yard record that Ted Meredith set severyears ago was erased from the books by Dr. Good teajns have gone to pieces beforePeltzer, also a German. And to cap it all, but none in a more conclusive manner than thealong came a German war veteran—a wound- Giants. They seem to be at.sea absolutely, I ^"l,"1™11*' ss jj* JJed one at that—to shatter Gertrude Ederle's and are taking pastings from all sorts of teams' coiiins,'c.'..".'"'.'."'."'.'•'.'.'.'.'.". 3 -record for the Channel crossing by doing the arid all sorts of pitchers. There is a rumor! Galvanek, if. 3trick in two hours less time that Gertrude going the rounds that the debacle of the jJ- v'"t" "f *

    sive wh^n Vernillo/'fanned the nexttwo batsmen, Collins and Galvanek.The borough players, were never indanger, with Mjglecz^ allowing nomore than three hits

    This contest will be played offwithin a short time. It probably willbe played off on one of the boroughdiamonds.

    The box score:Y.nk.Kasha, 2b

    lb.3b.

    SM.

    needed.Germany is going in for athletics. She

    Giants can be attributed to the bursting ofthe Florida real estate bubb.l§.. It will be re-!

    mba, rf. 3

    29 0 6AB. R. H. E

    I Dunham, c , 3 0 1 0

    Copper Work* Team DefeatsStrong Newark Outfit

    Monday night the Copper Worksnine journeyed to Newark, wherethey trimmed the Bollb,acks, of thatplace 12 to 2. The game waa one-sided all the way.

    Jerry, Harrigan took care of themound activities and Kurtz return-ed the stabs. Harrigan had controlof the game at all intervals. TheU. S. M. R. offensive worked to per-fection.

    Carteret Player* Star. On Out of Town Team*

    I Jess Sullivan's superior performance der competent coaches. -' - - - . • ! - - 1 . 1 . _ T1 . . .J ! r

    has her walking clubs, her bicycle clubs, and called th.at in the Spring some of the Giants Tiger.her field exerojises—which are a great deal scarcely could He kept at their training, so in- ] i2q^n%iZZZZZ' 3 o o olike our military setting-up exercises. On the terested were they in Florida real estate "bar-: Jordan, c'f. Z'..ZZZZ $ o o owhole the young) German is in pretty good, gains". Frankie Frisch's ilerves have giv- J. Milano, ib. 3 o l lphysical shape. I There's no telling how far en way, either under that or some other strain, Hotakô 3b 3 ohe may go in seating athletic records if he and he will play no more ball this year. ' 'pursues the American plan of specializing un-

    "Topsy" Roth pitched one of thefinest games of his career at Eliza-beth, Sunday afternoon. The starhurler was called upon to perform

    h i t th P

    : KOOM HOUSE, electric, wa- ' o v e r Hoefner, of the opposition. Hoef-i and toilet, garage, poultry | n e r fa n n ed

    - three and Sullivan elevenaitieulara address Henry St. C."•'-. I l l Main itraet, Woodbridge.

    -•- Wood. 1160 and 1182.

    . left fielder wa» taken out of theI game as he injured his legrwhen he

    fell on the Jeft field sidewalk goingny.

    1 LOTS on Gordon street nearl"*y. Apply Woodbridge Inde-i i ' i i t ,

    1«>OM HOUSE, centrally locat-1 m Woodbridge j" used only « few

    ll:-; hke new; bargain price.|!|'W installment* accepted,

    • for immediate occupancy' 88b-w Woodbridge.

    The boxCarter*! AB. R. H. E.Hasbruuck, 3b 4Leshick, 2b. 5Masculin, If 6Elko, cf 5Skin-lit, an. 4Kara, lb .- 4Helly, rf. 4Itnuiy, c. 2J. Sullivan, p 4

    National*Rehorick, ss.Hiley, 2b.

