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four Comic Section RESS Sporting News, Page 7 VII, No. 37 CARTERET, N. J , FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1929 PRICE THREE CENTS- Annual Meeting Of Womans Club Mrs. Stremlau Renamed President ubroitt«d By Nominating Committee Unanimously Elected d u b Had Bu»y Year Report Shows—Annual Luncheon On June 8. Harmony Club Member* Have Tenth Annual Banquet afternoon in the Kriday f the Municipal building and r<> "Ti«D0rta«t business wan tran*- m " c 5 The annual election of onVwrs art * UJA with the following results. Emil Stremlau The others elected rft ary, W* Mrg . John Groom; a< ion * Henry J. Harrington; are: KMII L. Mr*, sec- Hagan; fodor Groom; alion =•• u Henry treasurer. Mi* " ^ m , )irectorR i M V n . Thomas F. treasur. udiU)r M y ?or>hree y^, The the floor rnous. AMr. , ol Bradley, Mrs. i. C. H. Byrne, of candidates was svth- a nominating committee were no nomination*! from The election was unani- who U working in the " Camp The members of the Harmony So- cial Club held their tenth annual banquet but Sunday afternoon and evening in the new club rooms. An excellent menu wai served and there wag much entertainment. Some of the entertainment was furnished b; 'members of the club. There w^r© al of firearms ao that a safe and sane' 80 entertainment niumbers by mom- Independence Day be what its name! hew of the Pumpkin Centre Trio, implies—"A Memorial." ' and by Louis DolgofT, master of cere- Through the efforts of this cflu'b I monies of the Noit Club of Now York. and the co-operation of the Oummie-1 AU of the members of the club with aion for Blind, a nine-year-old child, | one or two exceptions, were present. practically blind and otherwise great- ly in need of medical attention, has | " rp » Masonry Topic At Presbyterian Church Rev. C. B. tvlitchell Urges Ma- son* To Keep Ideals of Or- der Always In Mind. Memorial Day services were held Slat's Diary Friday—Nina Glunt was in here this evning for a wilp. I (fesw Ant placed in the Elizabeth General Hospital and the case will be close- ly followed. At Thanksgiving twenty families wore supplied with food, by the Jun- iors, and at Christmas old toys and clothes were mended and distributed to the needy. A "Woman's Cluib Shelf" has been estahlished in the Public Library. A prize of $5 will be awarded to the high school girl with highest per- centage for three years in home, sconomles, A very fine Sehutmrt pro- j Standay morning in the the tailing of the great v j T that i* done at the 5nd«rno«rri»hed hildn St th pre Emmy dueaent think very mutch of her and when I a«t her why shft d i d d e n t think mutch of her Ant Firemen Score Big Success In Card\PartyJLnd Dance Here when a car Tn which she was riding | Biggest Attendance jtt Season at Affair In High School Satur- day— Firamm Ar. Complimented Upon Th* Orderly Manner In Which Big Function Is Managed. Mm. Thomas Carteret Girl Injured In Accident in Woodbridge Bertha Kopolv of 9 McKinley avenue, Carte-ret, had her left hand injured Sunday night at 8:20 o'clock I was in collision with another ma- chine. Miss Kopola was riding with j Prank G. Mille, of Douglas street, Fords. In Amboy avenue, Wood- reply™! and *ed. | bridge, near Convery boulevard, a Wll h i ht di >h Mrtl M f 284 e children csmp i.inin* that the present acco- and eiplamingjw. r ^ Qji , y iraThird^tho^Jhat are inly and He _ can be accomodi A ? n } Z SA *We the camp gram was presented and a most en- joyable orKvact play was given at one of the largest meetings this year. Classes in millinery and cooking have been held, Our programs have been interest- Ing, instructive and educational, and meetings have been supported very church and several members of the local post were present. Rev. Charles Benezet Mitchell preached a sermon of tribute to the hero dead of the nation. In the evening services were held for the Masons and members of Roosevelt Lodge were present. The you kokf v ben throe men and 2 Colligr- students. Sutwlny M a was a Retting red- dy to go to a brid«d party tonite and sho Bed Rhe hopfd thny wood- ent sorve Chicken Sallad 'becui she has ben rodoocing and Pork all ways Stuinlck so mutch enny ways, Sunday—Ant Emmy says it aint never to late to lem sum thing. She had all way thQt thot T. N. T. "waa a brevaahun for! the Telephone and Telegraft cutnpnys. But the m&gga- zine seckshun in the ipaper today Ted her to 'beleeve it wao sum think to Xplode and blow things up. •—The teecher ast us today „„„ _,...-„-, ..-. The most largely attended card, Mm. ^.Sharkey, sho is what car driven toy Myrtle Mauron, of 284 par t y an d dance of the season was lll&dom, Mis« Evriyn Bracher, Mrs. wood call a Monmouth road, Elizabeth, collided k^ Saturday night in the high W. Truatum, Mm. N. Twnpany, Mrs. she has j with Mille's car. Mille took Miss Ko- nchool gymnasium and in addition A. ('. Hundeman, Mrs. Mary T ****- ingaged to polo to the Perth Amboy hospital to being a financial success it wan Mm. .lohn Shiifflln, Miss Anna K.«n- whore her injured hand was treated, conceded to be the most orderly and bach, Mrs. Frank Andres, Mra C. J. well-managed affair of the kind ewr Brady, George Swenson, T. Hoolihan, held in the horough. It was held un-, Willtaim Brandon, William Sharkey, der the auspices of Fire Compnny Miss Klsie Sjwingrr, Stephen UVKO- No. 2 and the entire membership of P ki, Mrs. J. Murphy, Mrs. G. 1. G»«- the company acted a« n committee mi det, Rlwood «n D*vinter, Harry Con- arrangements. 1 Un. Mr*. William Rspp, Mm. J. «* w > Thoro were a great many fine priz-' Mrs. C. Staubach. K. X. Koopfler, es for the winners in the card c • , . , . , c , All tho popular gampa were in play. Several Local Members Spend p^,. thosfl who dill not care t<) p i Jly Week End In Atlantic City cards there was dance music hy u w i -L-H u •. competent orchwrtra all evening. —Mayor Mulvihill Hott. Tnere were a |, w al>PC ml entertain- ment features. The Carteret delegation that at-1 When the card (fames were over Carteret Foresters Attend Convention Mrs. Alfred Ronner, Mrs. Thoma* Smith Mrs. V. X. Kcwipfier, A. Nw- ing, Mrs. VV. Donnelly. Mrs. C. H. Bryne, John ShulTlin. Mrs. T. M. f well, considering the amount of sick- j pastor told of the high ideals of Masonry and urged that the mem- bers- of the order carry out the prin- ciples of Masonry in their daily life w«U A» in the lodge room. Every during the winter. Your president has attended all but three regular meetings and one directors meetin a great many gladly answered stole aid. iou* me" pr<- presi- telephone calls. Your club has been the represented at all conferences and P<JB- conventions and several club meet- 1 ings throughout the district. That each club member feels her responsibility is evident in the suc- ng and waa present at j _ ... Junior meetings, and | pew in the church was occupied. Mr. Mitchell said it was the duty of every true Mason to attend regu- larly whatever church he is affiliated with. The speaker pointed to eGorge Washington as an example of what a Mason should .be. He said Washing- ton carried the (principles of the or- der into all hia dealings with men c«s» of the card party and food sale, The Cateret delegation that nt g tended the state convention of th« those who had i>oen playing were nsk- Poresters of America returned late *d to take neats in the auditorium. Md ih l Th i ! i th Poresters of America returned late Monday night of last week from AU The prizes were arrange! in the lantic City where the convention was chestra pit and as members of held in the Hotel Chelsea. committee called the the of th<i Mrs. E. an<l proves do. You all, efforts whai organization am sore, agree that can | and nations. Mr. Mitchell said that Masonry has through the years because it have ben'very worth- \ is constructive and progressive, year> and won , fc better this cominjf year. The part UJM of d€epeninjf un , ! dowtandJng. We know each other i better and can, therefore, help each Mrs- J. re for ho3 P iuiity"de^» e ^ n o i d irl up by the dub, was as been discussed. The members of the d up by the c , child was found by members of the club to be in a oadly undernourished condition; sha baa cataracts on each eye and has never attended school. The club had her removed to the il h i being is just flphnt each member contributes aivd 1 urge each one to feel it her. v . duty to help on some committee and i Victory boost the club at ail times. A Wom- an's Club is to a community what a woman is to the home. The splendid co-operation of the Carteret High Wins Debate Over St. Peters The splendid cp members and especially of the Board nf Directors has greatly inspired and t b leder Makes Local School Champion of Central New Jersey, The members of the Carteret High School Debating Team, under the bil id f M i Mt if enny 1 in the class new what the Xpression. See America 1st, reffered to and Blisters answered and replyed that it was Criatofer Cluiwbuses slo- gan when he started out west on his discovering trip to grow up with the Injuns. Teusday—At the party tonite I ast Elsy if she ever let fellas kias her and she sed to me. No fella will ever get to kiss me un else I cant see him comeing. And all the rest of the evn- ing when T -was Betting with her she set there with her eyes shut: I cant make out what her idee WSB in set- j ting with her eyes shut. I wood of thot she wood of toen afrade. Wensday—Ma was a balling pa out for eating peas and some uther few things with his nife and she sed. And .besides not only is it bad man- ners but it ia very dangerous to. Pa sed Well I will just have you to un- derstand that I aint no kowardy kalf. Thirsday—Pa was on a jury trile today and when he cum home kmite he told us that the jury had dis agreed and cuddent make no verdick. Ma ast him how cum they diddent agree and make no verdick and pa replyed and sed that he diddent no un else it was Ibecos of a mistake the lawyers had made when they put a husbend and his wife on the same Jurry mebby. Ma looked board and diddent laff none. The delegates from Court Oarteret winners, the latter filed were: Louis N, Bradford, Joseph pit raiting, receive! their prizes nn.l Edward returned to tiheir seats. In tins wuy Schultz, Martin Rock and'John S. there was no crowding or confusion Olbricht At the convention Shutjlla, William F. Laiwlor, Edward returned to tiheir Shl Mi Rk J there WM no crog and the prizes were quickly awarded Mr. Olbricht Tb*n the dancing continued until a was elected supervisor of Junior late hour. Delicious refreshment* Mm. Charles (ireen, Mrs. Thomas F. Burke, Mrs. Russell D.mdell, Mrs. Jennie V. Currie, Joseph BrandoO, William Donnelly, (1. T. C.ivudet, Mrs. L Jones, Gtorrcf Kim*»«f*i, Fr«d Still- „« man. .li>R<»ph McHale, Mrs. C. O'Don- nell, Frcil Springer, Mins E. Britten, Miss lVggv Morris and Mrs. Pr«d SUiulnu'h. Bridge: Mrn. Ella dleckner, Mrs. Harry Kischcr, Miwl.illinn Donnelly, Miis Amw Reilly, Mrs. John Kenne- k M Enlanuel dy, d supervisor of Junior courts ami Mr. Bradford was named were provided by the committee. After the affair was over a com- a delegate to tne Sum-erne court ot *»« tIIU «»«"» «"" ""-' » *-""• i n the order. Mr. Lawlor is the alter- mittee of liremicn cleaned up the an-, ' ur - Ry, Hurry (llockner, rMs. Enlanuel , Mrs. Thomas D. Cheret, Mrs. T. K, Hewitt, MJBS Gustofson, Mrs. Howard Burns. William F. l nate. Besides the regular (lart)cr, MiM Helen Struth- ert i r Hewitt Miss Kathleen Mul- ditorium and aymfloor and put every ^ - ^ tester. Miss Eliia- delegat«. bit of equipment that had bee retnov-. ^ M c( £ nlpy> Girllr ,i Goodman, T ........ qp othera from Carteret who attended ed« back into place. Th i i othera from Carteret who attended ed« back p Thomas Jakeway Thom the convention were: Mayor Thomas The priw winners were: Fan Tan: Conran Misa S J. Mulvihill, William Staubach, Mr. Sadie Rosmian, Julia Alton, Mm. A. ' C(>ok Mfg and Mrs Joeph Sarzilla Mrs Otto Walsh Alex Skurat Mrs Dennis £ • G h M ^ &nlpyi (|rllr(1 a o t Thomas Jakeway Thomas I). (Tieret, C Mi Sylvia Fischer J i NeviU Sadie Rosmian, Julia , Walsh, Alex Skurat, Mrs Dennis M Wll 0 B y Jervig , , C(> and Mrs. Joseph Sarzilla, Mrs. Otto. Walsh, Alex Skurat, Mrs Dennis £ • Garh(>r Miss luth Stauba(;H ^ Mrs. Bradford, Mrs. Fitzgerald, Mrs. William 0 Bnen, ^ ^ aml Mr3i y] a( i p Ajbell, Mrti Rk d Mihl Kti Mrs Carman Martin Rock, and Michael Kastrin- sky. All of those in the Carteret dele- ty Th« club nan u» . General Hospital where she in being Irtated. and. the cate will be follow- ed up by hte club. When the e«Ur- ;i.u are advmaced far enough an op- eration wttl be performed to remove them and rjptore tot ^\i'» sight. The dnbnyul r«c*iv«d reports re- garding the method of quarantining contagious diseases. It wil said that in some cases patients are quarantin- ed longer than others afflicted with the same disease. It was also report- ed that quarantine signs are not al- ways displayed in conspicuous places with the result that other persons, especially children are liable to be exnosed. The dub generally favored iixantine as a means of •"•->•*- iriven me courage to be your leader, _ , , . given me •* ..^ . . j ^ y e i prentiaa, were acclaimed the cham-1 School Debating Team, under the brilliant guidance of Miss Margaret' fortVpMUwoycar S ;andM I have; Pre, been urged to carry on for T another, pioita of Central Jersey, year as your president, may I ask for | a decision over the St. your continued loyal sup Mrs. Carman. Euchre: Mrs. Joseph Byrnes, Stan- ky. All of those in the Carteret dele- Euchre: Mrs. Joseph Byrnes, Stan ation were the guests of Mayor ley Richards, Mise Helen Devereift, lihill Sdy ight at a erfrm Mrs H Green Mrs George Bracher, Mulvihill Sunday night at a perform- ance in the Apollo theatre, Pinochle; F. E. Ruckreibel, Elste Lehnicht, Mrs. Mamie Little, Frank Bright, Mrs. Andrew J. Ohristcnsen, P. Lloyd, Mrs. F. F. Simons, Mrs. J. Rohde, John Deisel, Miss Guasie in the big thing* of life we are as ipport so that' school, by Professor Morris, head of the Debating department of New one, a U the many aims and ideala of | York University, Monday night, in the J eep- Slw^cTntigiou. diseases Mrs. Stremlau and Mrs. Miles wtre appointed a committee to <onf«r with thTBoard of Health at its "«»«•£ ir-x in an effort to bring about better quarantine conditions. Fi A letter was received from nre Company No. 2 inviting the members to attend the c«rd party ami dance iriven by the firemen on Saturday nigh" ft wa. decided that .11 *ho could would attend. Arrangement- were made tor the Third Annual Luncheon of the club vrhkh will be held on Saturday June 8, in the Pnwbyterian Sunday school room at 1 p. « . All of the members are expected to attend this funtion. Mrs Harvey Young of the home economics department reported that a class of sowing waa to be h«ld in the home under theiwstruction of Miss May Truman, a field lemonstrat- or of New Jersey Extention Service The class wa* held and a permanent patetirn wa» made. At the next meet- ing the claw will bring material and begin work on dresses. The complete report of President ». Stremlau follows: The second year of this orgaiuia- tion just coming to a close has passed j rapidly, u Y ,b usv i p ( happy ii Club Eve- and parents. and j Thedebate was held under the au- Cartoxet r*resa, the Elizabeth spices of the Rutgers Inter-Scholaatic the Elizabeth Times, the : Debating League, and was the fourth ami St. Joseph's church-1 in which Carteret participated this who have in anyj year. Carteret holds victories over St. Mary, South River and St. Petem, Rahway high school defeated Car- teret this year. Carteret upheld wuy contributed to our success. R t f u l l y submitted ontributed to our s Respectfully submitted, Violet C. Stiwnlau, Was Carry On ngr^M Hoffman Tell* Decoration Day Crowd That Men of AU Wars Left That Slogan Parade Exercises and Fireworks. The soldiers of the Revolutionary War. the Mexican War, the Civil Carteret Car In Wreck Boy Is Killed week be adopted by American i try." ! Never in the history of the local | institution has so great an honor been achieved by a Blue and White an eloquent address at the memorial ilaw exercises held at the Memorial "Dodsworth" By Sinclair Lewis Recently Added To Fiction Shelves—Ibanez Writes Ro- mance of Christian Boy and Jewish Girl. Dodsworth, by Sinclair Lewis. To his portraits of middle-class Ameri- cans Mr. Lewis adds that of Samuel Dodsworth, a successful automobile manufacturer, who retiring at the age of fifty, realizes that he doesn't know what to do with the rest of his life. The story follows hia wan- derings in Europe, with his socially aspiring wife, his gradual estrange' ment from her, and his findings of a new love and purpose. Method and manner are similar to the author'; earlier novels. , They "Still Fall In Love, by Jesse Lynch Williams. "She was tall an< thought love was the biological urge with a little smear of sentimentality over it." He that Heaven tion to the Gobi desert. Both revised their views, and after many narrow Mrs. H. Green, Mrs, George Bracher, Mra. M. Hallihan, Mrs. T. A. Bishop, Mrs. William Bowler, Mrs. L. NJ ..--, Bradford, Mrs. J. McCarthy, William j Kapusy, A. U Hundeman, Miss Van J. Lawlor, H. Fleming, H. Rossnmn,' Deisky, Mrs. H. J. Gallagher, Mrs. William V. Conghlin, Mrs. Thomas] John Adams, Mrs. P. Campion, David Larkin, Alex Calderhead, Miss. Mar- Roth, H. J. Gallagher, Mrs. John Har- garet Donnelly, Mrs. 'Irene Decker, rington, Mrs. J. H. Nevill, Mias Ruth ~ ~' " ' " ' '-•-- 41 'Gallagher, John (Bruxl) Harrington, I Mrs. Charies Crane, Mrs. Anna Pe- ! tereon, Mra. T. J. Mulvihill, Mrs. Duv- Notable New Books I wtav,^ 1 »»•>«»" i **? '^T S A^:2: SJA" At Carteret Library ban, 9. T. Britton, Mrs. C. Jamison, Thomas Smith, Hte Dorothy Thatch- " . M r s . V ^ P Murnhvf er Mrs. William F. Lawlor, Eliza- id Wohlgeanuth, Mrs. P. Murphy, I. er, Mrs. William F. beth McHale. Jackson and Mrs. Suroner Moore. Smelter On Fire In Big Plant Blaze Breaks Out In U. S. Me- tals Company Unit on Sun- day Afternoon. Fire (broke out in the ibig smelter of the U. S. Metals Refining Junior Reception On Friday June 7 Class of 1930 Makes Arrange- ments For Annual Event In Honor of Graduates. The annual reception of the Junior aaw&.w ss (ire department. A few minutes later the borough alarm was seunded and smear oi sentimentality i •;•- .~=>"",~^ . j was small, and imagined •*« two local fire companies reapond- was a scientific expedi-1 ^-, After a hard jight t|»joint ef- On cent, hi, faruther aged 3 months » ; ^ Carterft team t o w i n t The nut expected to liw, Anthotiette, a , Caltetet S p eakers were exceptionally their r^buttab were equat i b t l tta Congressman Hoffm first hand the dangers and suffering ^ ^ d their r^buttab were equat \ first ^ ^ ? f as brilliant . In their rebuttals, tta I Ijhat »w the lotof * (5 arteret debaters refuted many of , dieted that Carteret £ their opponent's points | U1LIOU MU*h v^u^v^» uu ..... I one oi the greatest, communities ii from to the Dark Hester, by y finally sue- Anne Douglass d years. Your president, in submitting her annual report to you, will not attempt to give in detail the activi- ties of the various department!!, which are given in separate reports, but would like to give you » general review of the work accomidww* 1 by the club. During the part year your club has donated generously tu the Ne*r Kaat Kellef, the Tuberculosis U-a^ue, the Christmaa Cheer Fund, American Le- gion, Kiddie Keepwell Camp, Km. Yardtev's Memorial Fund. At Cliriat- mas sales of articles nia<ii* by the blind and also 'the soldiers, were held at several drub meetings. The tirat flower show in tl»e borough waa held under our auspices. The carol ringing at the community Chrifttmaa tM*> on Christmas eve h»« become an annual event The chub cooperated with the Borough Council in regard to the watef situation iby (tending » ilele«»- tion to the hearing before HMJ I»ubliu Utilities Commiswon. Utters wore written to the Borough Council en tloraing a borough p»uk, a«d in ap ' of the many trees a*ided ulster, aged li, is sufTerinK from shock j and lacerations of the knee, another ulster Lillian, 4, ha.s lacerations of both wrists, Ciu-mella, aged 2 has la- cerations of the fa*»> and head, and Mrs. AtithoiietU) Colurnar motlier of, gente< j uy MelvJ n »,i T'i^LbrrTntroduced He mad© a the children has lacerations of t ^ , lbttd ore tobinowiU, Blanche Gross- ^ s t ,^ r k ^'"^Sg on Carter- breast ami face as a^ult of .nauU, ; ? a u m mA Albt , rt Wowling. ( The St. j ^ r t i j w j j . ^ " " " ^ j j f ^ a r and "' •»"..