    111000000

    26Score by innings:

    Yanks 000 000 000—0 stats-Tigers 000 000 000—0

    The manner in which politicians havestuck their finger into the professional box-

    Readers- will recall that in the last Olym- ing game in search of plums is sickening. Butpic games America cut little or no figure in then, politics as a rule are sickening in any ait-the middle and long distance runs, but fig- uation. Prevented by Tammany politics fromured to clean up in the sprints. And, as a holding his Dempsey-Tunney fight in Newmatter of fact, while we did roll up points in York, Tex Rickard provided for holding thethe sprints it was Abrahams, the Britisher, who fight at Philadelphia, only to have to give' by Vernilio 14. Double plays, Smoi-took the coveted-"hundred". Germany has certain concessions in the matter of choice' £ * * M i , ^ ^ ^ ^ ; ^ " 1 1 ' 8

    men who excell in the shorter distances, aa seats to the Pennsylvania Boxing Commission. I 'indicated by the feats of Houden and Pelt- Tie it if you may, but you will never beat it,

    Kollar, ss 3K. Milano, 2b '.. 3Gentile, If 2

    with the Cometa against thc Pre-1 miers, both of Elizabeth. The Com.0' ets conquered by an 8 to 1 account,00 plate to guide his dazzling slants,0 Roth kept clear of any trouble.Q Strong batting support wag given

    _ ' the Carteret product by hiB team-0 3 i ' mates. Cutter and Roth' perform

    I quite regularly with the Betsytown

    Summary: Two base hit, Medwick.Bases on balls off Miglecz 2, off Ver-nillo 0. Struck out by Miglecz 11,

    The Cmteret battery is exptcted totake a great part with the Comets, inthe Elizabeth championship tourna-ment. An Elizabeth newspaper iaawarding gold medals and a lovingcup to the champion!) after tht com-pletion of the elimination tourna-ment. The Comets are expected to

    The Dodgers could not tally more.Pu'l o u t '" f r o t l t of th« f l«h t w i t h

    Hakoah Players Arrive to Join Jewish.Soccer Team

    37 8 U 0AB. H. H. »•

    5 0 -2*4 0 01 0comer Grove avetjue ^p4 i« , ,, i v

    a 'e place, six large rooms, aU't ̂ m " ' ":. ' 4 i

    • ;::::- !• J"Amenta lot 80 x 182, garage.

    *, Wofd.

    . , - - 3 W w n w - SERVICESF , r: 5. WHIQBT, O.Uo3atW«t'i'v»iei»n, Post Office Bufidtng,^» street, Woodbridg*. "J

    and Fri4*yt.Houxt:

    Denton, rf. 8 04 0Skoloeka, lb « »

    Urt.trmv. 1) * UHotfn«r, pLolly, If. 3 0

    84 2

    100 001 0—2QQ2 000 000 1—8

    thun two runs on eight hits, while1 the Yunks succeeded in piling upJ live L'uns on four hits. The borough

    iiiiit' scored two rung in the openingami the name number in the closingframe,

    I Ttirice Sierkerka got on first thrui u Dodger error and thrice the first

    ticker scored, leaving Cook to pitchheavy odds. Cook pitched

    Roth at his ttest.Such teams aa the Premiers, El-

    rnoras, Braves, together with a stringof others, are to compete with th«Comets for the honors and prizei

    line game, holding the Tank tousers

    Jump In, Gtt a LiftIIIIH "neve-r-stoji" clevatorn,

    In fiturThree pitchers were useii by the

    Yanks. Mi|;lecz could not • performfor more than the first inning, onuicount of a'sor« arm, Julius Vutterinteht'il until the eighth, when theSUituti Wander scored two runs andMedwick hurled the last two frames.

    Thts box acore; 'Y*uk. AB. R. H. E.Kasha, 2b 4 1 , 1 0Kwkierka, lb 4 3 0 1Smolensky, as. ,L 4 1 1 2Medwick, 8b., P 8 0 1 0Mtglec*, p., If 4 0 0 0Comb», cf 4 . 0 0 0Balwr, rf 3 0 0 0Galvanek, e 8 « , 1 8J. VUlter, If., p :... 8. 0 0 0

    Swedethe c«rn of whlcli [IHSS slowly and con-tlmioiiKly from floor to Itoor. Theagile piiHKpn^rs lfap tn mid out aithe oirs |inK« their floure.

    rfF. Snyder, cf.C. Snyder, e.' ..Cook, p.Winant, 2bToblin, lbRitsy, ss. .L»»ky, rf

    i44

    •4444

    00011000

    (

    35 2 aScore by innings:

    200 001

    Summsiyi Two base hits, ToblfcMedwick. Sacrifice hit, M«

  • DITPERTH AMBOY—T«L 2796

    Hrrr'i • Good TrickJo.t Try And Do l i t

    A maun of white. One nose andtwo fyrs pepped out. That was all!