-- - """„ and! thanking the Legion and the many re giten! organi^tions that had taken part in che«rine the day's parade. Another patriotic ch g i addre^, waTdelivered by Recorder N. A 'Edwi°n Casey introduced the speak- ers with appropriate remarks. Com- mander Thomas Jakeway, of Roose- velt Post of fte Legion was master of ceremonies. He awarded pm«, cer- tificates to the thre* girls and three buys contributing the best essays in the recent contest of essays on the ttui? The girls winning were Mary Ma^'aniuhar, Fanna Ruth Thorn and k , y g Bedgwick. A delicate study of two English women who come into con- flict not only because of their rela- tions as mother-in-law and daughter- in-law but because of the different viewpoints of the generations they represent. Unknown Lands, by Vicente Blasco Ibanez. Dramatic and colorful tale of a pair of lovers—a Christian boy and a Jewish) girl—who took service as pages to Christopher Columbus and sailed with him on, his first voy- age. The background 'both in the Old World and the New is vividly painted and the story moves swiftly. The au- thor's last novel. Colomar t-ar and who was slightly injured lust Thurs- day night in an explosion in a locatl plant, both have lucwutoins uf the lace. The HLbas .brothers room at the Colomar huuse and are related to the Coliwnsir family. Coroner J. J. Lyinan wlio conducts un uiiderltikiiig establishment in Car- teret, went tu StaU'ii Island Sunday for the ibixly of John Colomar and was told tlmt he cuuld not obtain it uittil Monday. It wus in a morgue in l'<irt Uichmoiid Cardinals To Play Irvington Pros Sunday If'ast T e a m To Oppose Comha's Men on High School Field. Henry Non-Fiction the Eighth, by Francis class and the parents < Mias Gertrude Armour, president of the Junior class, appointed the following committee on arrange- ments. Gertrude Armour, chairman; Joseph Medwick, Stanley Richards, Isaac Daniels, Marie Gaydos and Al- bert Bowling. Hie customary features the com- mittee reports, of dancing, enter- tainment and music will make up the irogfam for the- reception, which will oe one of the largest ever held, ow- ing to the large number of students in each class. TheCriterion Rach Or- chestra will furnish the music for the occasion. forts of the two fire-fighting organ- izations overcame the blaze and it was silt out- , According to a report Iby members of the borough fire department, the blaze started when an error was made in placing a charge in the smel- ter and b lot of molten copper surg- ed up an4 ignited surrounding ma- terial. The damage is said to have amounted to considenubl*, especially in motor system of the plant. Several of the electric motors were badly damaged. The alarm resulted in an •unprece- dented rush of traffic and serious jam at the gates .of the big plant where hundreds of cars collected in a few minutes af tea: the location of the fire became kuown. In Hudson street at w v the junction with Chrome avenue,' alu J dance held Saturday night in" the Card of Thanks The members of this company desire to thank most sincerely all those who donated prizes, those who attended, the merchants who permit- ted display cards in their windows, and all others who contributed in any way to the success of the, card party alu j dance held Saturday night ihthe irt Richmond. Heaid.es tlu> occupants of the Colo- ral peroona in two other d i U cident were car several pero thttil figured in Uie accident i S t k n Islan nittT car seve. curs ilijurot! pitaU. l.t^wifl ( 46 in injured d Comba's Cardinals will endeavor ! Julia Alec. The boys were Benjamin to make it two in a row Sunday af-1 Kabinowitz, Paul Nederburg and ternoon on the high *hool athletic I James McNeill, all boy scouts. ' ' ' '•• -'-- ! As part of the exercises In Ireciation; of the many t to the streets thin Spring we aluu ask- ed th»t shrubs and tree* be planted at the library. The Woman's Club ask ed the Council for rtrict obb«rvauce of the ordinance prohibiting the sale tiiiij OIK in SUU'ii lsUind hos- ^urrocciolii, 46 years old, of. iu IVMUU.I street, Grant City is in a .Stateu Island hoapital where hia re- try is doubtful. Others wh« were the car with him were seriously injured as were occupants oi a third car driven by John Miller of 363 Target* street, Staipleton, S. I. AccurdiiiK to police reports of the accident Ourroociudi pulled out of a line (if tialtic and attempted tu get ahead. Ilia cat struck the gasoline tank uf Miller'tt ctu and the latter macihine burst into tlam-eet. Then the Col-omar car struck the Curroccioli cur with such force tluit the hahy, Vincent, wua cutupulUd Uiruugh tlve 1 roof i>f the oar. is under police guard field, when th*y meet the Irvington Pros. The Cards defeated the Jersey City Leaguw« last Sunday, and with the return of Mickey Miglecu, the ace j mes McNeill, all boy sc As part of the exercises Ina Mac Fartiunar, a seventh grade pupil in the Columbus, school, recited a poem. Hackett. With strTct fidelity to his- torical fact baaed upon a painstaking Btudy^of sources, with dialogue, even, quoted from the records. Mr. Hack- ett has recreated Henry VIII and hia times. The book is no mere record of wives foresworn but a revealing history of the network of politics in which Henry lived, of the great poli- tical figures of his day, both English I and Continental, and of the six hap- ! less women who at successive periods in his reign served the purposes of a king ambitious for power and the continuance of his dynasty. Swords ami jltases, by Joseph Her- gtsheimer. Studies of the days and persons of the vanished South he- there waa another serious and dan- gerous condition. Pedestrians, men, women and children were hurrying to the fire across the fields Iby a path beginning at that ipoint. As the rush- ing cars swung around the corner from Hudson street into Chrome ave- nue, there were many narrow escap- es. high school building. Fire Company No. 2 Oarteret, N. J. FLAT FOR RENT FOR RENT—5-room fiat with sun parlor, tile bathroom, pantry, steam heat and all improvements; apply 73 Carteret avenue, Carteret. Memorial Day," which waa her own of the Cardinal pitching start', the I cumpc '""»• •-"•!• jsition and which had consider- Cards hope to win again Word from the Irvington camp in- dicates that they have a fast bull team this >y«ar. To beat the Pros, the Cards will be compelled to play Class- A ball. Andy Galvnek will receive Miglew's slants. The inlield will in- clude Siekerkai at first, Kara, at see- und; Sam Smolensk! at short und Johnny Skurat at third base. In the outer gardens will be Mtusi-uliu in able merit. She was accordtxl appluu»e. The invocation was K'ven by Rev. father Joseph D'Zaidusz of the Holy Family Church. Benediction was pro- nounced by Kev. Ch&rlea Vincze, uf the t^ife Magyar church. Tltere was the usual roll cull uf the hefo dead of Carteret and the salute and taps. Previous to the eSerciaea there was u parade tliat startrfl at Brady's field " : -i streets of the f after it went to war. Street Scene—A Play in three aits, by tilmer L. Rice, (Pulitzer l A t i h o iid l p fore and Street aits, by tilmer L. Rice, ( Prize Play.) A triumph of vivid real- ism, a picture of striking contrasts showing the joys and griefs of New York Street dwellers. The Modern Gasoline Automobile, its design, construction, operation and maintenance. HARDIMAN'S PHARMACY Ed. L. Hardiman, formerly uf S«wn»n's, Perth Ambuy Called For and Delivered Qor, Ouirih'cioli is uiwler police guaru at the huspital tu which he waa taken. If he lives he will be held oil A charge of homicide. Traffic on the boulevard wa;, lilock'.yl for more than two lioura ami hiul tu detuur while the winxk- utt« of the tNirs was Ibeing removed. The iiiat report of the awUient wan received iu Oarteret at 7 ;30 o'- liock Sutufduy evening when the po- lice here were asked tu nutify Joseph Colomar uf the duutater thai had hap- ' to hUfamily. Thehujtaiwl mul ; - "• • plant of the U. S. Metal* Company"*t ^ time. 3 O'clock. .... F.piicupal Churtb Kev. Win. Muhon, Minister Sunday, Juno 2—'Sunday schoul begiiui at 11:45 a. m. Have yuur child trained in the Sunday school tu lie a Useful citizen at maturity. Church norvice at U :O0 a. ni. The pastor will urea ' " - •'•• whilv .. text, iipwurth league ut 7:0U p. m. These services are open to all. We invite th«3t> who desue a aermon wurtti anyone's tu hear from an aiipropriate the gold star iiiiilliers, a band, the with a borough ottkials, the liremun. with a baud and a W »araU, s , (lour Carteret foresters of Amerini, the Italian ho- u.ety iKtedentore, the publip school d ih fl Wuh aocUty with e pubp a Wuh aocUty l umithe childr,^ the Holy Family school with tarty i«tnotu> decora lions The children of 9t. Josephs ^-liuol with the only float m the. p*r- ade several troops of Boy .Vouta and a truoii of Girl Scouti[, als(» a band from I'erth Amboy. The High School Notes The senior class met recently und made plans fur theuntiual class day program. It is probable that the play entitled, "Nothing But the Truth, 1 ' will be presented. ( la.ss duy exercis- es will be held in the evening in the Caitertt high school uduitorium, the daUi as y*>t haa nut been announced, U d mmbers of the So that nut been a and members of the d Th asitetially invite th^Kte w Christian Kvllowship to WDruhip with ucimt band from Perth Amboy. The ua, come and make yourself at home, mruiburs of the Legion and Veterans 'i'liuiisdny Juiiu ti -Ttuj Kitwurlli, of other wars brought up the rear, Wiursday, J««<» '^ - , , ; ue will hvM a strawberry fes.tl- basemont uf the church at mall admissi Leag 1 yal in which In the evening I ever uluinui nssuciatioii may, attend. The seniors iin: buuy with the Loudapeak- p er, us the next issue ia the senior ed- i itiou. The Hbtory clust of th« Carteret high sclioul will make an education- til trip tomorrow to the llu&eum uf Natural Histury, in New York City, A guide will *hW the class around the miMMum. Hist DeHwtiuu. at the •'" ~ Club; Miss Deck- PROCLAMATION All peraorw owning and harboring any dog or dogs are hereby notified to procure a license for each dog own- ed or harbored on or before June 15, 1929. After said date all dogs found running at larg« within the limits of the Borough of Carteret except such as shall be properly muzzled with a muzzte about the nose, securely fastened, and without a collar having en- graved thereon or attached thereto the registered nuto- ber of the license for said dog, shall be seized and des- troyed unless the dogso seized is redeemed by the own- er within 48 hours after seizure. BY ORDER OF THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF THE BOROUGH OF CARTERET. THOMAS J. MULVIHILL, Mayor. d of the History and Miw Domina ; wUI

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fourComic Section RESS Sporting News, Page 7

VII, No. 37 CARTERET, N. J , FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1929PRICE THREE CENTS-

Annual Meeting Of Womans ClubMrs. Stremlau Renamed Presidentubroitt«d By Nominating Committee Unanimously Elected

d u b Had Bu»y Year Report Shows—AnnualLuncheon On June 8.

Harmony Club Member*Have Tenth Annual Banquet

afternoon in theK r i d a y f the Municipal building andr<>"Ti«D0rta«t business wan tran*-m" c5 The annual election of onVwrsa r t* UJA with the following results.

Emil StremlauThe others elected

rftary, W* M r g . John Groom;a<ion * u « Henry J. Harrington;

are:KMII L.

Mr*,sec-

Hagan; fodorGroom;

alion =•• u Henrytreasurer. Mi* " ^ m , ) i r e c t o r R

i M V n . Thomas F.

treasur .

•u d i U ) r M y?or>hree y ^ ,

The

the floorrnous.

A Mr., ol

Bradley, Mrs.i. C. H. Byrne,

of candidates was svth-a nominating committee

were no nomination*! fromThe election was unani-

who U working in the" Camp

The members of the Harmony So-cial Club held their tenth annualbanquet but Sunday afternoon andevening in the new club rooms. Anexcellent menu wai served and therewag much entertainment. Some ofthe entertainment was furnished b;'members of the club. There w r© al

of firearms ao that a safe and sane'8 0 entertainment niumbers by mom-Independence Day be what its name! hew of the Pumpkin Centre Trio,implies—"A Memorial." ' and by Louis DolgofT, master of cere-

Through the efforts of this cflu'b I monies of the Noit Club of Now York.and the co-operation of the Oummie-1 AU of the members of the club withaion for Blind, a nine-year-old child, | one or two exceptions, were present.practically blind and otherwise great-ly in need of medical attention, has | " rp • »

Masonry Topic AtPresbyterian Church

Rev. C. B. tvlitchell Urges Ma-son* To Keep Ideals of Or-der Always In Mind.

Memorial Day services were held

Slat's DiaryFriday—Nina Glunt was in here

this evning for a wilp. I (fesw Ant

placed in the Elizabeth GeneralHospital and the case will be close-ly followed.

At Thanksgiving twenty familieswore supplied with food, by the Jun-iors, and at Christmas old toys andclothes were mended and distributedto the needy.

A "Woman's Cluib Shelf" has beenestahlished in the Public Library.

A prize of $5 will be awarded tothe high school girl with highest per-centage for three years in home,sconomles, A very fine Sehutmrt pro- j Standay morning in the

thetailing of the great

v j T that i* done at the5nd«rno«rri»hed h i l d n

S t th pre

E m m y dueaentthink very mutchof her and when Ia«t her why shftd i d d e n t thinkmutch of her Ant

Firemen Score Big Success InCard\PartyJLnd Dance Here

when a car Tn which she was riding | Biggest Attendance jtt Season at Affair In High School Satur-day— F i r a m m A r . Complimented Upon Th* Orderly

Manner In Which Big Function Is Managed.

Mm. Thomas

Carteret Girl Injured InAccident in Woodbridge

Bertha Kopolv of 9 McKinleyavenue, Carte-ret, had her left handinjured Sunday night at 8:20 o'clock I

was in collision with another ma-chine. Miss Kopola was riding with jPrank G. Mille, of Douglas street,Fords. In Amboy avenue, Wood-

reply™! and *ed. | bridge, near Convery boulevard, aWll h i h t d i >h Mrtl M f 284

echildrenc s m p i.inin* that the present acco-and eiplamingjw. r ^ Qji,y

iraThird^tho^Jhatare

inlyandHe_ can be accomodi

A?n} Z S A *We the camp

gram was presented and a most en-joyable orKvact play was given atone of the largest meetings this year.

Classes in millinery and cookinghave been held,

Our programs have been interest-Ing, instructive and educational, andmeetings have been supported very

church and several members of thelocal post were present. Rev. CharlesBenezet Mitchell preached a sermonof tribute to the hero dead of thenation.

In the evening services were heldfor the Masons and members ofRoosevelt Lodge were present. The

youkokfvbenthroe men and 2Colligr- students.

Sutwlny — M awas a Retting red-dy to go to abrid«d party toniteand sho Bed Rhehopfd thny wood-ent sorve ChickenSallad 'becui shehas ben rodoocingand Pork all ways

Stuinlck so mutch ennyways,

Sunday—Ant Emmy says it aintnever to late to lem sum thing. Shehad all way thQt thot T. N. T. "waa abrevaahun for! the Telephone andTelegraft cutnpnys. But the m&gga-zine seckshun in the ipaper today Tedher to 'beleeve it wao sum think toXplode and blow things up.

•—The teecher ast us today

„ „„„ _ , . . . - „ - , . . - . The most largely attended card, Mm. ^.Sharkey,sho is what car driven toy Myrtle Mauron, of 284 p a r t y and dance of the season was lll&dom, Mis« Evriyn Bracher, Mrs.

wood call a Monmouth road, Elizabeth, collided k ^ Saturday night in the high W. Truatum, Mm. N. Twnpany, Mrs.she has j with Mille's car. Mille took Miss Ko- nchool gymnasium and in addition A. ('. Hundeman, Mrs. Mary T****-

ingaged to polo to the Perth Amboy hospital to being a financial success it wan Mm. .lohn Shiifflln, Miss Anna K.«n-whore her injured hand was treated, conceded to be the most orderly and bach, Mrs. Frank Andres, Mra C. J.

well-managed affair of the kind ewr Brady, George Swenson, T. Hoolihan,held in the horough. It was held un-, Willtaim Brandon, William Sharkey,der the auspices of Fire Compnny • Miss Klsie Sjwingrr, Stephen UVKO-No. 2 and the entire membership of Pki, Mrs. J. Murphy, Mrs. G. 1. G»«-the company acted a« n committee mi det, Rlwood «n D*vinter, Harry Con-arrangements. 1 Un. Mr*. William Rspp, Mm. J. «*w>

Thoro were a great many fine priz-' Mrs. C. Staubach. K. X. Koopfler,es for the winners in the card

c • , . , . , c , All tho popular gampa were in play.Several Local Members Spend p^,. thosf l w h o d i l l n o t c a r e t<) piJ ly

Week End In Atlantic City cards there was dance music hyu w i -L-H u •. competent orchwrtra all evening.

—Mayor Mulvihill Hott. T n e r e w e r e a | ,w al>PCml entertain-ment features.

The Carteret delegation that at-1 When the card (fames were over

Carteret ForestersAttend Convention

Mrs. Alfred Ronner, Mrs. Thoma*Smith Mrs. V. X. Kcwipfier, A. Nw-ing, Mrs. VV. Donnelly. Mrs. C. H.Bryne, John ShulTlin. Mrs. T. M.f

well, considering the amount of sick- j pastor told of the high ideals ofMasonry and urged that the mem-bers- of the order carry out the prin-ciples of Masonry in their daily life

w«U A» in the lodge room. Every

during the winter.Your president has attended all

but three regular meetings and onedirectors meetina great many

gladly answered

stole aid.

iou*me"pr<-

presi- telephone calls. Your club has beenthe represented at all conferences and

P<JB- conventions and several club meet-1 ings throughout the district.

That each club member feels herresponsibility is evident in the suc-

ng and waa present at j _ ...Junior meetings, and | pew in the church was occupied.

Mr. Mitchell said it was the dutyof every true Mason to attend regu-larly whatever church he is affiliatedwith. The speaker pointed to eGorgeWashington as an example of what aMason should .be. He said Washing-ton carried the (principles of the or-der into all hia dealings with menc«s» of the card party and food sale,

The Cateret delegation that nt gtended the state convention of th« those who had i>oen playing were nsk-Poresters of America returned late *d to take neats in the auditorium.M d i h l Th i ! i thPoresters of America returned lateMonday night of last week from AU The prizes were arrange! in thelantic City where the convention was chestra pit and as members ofheld in the Hotel Chelsea. committee called the

theof th<i

Mrs. E.

an<l provesdo.

You all,efforts

whai organization

am sore, agree that

can | and nations.Mr. Mitchell said that Masonry has

through the years because ithave ben'very worth- \ is constructive and progressive,

y e a r > a n d won,fc

better this cominjf year. The partUJM o f d € e p e n i n j f u n ,

! dowtandJng. We know each otheri better and can, therefore, help each

Mrs- J. refor

ho3 P i u i i t y"de^» e ^ n o i d i r l

u p by the dub, wasas beendiscussed. The

members of thed

up by the c ,child was found by members of theclub to be in a oadly undernourishedcondition; sha baa cataracts on eacheye and has never attended school.The club had her removed to the

i l h i being

is just flphnt each member contributesaivd 1 urge each one to feel it her. v .duty to help on some committee and i Victoryboost the club at ail times. A Wom-an's Club is to a community what awoman is to the home.