    Ftirhnrd I>ix wripRlril a bit nndt|,en the rnmerns started to grind,A sequence in "Say It Again" wasln-.ng shot. The "wne takw place Inn war-time hospital, Richard, Rwonnrii>d doughboy, lay in bed, hisface bsiidnj^tl boyond recognition,with only the throe aforesaid mem-IIPIH »ppo»rinK above the surface.Alycc Mills, Dix's pretty lead-ing woitinn, dressed as a nurse, isinking his pulse. He, sans full face,is naively trying to register thethought, "I love you-"

    "Say It Again" comes to the |Womlhrulge Theatre on next Wednes-day. It is Dix's third Paramount i

    rertinn of Gregory La Cava, Ches-ter (nnklin has a prominent role intlii" film, on* that given him many op-portunities to inject his own uniquebrand of fun.

    THE ERSMerrill Breaki Anotlirr Record

    Frank Merrill considers a dfly altanlutely wasted when he doesn'tbreak another athletic record. His

    A Star Cut in ZaneGrey1. "Dciert Cold"

    Paramount's latest Zane Greythriller "Desert Gold" cornea to theWood bridge Theatre Monday, Sep-tember 6th, with what is truly an allstar cast. Featured in the four lead-ing roles are Neil Hamilton, ShirleyMiiMUi. William Powell and RobertFruzer Hut add to these George)Rigns. who was seen as "Goal" in"The Wanderer," Frank Lackteen,

    a fcRt of superhuman strength. Witha man weighing an hundred and fortypounds hanging around his waist, hesucceeded in "chinning" himself threetimes. Sounds simple, but just try iton the parlor chandelier! Merrill'snewest picture, "Cupid's Knockout"is booked at the Crescent Theatre, to-day.

    FINAL ROMANCEOF THE INDIAN

    "Tk* Vamthinf American", ZaneGrey-Paramount Picture

    At Ditmai

    •Bnu«.*r, *.»..» « » » = . . , , Thrir retreat into the desert fart,Irvine, Eddie Gribson, Jo- ness is marked by a trail of blood

    sef Swickard nnd Bernard Siegel,and you have just about started tell-ing who's who in the supporting com-pany.y.

    ''Desert Gold" was actually takenright (in (he locations about whichthe story is built. The team thatworked on "The Vanishing Ameri-can", George Seitz, director, andLucicn Hnbbard, scenarist, are re-

    This portion of the story of thewestern hemisphere's first citizens isincluded in "The Vanishing Ameri-can", from the story by Zane Greyon the Navajo Indian reservation, 105miles from a railroad.

    This epic of the American Indian,written in the sincere, direct ilramat-ic manner that characterizes all ofZane Grey's works, ifl not a tragedy

    sponsiblc for this film. That ought but in it he did not gloss over theto be more than enough for anyonewho saw their first effort.

    "The S.a B«*»t"John Barrymore in "The Sea

    Beast" is playing at the WoodbridgeTheatre today.

    The picture adapted from Her-man Melvile's "Moby Dick" and pro-duced by Warner Brothers under thedirection of Millard Webb, has beenacclaimed as the most important pho-toplay of the year. It deals with theNew England whalers of 1840 who,in their clipper ships, carried theAmerican Hag over the Beven seas. Itis said to have done for this heroicchapter in American history what"The Covered Wagon" did for theWestern pioneer and "The IronHorse" did for the building of therailroads.

    Barrymore, who has not been seenin pictures since, as "Beau Brum-mel," he won the gold medal forthe greatest acting of the 1924 sea-son, is said to have contributed an-other masterpiece of acting to thescreen in the role of Ahab Ceeley,the fighting sailor whose towering

    transgressions of the white managainst the red. George B. Seitz whowas entrusted with the directing ofthe picture, has followed the storyfaithfully, both in tetter and spirit.