The splendid co-operation of the

Carteret High WinsDebate Over St. Peters

The splendid c pmembers and especially of the Boardnf Directors has greatly inspired and

t b leder

Makes Local SchoolChampion of Central NewJersey,

The members of the Carteret HighSchool Debating Team, under theb i l id f Mi M t

if enny 1 in the class new what theXpression. See America 1st, refferedto and Blisters answered and replyedthat it was Criatofer Cluiwbuses slo-gan when he started out west on hisdiscovering trip to grow up with theInjuns.

Teusday—At the party tonite I astElsy if she ever let fellas kias her andshe sed to me. No fella will ever getto kiss me un else I cant see himcomeing. And all the rest of the evn-ing when T -was Betting with her sheset there with her eyes shut: I cantmake out what her idee WSB in set- jting with her eyes shut. I wood ofthot she wood of toen afrade.

Wensday—Ma was a balling paout for eating peas and some utherfew things with his nife and she sed.And .besides not only is it bad man-ners but it ia very dangerous to. Pased Well I will just have you to un-derstand that I aint no kowardy kalf.

Thirsday—Pa was on a jury triletoday and when he cum home kmitehe told us that the jury had disagreed and cuddent make no verdick.Ma ast him how cum they diddentagree and make no verdick and pareplyed and sed that he diddent noun else it was Ibecos of a mistake thelawyers had made when they put ahusbend and his wife on the sameJurry mebby. Ma looked board anddiddent laff none.

The delegates from Court Oarteret winners, the latter filedwere: Louis N, Bradford, Joseph pit raiting, receive! their prizes nn.l

„ Edward returned to tiheir seats. In tins wuySchultz, Martin Rock and'John S. there was no crowding or confusionOlbricht

At the convention

Shutjlla, William F. Laiwlor, Edward returned to tiheirS h l M i R k J there WM no c r o g

and the prizes were quickly awardedMr. Olbricht Tb*n the dancing continued until a

was elected supervisor of Junior late hour. Delicious refreshment*

Mm. Charles (ireen, Mrs. ThomasF. Burke, Mrs. Russell D.mdell, Mrs.Jennie V. Currie, Joseph BrandoO,William Donnelly, (1. T. C.ivudet, Mrs.L Jones, Gtorrcf Kim*»«f*i, Fr«d Still- „«man. .li>R<»ph McHale, Mrs. C. O'Don-nell, Frcil Springer, Mins E. Britten,Miss lVggv Morris and Mrs. Pr«dSUiulnu'h.

Bridge: Mrn. Ella dleckner, Mrs.Harry Kischcr, Miw l.illinn Donnelly,Miis Amw Reilly, Mrs. John Kenne-

k M Enlanueldy,

d supervisor of Juniorcourts ami Mr. Bradford was named were provided by the committee.

After the affair was over a com-a delegate to tne Sum-erne court ot * » « tIIU «»«"» «"" ""-' » *-""• inthe order. Mr. Lawlor is the alter- mittee of liremicn cleaned up the an-, 'ur-

Ry,Hurry (llockner, rMs. Enlanuel

, Mrs. Thomas D. Cheret,Mrs. T. K, Hewitt, MJBS Gustofson,Mrs. Howard Burns. William F. l

nate.Besides the regular

(lart)cr, MiM Helen Struth-ert i r Hewitt Miss Kathleen Mul-

ditorium and aym floor and put every ^ - ^ tester. Miss Eliia-delegat«. bit of equipment that had bee retnov-. ^ M™c(£nlpy> Gir l l r,i Goodman,

T

. . . . . . . . qpothera from Carteret who attended ed« back into place.

Th i i

othera from Carteret who attended ed« back p Thomas Jakeway Thomthe convention were: Mayor Thomas The priw winners were: Fan Tan: Conran Misa SJ. Mulvihill, William Staubach, Mr. Sadie Rosmian, Julia Alton, Mm. A. ' C(>ok M f g

and Mrs Joeph Sarzilla Mrs Otto Walsh Alex Skurat Mrs Dennis £ • G h M

^ & n l p y i ( | r l l r ( 1 a o tThomas Jakeway Thomas I). (Tieret,

C Mi Sylvia FischerJ i NeviUSadie Rosmian, Julia ,

Walsh, Alex Skurat, Mrs DennisM Wll 0 B

yJ e r v i g, , C(>

and Mrs. Joseph Sarzilla, Mrs. Otto. Walsh, Alex Skurat, Mrs Dennis £ • Ga rh (> r M i s s luthS t a u b a ( ; H ^ Mrs. Bradford, Mrs. Fitzgerald, Mrs. William 0 Bnen, ^ ^ a m l Mr3 i y] a ( ip Ajbell,Mrti R k d M i h l K t i Mrs CarmanMartin Rock, and Michael Kastrin-sky. All of those in the Carteret dele-

tyTh« club nan u» .General Hospital where she in beingIrtated. and. the cate will be follow-ed up by hte club. When the e«Ur-;i.u are advmaced far enough an op-eration wttl be performed to removethem and rjptore tot ^\i'» sight.

The dnbnyul r«c*iv«d reports re-garding the method of quarantiningcontagious diseases. It wil said thatin some cases patients are quarantin-ed longer than others afflicted withthe same disease. It was also report-ed that quarantine signs are not al-ways displayed in conspicuous placeswith the result that other persons,especially children are liable to beexnosed. The dub generally favored

iixantine as a means of •"•->•*-

iriven me courage to be your leader, _ , , .given me •* .. . . j ^ y e i prentiaa, were acclaimed the cham-1

School Debating Team, under thebrilliant guidance of Miss Margaret'

for tVpMUwoycarS ;andM I have; P r e ,been urged to carry on forTanother, pioita of Central Jersey,year as your president, may I ask for | a decision over the St.your continued loyal sup

Mrs. Carman.Euchre: Mrs. Joseph Byrnes, Stan-ky. All of those in the Carteret dele- Euchre: Mrs. Joseph Byrnes, Stan

ation were the guests of Mayor ley Richards, Mise Helen Devereift,lihill S d y ight at a erfrm Mrs H Green Mrs George Bracher,Mulvihill Sunday night at a perform-

ance in the Apollo theatre,

Pinochle; F. E. Ruckreibel, ElsteLehnicht, Mrs. Mamie Little, FrankBright, Mrs. Andrew J. Ohristcnsen,P. Lloyd, Mrs. F. F. Simons, Mrs. J.

Rohde, John Deisel, Miss Guasie

in the big thing* of life we are asipport so that' school, by Professor Morris, head of

the Debating department of New

one, aU the many aims and ideala of | York University, Monday night, in

theJ

eep-Slw^cTntigiou. diseases

Mrs. Stremlau and Mrs. Miles wtreappointed a committee to <onf«r withthTBoard of Health at its " « » « • £ir-x in an effort to bring about betterquarantine conditions. F i

A letter was received from nreCompany No. 2 inviting the membersto attend the c«rd party ami danceiriven by the firemen on Saturdaynigh" ft wa. decided that .11 *hocould would attend.

Arrangement- were made tor theThird Annual Luncheon of the clubvrhkh will be held on Saturday June8, in the Pnwbyterian Sunday schoolroom at 1 p. « . All of the membersare expected to attend this funtion.

Mrs Harvey Young of the homeeconomics department reported thata class of sowing waa to be h«ld inthe home under theiwstruction ofMiss May Truman, a field lemonstrat-or of New Jersey Extention ServiceThe class wa* held and a permanentpatetirn wa» made. At the next meet-ing the claw will bring material andbegin work on dresses.

The complete report of President». Stremlau follows:The second year of this orgaiuia-

tion just coming to a close has passedjrapidly, u

Y, b u s v

i

p(happyii

ClubEve- and parents.and j The debate was held under the au-

Cartoxet r*resa, the Elizabeth spices of the Rutgers Inter-Scholaaticthe Elizabeth Times, the : Debating League, and was the fourthami St. Joseph's church-1 in which Carteret participated this

who have in any j year. Carteret holds victories overSt. Mary, South River and St. Petem,Rahway high school defeated Car-teret this year. Carteret upheld

wuy contributed to our success.R t f u l l y submitted

ontributed to our sRespectfully submitted,

Violet C. Stiwnlau,

Was Carry Onngr^M Hoffman Tell*Decoration Day Crowd ThatMen of AU Wars Left ThatSlogan — Parade Exercisesand Fireworks.

The soldiers of the RevolutionaryWar. the Mexican War, the Civil

Carteret Car In WreckBoy Is Killed

week be adopted by Americani try."! Never in the history of the local| institution has so great an honorbeen achieved by a Blue and White

an eloquent address at the memorialilaw exercises held at the Memorial

"Dodsworth" By Sinclair LewisRecently Added To FictionShelves—Ibanez Writes Ro-mance of Christian Boy andJewish Girl.

Dodsworth, by Sinclair Lewis. Tohis portraits of middle-class Ameri-cans Mr. Lewis adds that of SamuelDodsworth, a successful automobilemanufacturer, who retiring at theage of fifty, realizes that he doesn'tknow what to do with the rest ofhis life. The story follows hia wan-derings in Europe, with his sociallyaspiring wife, his gradual estrange'ment from her, and his findings of anew love and purpose. Method andmanner are similar to the author';earlier novels., They "Still Fall In Love, by JesseLynch Williams. "She was tall an<thought love was the biological urgewith a little smear of sentimentalityover it." Hethat Heavention to the Gobi desert. Both revisedtheir views, and after many narrow

Mrs. H. Green, Mrs, George Bracher,Mra. M. Hallihan, Mrs. T. A. Bishop,Mrs. William Bowler, Mrs. L. NJ ..--,Bradford, Mrs. J. McCarthy, William j Kapusy, A. U Hundeman, Miss VanJ. Lawlor, H. Fleming, H. Rossnmn,' Deisky, Mrs. H. J. Gallagher, Mrs.William V. Conghlin, Mrs. Thomas] John Adams, Mrs. P. Campion, DavidLarkin, Alex Calderhead, Miss. Mar- Roth, H. J. Gallagher, Mrs. John Har-garet Donnelly, Mrs. 'Irene Decker, rington, Mrs. J. H. Nevill, Mias Ruth~ ~ ' " ' " ' '-•-- 41 'Gallagher, John (Bruxl) Harrington,

I Mrs. Charies Crane, Mrs. Anna Pe-! tereon, Mra. T. J. Mulvihill, Mrs. Duv-

Notable New Books I w t a v , ^ 1 »»•>«»" i **? '^TSA^:2: S J A "

At Carteret Library ban, 9. T. Britton, Mrs. C. Jamison,Thomas Smith, Hte Dorothy Thatch- " . M r s . V ^ P Murnhvfer Mrs. William F. Lawlor, Eliza- id Wohlgeanuth, Mrs. P. Murphy, I.er, Mrs. William F.beth McHale. Jackson and Mrs. Suroner Moore.

Smelter On FireIn Big Plant

Blaze Breaks Out In U. S. Me-tals Company Unit on Sun-day Afternoon.

Fire (broke out in the ibig smelterof the U. S. Metals Refining

Junior ReceptionOn Friday June 7

Class of 1930 Makes Arrange-ments For Annual Event InHonor of Graduates .

The annual reception of the Junior

aaw&.w ss(ire department. A few minutes laterthe borough alarm was seunded andsmear oi sentimentality i •;•- .~=>"",~^ . j

was small, and imagined •*« two local fire companies reapond-was a scientific expedi-1 - , After a hard jight t |»joint ef-

On

cent, hi, faruther aged 3 months » ; C a r t e r f t t e a m t o w i n t T h enut expected to liw, Anthotiette, a , Caltetet S p e a k e r s w e r e exceptionally

their r^buttab were equati b t l tta

Congressman Hoffmfirst hand the dangers and suffering^ ^ d their r^buttab were equat \ first ^ ^ ?

f a s b r i l l i a n t . I n their rebuttals, tta I Ijhat »w the lotof *(5 a r t e r e t debaters refuted many of , dieted that Carteret

£their opponent's points

| U1LIOU MU*h v^u^v^» u u . . . . .

I one oi the greatest, communities ii

fromto the

Dark Hester, by

yfinally sue-

Anne Douglassd

years. Your president, in submittingher annual report to you, will notattempt to give in detail the activi-ties of the various department!!,which are given in separate reports,but would like to give you » generalreview of the work accomidww*1 bythe club.

During the part year your club hasdonated generously tu the Ne*r KaatKellef, the Tuberculosis U-a^ue, theChristmaa Cheer Fund, American Le-gion, Kiddie Keepwell Camp, Km.Yardtev's Memorial Fund. At Cliriat-mas sales of articles nia<ii* by theblind and also 'the soldiers, were heldat several drub meetings. The tiratflower show in tl»e borough waa heldunder our auspices. The carol ringingat the community Chrifttmaa tM*> onChristmas eve h»« become an annualevent The chub cooperated with theBorough Council in regard to thewatef situation iby (tending » ilele«»-tion to the hearing before HMJ I»ubliuUtilities Commiswon. Utters worewritten to the Borough Council entloraing a borough p»uk, a«d in ap

' of the many trees a*ided

ulster, aged li, is sufTerinK from shock jand lacerations of the knee, anotherulster Lillian, 4, ha.s lacerations ofboth wrists, Ciu-mella, aged 2 has la-cerations of the fa*»> and head, andMrs. AtithoiietU) Colurnar motlier of, gente<j uy M e l v Jn » , i T'i^LbrrTntroduced He mad© athe children has lacerations of t ^ , lbttdore tobinowiU, Blanche Gross- ^ s t , ^ r

k ^ ' " ^ S g on Carter-breast ami face as a ^ u l t of .nauU, ; ? a u m mA A l b t , r t Wowling. (The St. j r t i j w j j . ^ " " " ^ j j f ^ a r and

" ' • » " . . - - - """„ and ! thanking the Legion and the manyre giten! organi^tions that had taken part inche«rine the day's parade. Another patrioticch g i addre^, waTdelivered by Recorder N.

A'Edwi°n Casey introduced the speak-ers with appropriate remarks. Com-mander Thomas Jakeway, of Roose-velt Post of fte Legion was masterof ceremonies. He awarded pm«, cer-tificates to the thre* girls and threebuys contributing the best essays inthe recent contest of essays on thettui? The girls winning were MaryMa^'aniuhar, Fanna Ruth Thorn and

k , y gBedgwick. A delicate study of twoEnglish women who come into con-flict not only because of their rela-tions as mother-in-law and daughter-in-law but because of the differentviewpoints of the generations theyrepresent.

Unknown Lands, by Vicente BlascoIbanez. Dramatic and colorful taleof a pair of lovers—a Christian boyand a Jewish) girl—who took serviceas pages to Christopher Columbusand sailed with him on, his first voy-age. The background 'both in the OldWorld and the New is vividly paintedand the story moves swiftly. The au-thor's last novel.

Colomar t-ar andwho was slightly injured lust Thurs-day night in an explosion in a locatlplant, both have lucwutoins uf thelace. The HLbas .brothers room at theColomar huuse and are related to theColiwnsir family.

Coroner J. J. Lyinan wlio conductsun uiiderltikiiig establishment in Car-teret, went tu StaU'ii Island Sundayfor the ibixly of John Colomar andwas told tlmt he cuuld not obtain ituittil Monday. It wus in a morgue inl'<irt Uichmoiid

Cardinals To PlayIrvington Pros Sunday

If'ast Team To Oppose Comha'sMen on High School Field.

HenryNon-Fiction

the Eighth, by Francis

class and the parents <Mias Gertrude Armour, president

of the Junior class, appointed thefollowing committee on arrange-ments. Gertrude Armour, chairman;Joseph Medwick, Stanley Richards,Isaac Daniels, Marie Gaydos and Al-bert Bowling.

Hie customary features the com-mittee reports, of dancing, enter-tainment and music will make up theirogfam for the- reception, which willoe one of the largest ever held, ow-ing to the large number of studentsin each class. The Criterion Rach Or-chestra will furnish the music for theoccasion.

forts of the two fire-fighting organ-izations overcame the blaze and itwas silt out- ,

According to a report Iby membersof the borough fire department, theblaze started when an error wasmade in placing a charge in the smel-ter and b lot of molten copper surg-ed up an4 ignited surrounding ma-terial.

The damage is said to haveamounted to considenubl*, especiallyin motor system of the plant. Severalof the electric motors were badlydamaged.

The alarm resulted in an •unprece-dented rush of traffic and serious jamat the gates .of the big plant wherehundreds of cars collected in a fewminutes af tea: the location of the firebecame kuown. In Hudson street at w vthe junction with Chrome avenue,' aluJ dance held Saturday night in" the

Card of ThanksThe members of this company

desire to thank most sincerely allthose who donated prizes, those whoattended, the merchants who permit-ted display cards in their windows,and all others who contributed in anyway to the success of the, card partya l u j d a n c e held Saturday night ihthe

irt Richmond.Heaid.es tlu> occupants of the Colo-

ral peroona in two otherd i U cident were

car several perothttil figured in Uie accident

i S t k n IslannittT car seve.cursilijurot!pitaU.

l.t^wifl (46

ininjured

d

Comba's Cardinals will endeavor ! Julia Alec. The boys were Benjaminto make it two in a row Sunday af-1 Kabinowitz, Paul Nederburg andternoon on the high *hool athletic I James McNeill, all boy scouts.

' ' ' '•• -'-- ! As part of the exercises In

Ireciation; of the many tto the streets thin Spring we aluu ask-ed th»t shrubs and tree* be planted atthe library. The Woman's Club asked the Council for rtrict obb«rvauceof the ordinance prohibiting the sale

tiiiij OIK in SUU'ii lsUind hos-

^urrocciolii, 46 years old, of.iu IVMUU.I street, Grant City is in a.Stateu Island hoapital where hia re-

try is doubtful. Others wh« werethe car with him were seriously

injured as were occupants oi a thirdcar driven by John Miller of 363Target* street, Staipleton, S. I.

AccurdiiiK to police reports of theaccident Ourroociudi pulled out ofa line (if tialtic and attempted tu getahead.

Ilia cat struck the gasoline tank ufMiller'tt ctu and the latter macihineburst into tlam-eet. Then the Col-omarcar struck the Curroccioli cur withsuch force tluit the hahy, Vincent,wua cutupulUd Uiruugh tlve1 roof i>fthe oar.

is under police guard

field, when th*y meet the IrvingtonPros. The Cards defeated the JerseyCity Leaguw« last Sunday, and withthe return of Mickey Miglecu, the ace j

mes McNeill, all boy scAs part of the exercises Ina Mac

Fartiunar, a seventh grade pupil inthe Columbus, school, recited a poem.

Hackett. With strTct fidelity to his-torical fact baaed upon a painstakingBtudy of sources, with dialogue, even,quoted from the records. Mr. Hack-ett has recreated Henry VIII and hiatimes. The book is no mere recordof wives foresworn but a revealinghistory of the network of politics inwhich Henry lived, of the great poli-tical figures of his day, both English

I and Continental, and of the six hap-! less women who at successive periodsin his reign served the purposes of aking ambitious for power and thecontinuance of his dynasty.

Swords ami jltases, by Joseph Her-gtsheimer. Studies of the days andpersons of the vanished South he-

there waa another serious and dan-gerous condition. Pedestrians, men,women and children were hurryingto the fire across the fields Iby a pathbeginning at that ipoint. As the rush-ing cars swung around the cornerfrom Hudson street into Chrome ave-nue, there were many narrow escap-es.

high school building.Fire Company No. 2

Oarteret, N. J.FLAT FOR RENT

FOR RENT—5-room fiat with sunparlor, tile bathroom, pantry, steam

heat and all improvements; apply 73Carteret avenue, Carteret.

Memorial Day," which waa her ownof the Cardinal pitching start', the I cumpc

'""»• •-"•!•jsition and which had consider-

Cards hope to win againWord from the Irvington camp in-

dicates that they have a fast bullteam this >y«ar. To beat the Pros, theCards will be compelled to play Class-A ball. Andy Galvnek will receiveMiglew's slants. The inlield will in-clude Siekerkai at first, Kara, at see-und; Sam Smolensk! at short undJohnny Skurat at third base. In theouter gardens will be Mtusi-uliu in

able merit. She was accordtxlappluu»e.