    The bitter, courageous, determinedbut hopeless stand of the Indiansagainst their white enemies, their re-treat from the green fields and wellwatered country they had called theirhome for centurjes into the Darrendesert wastes is a powerful episodeof "The Vanishing American," whichwill play at the Bitmas Theatre, Sun-day, Monday and Tuesday.

    At the head of a company of 500persons, Seitz established a base campat Kayenta, on the Navajo reserva-tion in northeastern Arizona, and re-mained there approximately fourmonths. Richard Dix, Loia Wilson,Noah Beery and Malcolm McGregorare the featured players.

    pride and mighty strength carriedhim through blistering passion andmurderous adventure.

    —Please mention this paper whenpurchasing from our advertisers.—

    WOODBRIDGE* V T H E A T R E

    Matinee Every Day—-2.̂ 0 P. M.—Evening 7 and ft I*. M.

    LAST TIME—TODAY—FRIDAY—

    JohnBairymore

    The Sea BeastSPECIAL MUSIC Comedy "It's a Gift"TOMORROW-SATURDAY ONLY—

    DOUGLAS MAC LEAN in

    "Thats My Baby"Pathe Comedy "Mama Behave" Fox New*

    SPECIAL MUSIC

    MONDAY, Sept. 6th—LABOR DAY ONLY—

    NEIL HAMILTONSHIMUtY MASONWIUIAH POWtUHOBUT FRAZH

    Our Gang Comedy "Baby Clothes" Honeymoon LandSPECIAL MUSIC

    TUESDAY, September 7th—An Epic of the Nation on the March

    "Grass"Chapter Three "Snowed In"

    Pathe Comedy "Under Two Jag»"

    WEDNESDAY, September 8th—RICHARD DIX in

    ' "Say It Again"- Shore Trail." Felix Comedy "Tale of tw* Kittle*"

    )AY, September 9th—\ BEBE DANIELS in

    FALL REOPENING

    RICHARD DIX. ALYCE MILLS AND CHESTER CONKLIN IN A SCENE FROM' ."SAY IT AGAIN* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE

    U m Novel MethodTo Create Suipente

    Even the players in William deMille's new production, "The Run-away", did not know how the storywas going to end until the final scenewas reached,

    Warner Baxter and William Powellwere kept unaware regarding whowould eventually win the girl, ClaraBow.

    The idea of keeping the story'soutcome a secret was William deMille's. Re made everyone in thecast, which in addition to those nam-ed above includes George Bancroft,and Edythe Chapman, promise not toread the concluding chapter of thenovel or attempt to learn its re-sult.

    "I believe we succeeded in makinga picture which will keep the audi-ence undecided as to whether Baxteror Powell, if either, wins the girl,"he says, "and I thought the playerswould be better able to assist in cre-ating this suspense if they themselveswere not 'in on it' "

    "The Runaway" comes to theStrand Theatre Sunday. It is a storyof the Kentucky mountains and waswritten by Charles Neville Buck. Albert Shelby La Vino prepared thescreen play.

    "Th« Wanderer" To Be and beauty of character. And Kath-At Ditmat Theatre ryn Hill as "Naomi".

    Three days next week, Wednesday,Thursday and Friday, the DitmasTheatre will shflw Maurice V. Sam-uels' stage spectacle, "The Wander-er", from the Biblical parable of theprodigal son.

    Choosing the players for "TheWanderer" proved a difficult task,William Collier Jr., who plays thetitle role, was selected from agroup of more than one hundred ap-plicants. 'Fully thirty screen testswere made and scores after scoresof candidates were interviewed be-fore ColUer was chosen. Ernest Tor-rence was selected as "Tola," the evilone, and Wallace Beery was choBenas the drunken sailor. Greta Nissen,because of her ability as a panto-mimic dancer, and also because Fa-mous Players—Lasky Corporationfirmly believes her to be one of thegreatest discoveries in the history ofthe firm industry, was picked for thepart of "Tisha", the siren.