The invocation was K'ven by Rev.father Joseph D'Zaidusz of the HolyFamily Church. Benediction was pro-nounced by Kev. Ch&rlea Vincze, ufthe t^ife Magyar church. Tltere wasthe usual roll cull uf the hefo deadof Carteret and the salute and taps.

Previous to the eSerciaea there wasu parade tliat startrfl at Brady's field

" :-i streets of the

fafter it went to war.

Street Scene—A Play in threeaits, by tilmer L. Rice, (Pulitzer

l A t i h o i id l

pfore and

Streetaits, by tilmer L. Rice, (Prize Play.) A triumph of vivid real-ism, a picture of striking contrastsshowing the joys and griefs of NewYork Street dwellers.

The Modern Gasoline Automobile,its design, construction, operationand maintenance.

HARDIMAN'SP H A R M A C Y

Ed. L. Hardiman, formerly ufS«wn»n's, Perth Ambuy

Called For and Delivered

Qor,

Ouirih'cioli is uiwler police guaruat the huspital tu which he waa taken.If he lives he will be held oil A chargeof homicide. Traffic on the boulevardwa;, lilock'.yl for more than two liouraami hiul tu detuur while the winxk-utt« of the tNirs was Ibeing removed.

The iiiat report of the awUientwan received iu Oarteret at 7 ;30 o'-liock Sutufduy evening when the po-lice here were asked tu nutify JosephColomar uf the duutater thai had hap-

' to hU family. The hujtaiwl mul; - "• • plant of

the U. S. Metal* Company"*t ^time.

3 O'clock.

.... F.piicupal ChurtbKev. Win. Muhon, Minister

Sunday, Juno 2—'Sunday schoulbegiiui at 11:45 a. m. Have yuur childtrained in the Sunday school tu lie aUseful citizen at maturity. Churchnorvice at U :O0 a. ni. The pastor willu r e a ' " - •'••whilv v« ..text, iipwurth league ut 7:0U p. m.These services are open to all. We

invite th«3t> who desue

a aermon wurtti anyone'stu hear from an aiipropriate

the gold star iiiiilliers, a band, thewith aborough ottkials, the liremun. with a

baud and aW»araU,s, (lour Carteretforesters of Amerini, the Italian ho-u.ety iKtedentore, the publip school

d ih fl W u h aocUtywithe pubpa W u h aocUty

lumithe c h i l d r , ^ the Holy Familyschool with tarty i«tnotu> decoralions The children of 9t. Josephs^-liuol with the only float m the. p*r-ade several troops of Boy .Voutaand a truoii of Girl Scouti[, als(» a

band from I'erth Amboy. The

High School NotesThe senior class met recently und

made plans fur theuntiual class dayprogram. It is probable that the playentitled, "Nothing But the Truth,1'will be presented. ( la.ss duy exercis-es will be held in the evening in theCaitertt high school uduitorium, thedaUi as y*>t haa nut been announced,

U d mmbers of theSo thatnut been aand members of the

d Th

asitetially invite th Kte wChristian Kvllowship to WDruhip with ucimt band from Perth Amboy. Theua, come and make yourself at home, mruiburs of the Legion and Veterans

'i'liuiisdny Juiiu ti -Ttuj Kitwurlli, of other wars brought up the rear,Wiursday, J««<» *» ' ^ - , , ;ue will hvM a strawberry fes.tl-

basemont uf the church atmall admissi

Leag1

yal inwhich

In the evening Iever

uluinui nssuciatioii may, attend. Theseniors iin: buuy with the Loudapeak-

p er, us the next issue ia the senior ed-i itiou.

The Hbtory clust of th« Carterethigh sclioul will make an education-til trip tomorrow to the llu&eum ufNatural Histury, in New York City,A guide will *hW the class aroundthe miMMum. Hist DeHwtiuu. at the

• •'" ~ Club; Miss Deck-

PROCLAMATION

All peraorw owning and harboring any dog or dogsare hereby notified to procure a license for each dog own-ed or harbored on or before June 15, 1929.

After said date all dogs found running at larg«within the limits of the Borough of Carteret except suchas shall be properly muzzled with a muzzte about thenose, securely fastened, and without a collar having en-graved thereon or attached thereto the registered nuto-ber of the license for said dog, shall be seized and des-troyed unless the dog so seized is redeemed by the own-er within 48 hours after seizure.

BY ORDER OF THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL OFTHE BOROUGH OF CARTERET.

THOMAS J. MULVIHILL,Mayor.

d of the Historyand Miw Domina

;wUI

Page 2: RESS - DigiFind-It

PAGE TWO ' , . , • : • "

Reliable Foods forParticular People

Hundreds of thoujwnds of careful, particular pare r jrular patron* of ASCO Stores. They shop with us day af-ter day because they know they always rnceive full value forevery cent they spend with us, ami every purchase i* iruanin-t«ed to pve complete »atiif*rtion. This in worth rememberingwhen making up the Pood Budget.

It Payi to Trad* in the Storea Where Quality Counu!

Reg 21c ASCOor Libby't DeLuxe

0Tk« Pick •! tfc» Orefcar*! B)« Valu»!

Sweethome

ChocolatesIb box 39

Clicquot Club SEC

Ginger Ale3 »<>«• 5 0 c

•tog" GRAPE MCE &19cSclactwl Grapa* and Pare.

V 4 J p g t lb 6BcOr.nf. Pekoe, India Coylon, OM Country StyU

V* lb pkg^3c : V. lb pkg 4Sc

TIMELY SUGGESTIONS

T1i« fnuiar 7«u rnr* aboat year C«p of T « the « i i«r it it for uito pl««« you. L«t u§ proTB it to you today.

ASCO TEASUlbpkgl2Vsc : lb 45c

Plain Black or Mi»>J

Tctley'» Tea

Pabtt^tt Cheete •••.-• P*K 23cAmerican or Swii. Cheete % b pk(f JScVelveeta Chee^ V* lb pkg 25cPhiladelphia Cream Chewe 2 pkgs 25cNu-Kraft Chee«e b 23cRich Creamy Chee.e lb 37cASCO Beam with Pork can 10cCampbell^ Bean. can 10cRitter or Heim Bean. • can 10cPrudence Corned Beef Ha.h can 27cLibby'» Potted Meat. can 5c, 9cR. & R. Boned Chicken .... can 55cVery Bett Cooked Corned Beef can 25cUnderwood'. Deviled Ham can 9c, 20cLight Meat Tun* FUh can 20cGeuha Japane»e Crab Meat can 35cImported Sardines In Olive Oil can 15cFancy Calif. Sardine. 2 big cans 25cASCO Wet Shrimp can 19cVery Choice Red Salmon ........ can 27cBest Pink Salmon .••• can 19cASCO Stuffed Olive* . . . bot 12Vgc, 23c

Reg. 15c Quaker

Puffed Rice2 pk«* 2 5 c

QuakerPuffed Wheat

12cWhore . 1 . . but in an ASCO S t o « can) you buy broad of inchQuality an<! Puriiy for *o little? Bjr «r«ry comparison Victor and^ * Bread Supremo repro.ent the bigffcitnnr k T\ Value* for your monBREAD - -Value* tor your money mj»o«t=.

Delivered "Oran Freib" to our Store*

SUPREME W r a p p e d ^

Victor Bread 5cLoose Wilet Sunshine

Brown Edge Wafers ... lb. 27cMacaroon Snaps lb. 24c

Sugar Cured BACONi/2llb.pkg. 21C

ASCO Dried Beefy4 ib. pkg. 17c

PURE REFRESHING BEVERAGESI

'Rob Roy Pale Dry Ginger Ale bot l i e• Puritan or Ruppert'. Cereal

Beverages 4 bots 25c*Kruger*. Cereal Beverage .. 4 bots 25c•ASCO Root Beer or Sarsaparilla

3 bote 25c•PIUB our usual bottle Deposit

Extract* 59*Hom.de-Lite

Mayonnaise10c:2Oc

ASCOSandwich Spread

10' : 20cReg. 5c N. B. C. or Sunshine

Cakes and Crackers 6 pkgs.

PRODUCE SPECIALS!PINEAPPLES each 10c

TOMATOES , ." lb. 19c

PEAS 2 lbs 29c

RHUBARB 2 bunches 9c

| Thrtte Prlraa Effective In O«iJ fitona In Horth Jwwf and Vicinity

MORTGAGE MONEYUNLIMITED AMOUNTS AVAILABLE

1ST AND 2ND MORTGAGESCONSTRUCTION LOANS

DUNHAM SABQ,IN<X

FRISCO TRAINS MENTO DO HOUSEWORK

Rrnult of Unemployment Situ-ation There.

gan Franulwn, CallJ.—TUe unem-ployment Rluiatlon In Sun FraneUi-otins iilnjpd havoc with the "utronRWnet," In the opinion ot the city's oldtlmpri who remember lit leant a fewof thp dnj-g of '*» and when NorthBench WB« the world'a toughest com-munity.

The old-timer*' views were aired, ina typically old time manner, after an-nouncement thnt the Associated Char-It Ion of Sao Fmnclico had started •school to trnln men to (lo bnntework.

"It Jti«t don't eeem rwisonsble."was the commept of one of the oldmmrd. "that the male folk shouldhnTe to scrub floors and ran themrttnc-fangted sweepers ID order tomnke a llvln'."

"Now I remember when—" andhere the fray-haired veteran InoqchertInto a graphic story of the time when"men were men" nnd Ban Franciscowas the "wide open" city of the world.

HoTrerer, officials of the AssociatedCharities can see no reason why menshould not be trained to do domesticwork.

"Men are better ntted to do heavybQUKWork tban, women," ope of theofficials explained.

"\tyiy, they can wax floor*, operateracunm cleaners, wash windows andwoodwork, ran washing machines aDddo Innumerable things."

Under the direction of the officials,seven men were chosen to take thefirst course, and after an Intensiveseries of lessons ID the art of house-work were graduated with honors.

Tbe men studied house cleaning.w e of modern appliances, manners oftaking care of floors, and were takenInto the finishing department andtaught the polishing, touching up andcleaning of furniture.

Then followed ten days' practicalexperience In homes and, accordingto the officials, the ability of the men"was simply marvelous."