    Tyrone Power, who plays "Jesse",patriarch of Hebron, had a long, suc-cessful stage career behind him andblended into the part perfectly.Kathlyn Williams was chosen as themother, "Huldah", because of herability to create sympathetic parts

    Delightful Heroine, Dorothy Dwan,Seen To Adrantate In

    New Rajart Melodrama

    "The Call of the Klondike"/ whichopened today at the Crescent The.atre, is a finely mounted and wellcast melodrama, enacted by a care-fully chosen group of star perform-ers, which includes Gaston Glass,Dftrothy Dwan, Earl Metcalf andJimmy Aubrey, to say nothing ofLightning Girl, the canine marvel,

    Particularly fortunate was thechoice of Miss Dwan for the leadingfeminine role. Her flower-like beauty, which has been seen to advantagein BO many ftayart pictures in thepast—"Perils of the Coast Guard"and "The Dangerous Dude" amongthem—is no less vivid beneath theAurora Borealis than it is beneaththe scorching raya of the Californiasun. For so it is that the locale ofthe story ranges; after a particularlyengrossing sequence on the MojaveDesert the scene shifts to Alaska—the Klondike—the Yukon—the landwhich Robert W. Service described sovividly.

    KEEP COOL IN THE

    NEW EMPIRE THEATRETelephone Rahway 994 RAHWAY

    Under Personal Supervision of JACK E. UNGERFELDResident Manager, ROBERT M. UNGERFELD

    Musical Director, Mr. JOHN SCHADE

    ALWAYS 70 DEGREES, NEVER HIGHERWe have jtiat completed the installation of our Arctic

    Nu-Air Cooling System. The greatest hot weather com-fort ever invented.

    TODAY—F R 1 D A Y -ZANE GREY'S "BORN TO THE WEST*

    With JACK HOLTCombining with the thrills a warm romance—nothing washy

    washy, but real heart stuff done as naturally as it has ever beendone.

    A schoolboy quarrel. Scarred for life! A manhood meeting—and!2 Reel Dog Drama Comedy tad Fablei

    SATURDAY, September 4tb—ONE DAY ONLY—

    — BIG DOUBLE FEATURE —BEBE DANIELS in"THE VOLCANO"

    Love melodrama on the island of Martinique, where events fol-lowing the er uption of the volcano, Mt. Pelee, bring love and bap.pinesa to a pretty French girl.

    HOUSE*PETERS in"THE COMBAT"

    Alto a Comedy •

    SUNDAY, September 5th—

    — TWO SPLENDID FEATURES —PAT OMALLEY and MAY McAVOY in

    "MY OLD DUTCH"

    "HEARTS AND^SPANGLES"With an ALL-STAR CAST

    Eitra*

    MONDAY Mid TUESDAY, September Stt. and 7th—

    — DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM —ERNEST TORRENCE in"THE RAINMAKER"

    — — — ' PETER THE GREATThe WomUr DoC In

    "THE SIGN Ur i h u CLAW"Slfort .R«*U ! Newi

    WEDNESDAY, September 8th—

    — DOUBLE FEATURE BILL —VIRGINIA VALL1 ^

    "Sea Hortei" to Ride OnStrand Screen Next Week

    The Strand Theatre will have anexceptionally fine film attraction nextMonday, Tuesday *nd Wednesdaywhen Paramount's cinema version ofFrancis Brett Young's widely readnovel "Sea Horses," makes its locadebut. For tho.se who like vigor ov|melodrama, tinctured with love in-terest and moving midst scenes oftropic color and beauty, this photo-play will till the bill from soup tonuU.

    There is the added factor of a not-able cast, which numbers amongst itspersonnel such popular and capableplayers as Jack Holt, Florence Vidor,

    "George Bancroft and William Powell.The story centers about a lovely

    and charming English girl, who, withher little daughter, sets sail on anocean freighter which is headed foran out-of-the-way port on the EastAfrican coast. There ahe hopes tojoin her handsome, romantic hus-band, who deserted her u year aftertheir marriage.

    ,Her presence on board the shiphas an electrifying effect on therough crew and officers. The burlymate and the youthful third officereventually come to blows over her,and even the captain finds himselfyielding to her unconscious charms.What happens when she ttnds herhusband lu» degenerated into a dirtydrunken beachcomber, and the de-velopment of her subsequent romancewith ttie seu captain form* the larg-est and most gripping part of theproduction.

    "Song and Dance Mao"Ii True To Stage Life!

    The progress of Tom Moore in thetitle part, through the film version of"The Song and Dance Man," whichwill be at the Strand Theatre-, Fridayand Saturday, represents a true midvirtually complete history of the de-velopment ofathe song and dunce ty[Hiof vaudeville perforator. That ia to»ay, Tom Moore HtarU out with acarnival, worW up through the black-face singing and dancing act, whichwas the outgrowth of Nugro minstrel-sy, and finally in the latter scenes ofthe picture, uppers us the modernstraight songTand-dance vaudevilliau.

    If the role of the vaudeville dune'-er, played by Utsaie Love', i» takeninto coimldeitttion, the hintory in com

    Wted., Thur»., Fri.,Sept. 8, 9, JO—AOOlFM I | ) K 0 I M | K » I LUIII H»n<

    . & . # ZANE GREY'S

    VAHISHIH6AMERICAH

    Slat, Sun., Mon., Tu«>Sept. 4, 5, 8, 7—

    CRESCEN1PERTH AMBOY—Tel. 2S5

    THE COOLEST SPOT IN TOWNTODAY—LAST TIME—

    Dorothy Dwan and Gaston Glass int a l l o( the Klondike"

    Frank Merrill in "Cupid's Knockout"SATURDAY ONLY—

    Bill Cody in "The Galloping Cowboy'—o—

    Chapter Nine

    "LIGHTNING HUTCH"SUNDAY and MONDAY-

    Billy Sullivan in "The Windjammer"Gladys Brockwell in "The Carnival Gir

    MATINEE

    10c—20c S READE'S »\TRAND

    EVEN

    20c,2S

    PERTH AMBOYUnder Personal Direction of Walter Reade. A. 8. Flagf, Eei

    Matinee—2 and 3:30—Children, 10c; Adulta, 20cEvening—7 and 9—Orchestra. All Seate, 85c; Bulcon?, .

    2&c; Children, 20cSaturday Continuous— Evening Prices PraraiL

    COOLED BY REFRIGERATIONTODAY AND SATURDAY-

    STRAND BIG TIME

    A1) D EV ILLSUNDAY ONLY-

    unamy-

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    tion—throughout the coldest winters

    for years to come.

    Mailtonpon Mow and Ut HI ttni youliteratim ttllmg of tht many nmtuat

    . fettmrrt ofiht Thilchrr RotmJ Boiltf.

    Th* Cro$$ Lin** of

    Plaid Underscore

    the Bolero

    Thatcher Round Boiler horc shown\J provide! the maximum of both com-

    fort and general satisfaction.On* of lti many advintif ca li (hit the "Fire Pot"

    b unuiuillt deep, allowing proper ' banking" oTtralibi and the firioa of enough fuel to lut nearly alldaj. loteietiinf printed pititti "ill be lent jrou ooh o * to obtain nntinaj latiifaction. Write today.

    THE THATCHER COMPANYSma U50

    CHICAGO NEWARK, N J . NEW YORK.MlN.QarkSt. J9-41 St.Frandi St. 2lW.44chSL

    oAddress-

    FUTDE8TROT8

    Flies, MowiidtoesRoachesJBedbogsitMoua oaott mrflin)

    WOODBRIDGE

    VALET

    AuioSiropRazor

    sharpensitself

    The Hand Coat It a

    Good Junior Sport*

    Model

    Two cotorj, a separate bolero, kick plaitiaod a gay plaid put the vitamins A, It, Cand D of fashion into a robust s t y k ' o r

    school Four plaits—two at the frontand two at the back—give ample widthlot the bat-minute sprint (or the class-room. As the collar and lower sleeves arenot changeable an4 there are no hooks olbuttons, this makes a splendid up-in-tbe-morning-lair, and down-to -breakfast-early frock for twills and serge and suchlight weight wools as crftw, flannel anduuhmere with plaid, check or printed silkin the tleewlea body and lower sleeve.

    —Please mention this paper whpurchasing from our advertisers., j

    PUBLIC SERVICE

    A Supplementary Service

    Tire raglan coat with a lUrc thatat the shoulder and tipple? at the hem, acollar that will dose up snugly at the neckand pockets in exattly thr right positionto take the place of a mufl, is the smartestjports model of the year It is a strictlypractical wrap for school, traveling, thecar and football games, and is made in therougher wools such as chinchilla, fleececoatings, homespun, twmls, etc. It isdoubly warm and doutity chic when linedwith plaid flannel, or when made of pla