Should San Francisco take to theIdea of employing men for householdwork. It Is planned to enlarge theschool and to add additional coursessuch as laundering and gardening.

Pope's BodrgaardThe Swiss guard of tbe Vatican la

composed of 10 officers and 110 men.Only Swiss are eligible, and privatesare not allowed to marry. Tbe Swissguard Is tbe personal bodyguard ofthe pope.

I Am Yoursto Command

w HETHER you

would like a new; house,a large and commodjousbarn, or a small and com-pact garage, Bill Ding will1

cheerfully estimate thecost for you and superin-tend the furnishing ofgood lumber and buildingmaterial for as1 many or asfew buildings as you de»sire.

A telephone call to BillDing headquarters entailsno obligation.

m

WitCH8RY SEENIN MURDER OF

AGED SEERESS

WOODBRIDGELUMBER COMPANYBUILDING MATERIAL STOKEVOODBAIDCI NEW JKKSST

Police Baffled by Strange Kilt-ing of Fortune Telter in

Georgia.

Atlanta, On.—The strange ense ofMartha Rossell, eighty-year-old "»eerens." mnNJered In her little red cottage recently, has hnlked police andprivate Investigators, nnd left an eerlpfeetlng tn the city of Rone. 0a..where she lived, that there was mucbIn the realm of witchcraft behind thestaving,

Among the superstitions negroetand white fanners of northern Qeorgla there Is a tradition that DO gunenn kill a "witch." Mist Russell wn»Blnin with a knife. Her throat wascut three times, and she also wafstabbed In the breast

Tbe woman who had made a Damethrough the countryside as a fortuneteller, and spinner of "voodoocharms," came from Scotland manyyears ago. The blnck arts and super-stitions of tbe henths and moors olher native land were said to havebeen part of her stock in trade.

Many Visited H«r.

Into the dim parlor of her little cot-tage thousands bad come through theyeah, WMte and blAck, to flit n « tl«Some wanted enemies "hexed," Oth-ers wanted to find lost Jewelry. Themajority wanted advice on love prob-lems. Tbe little old woman, de-scribed ss having long gray whitehair, s wrinkled face with * bearjUp, would pound an old cane, and Ina wheety voice dole out her warning*and suggestion*

In boxes she kept dried spiders, vsrious roots and herbs, dried frog

watermelon seeds, and string

In a Wheezy Voice Would Dole OutHer Warnlitgi.

beans. These charms were sold forvarious sums, depending on the se-riousness of tbe questioner's ailment

A mechanic, suffering from a akindisease, found her body when be cameto receive aid. The body lay on thelloor, blood about i t Boxes of charmswere opened. Oddly enough $200 Inbills was left untouched,

Premonition of Death.Who killed Martha Russell remains

us moot a question today as the dayof the murder. It was certain shehad either a premonition or a casualfear of death. A fe.w days before shewas slain she called a neighbor tothe fence, and ssld, "Look out for me.Something Is going to happen."

One UlumlnatlDg' letter was foundin her possessions. It left little lighton tbe murder mystery, bnt a greatdeal on her activities and Indicatedsome who was "heied" may havekilled ber.

It read In part:"Dear Aunt Martha: I want you to

do some work for me. I want you tobring back this man to me, for I lovehim and I -doni want him to go wltbother girls. . . . I will see yon be-fore long. Please go to work on thisman as soon as you get this letter."

COLDFUR STORAGE

luturod AgaimtilKK AND THBFT

(Ch.rge.: 2% of Valuation)

Remodeling - Repairingand Cleaning

GAUMENTS CALLED FOB

A. Greenhouse

Autoiit Loses Mudhole—Oh! Yet, Car Was in It

Catsklll, N, T.—Unique In tbe Ustof tost automobiles Is that of a MewYock city man whose machine gotstpek In a nrodhole near here re-cently. ,

He cant find the mudhole, nor,therefore, the automobile.

Taking the wrong road ont of Cat-skill recently, bis ear stuck tn tbemud as he attempted to turn aruurnlIn a farmer's yard. The farmer, per-bups suspicious of robbery, refused tolet blin use tbe telephone to call aKtiruge After walking back to Cat-skill and waiting nntll daylight for amurage to open, the motorist wus unaljle to recall wblcb road Ue hadcukci). '

Search has failed to reveal the lo•II r Ion uf the farmyard or the uutcnuutitle.

It Oa4'« StepfatherZwole, Holland.—Marrying his step-

jjruudiuothur, a south here became hi afather's stepfather. The boy's fatheriiud married bis second wife when uiiewus tweuty years old, and ber motherwus forty-tlva The son wns by a for-iiwr umri lusts of bl* father.

Curtains?no, just laundered

\ 7 OU know tbe type of woman that to especially1 particular about the appearance of her home and

its furnishings-tlic home yon always lore to Yisit Bto tfxia type of t o n u that to having her curtainslaundered by More^LaRu^ where special equipmentfor ^asliinfr sm*aring and drying curtahw to need.Curtains laundered tbtoVay have a dainty softnessthat lends new charm to draping. It to ron and dustOut cause curtains to rot, not laundering. Curtainilaundered twice a y « r last twice as long. Letushelpto "—fc* jour home more attractive.

One of our o m e n wCl quickly answer your phoneeaU-and deliveries will be made just as promptly. Tohere your laundry done by us to more ecoswmkaL

-SAVES AND SATISFIES"

lidgerwood A vena* , , . , # . » Elinbeth, N. J.

THE TRADE- MARK.THAT GUARANTEES

A SQUARE DEAL.

AGAIN.

USED 04R MAR74-76 FAYETTE STREET " PHONE S7D3 PERTH AMBOy

Travel to your heart's content for a littlecash. We'll sell you a good RECONDI-TIONED car for a fraction of its originalcost and give you the privilege of exchangewithout loss within one week from date ofpurchase.

A FEW GOOD BUYS1928 Ford Model A Coach1926 Buick Sedan1926 Nash Coach1926 Studebaker Standard Coad1926 Dodge Coach1926 Ford Sport Coupe1926 Ford Coupe1925 Studebaker Sedan1925 Lincoln Coupe \

Many Others Ranging from $25 to $200

Trades Accepted Time PaymentsOpen Evenings Until Nine

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

FLITKills FliesMosquitoes

A Stitch in TimeSaves (Jfn) Nine—on your radio.

Expert inspectiun now untlthen—with the top-notch recep-tion thul lesulls - i s a luxurythat repays its slight cost manytimeb over in reduced coat ofoperation -batteries or housecurrent, tubes, and repairs.

Let us look it over- -we cantake that "»tkch in lime" thatwill savt> you worry later on.

AUTHORIZEDSlLVElHiARSHAU.

SERVICESTATION

EXPERT SERVICEON ALL MAKES

B*tt*rT S«uOp*r*U N«w

"CURLY LOCKS"CURLY LOCKS

Wilt thou be Mine?When that rhyme wan written

wring-lets weren't within the reach ofuvwy maiden and hene« the mritorsingled out for hla choice the onewith CURLY LOCKS."

HUT NOW THE

Supercurline SteamPermanent Waves

Are so exquisitely beautiful" and

natural Curly Locks are within the

reach of every maiden cutd matron.

To

E.H.MOTT87 Chrome Avu.

i HA NO EXTRA\l^Z CHARGE

BOBPHONE P. A. 1110 FOB

Kjaer & Nicolais

*6£° "fiffw HAIR

Page 3: RESS - DigiFind-It

Man's Pip* and Rln|Williamson, W. Vn.—A welra

find nnonnrij story of thfl appar-ent supornnturnl jirnnks plnypflon Harvey Mounts, Ron Crwk

l)y n bolt of lightningWHS hroiight to Wll-

llninqnn hy MtnRO P, Rcadls,enmity rnnii ensincor, any" theWmifltnmin Nfrwit, While rid-ing on hnrwhnrk throilRh fl ter-rific rnlnstorm MountH dorlnredthnt ho HHB Btnick by lightning,nlllioNRh, ttironRh a rnlrncolongtuiHt of fntp, he was not killednr ovon Injured.

However, a pipe «*lch th«ninn wns smoking was burnedlo n crisp, while a heavy goldring thnt encircled bis fingerwiig melted nnd driven Into thenerk of his horse, Inflicting tslight wound.

According to Mr. Keadla,Mounts has the charred pipeand the melted ring on display«a tangible evidence of hli re-markable experience.

3O. .« . .4 -95 .J l . . i . . 4 9 5 .3O..X..5.ZS.3 1 . . x . . 5.23.3 0 . . « . . 5.77.32. .x.. 6.00.

STOWAWAY DANDYIS DECK SWABBER

Drops Mop, Dont Top Hat toLand like Prince.

Malcolm Tire Co.1096 ELIZABETH AVE.

ELIZABETH, N. J.Oppoiitt City Hall

TelephoneEMenon M4>

Own EveninjiFre« Service

New York.—Hatches had been bat-tened down. Derrick! had Been fast-ened. All passengers were on board.A goodly cargo was In the holds, andIn the strong boxes was $4,500,000 ingold.

Weather wns fine, and the good shipAmerican Legion was on her home-ward run after making a series ofcalls at South American ports.

Thp craft was one day out ofMontevideo, and Cnpt. 8. 0. BlUon

captain, am* t rtwryt "Con* to."The floor opened. Tn stepped theiRwcr to "wtint B well dressed man

should wpflr In thp morning." Toplint, frock, cutaway cont, Rtrlped trotis-

rs, spots, pntent-lenther shoes. Inone hnnd flnngled s rnno.

Cnptnin Hilton Krone, and howed.What prince—what nonlemnn had heaboard his ship as passenger this trip?Then:

"Ton ore the captain? Well, sir, 1Am a stowaway. 1 am a hit In flnnncinl difficulty and desirous of gettingback to New Tort I have no money,hut I am willing to work at anythingfor my passage."

The visitor produced sn Americanpassport, showing that the bearer wnsJoles van Item, M, of New York.Consular vlsaea on the document Indicated that h?had traveled to prac-tically every country In Europe. Hewent 'on:

"Since my graduation from Harvard,have undertaken the stndy of as

many foreign languages as It Is pos-sible to learn. Hence my extensiveraveling. When I reached Boenos

Aires, I ran out of funds."Captain Hilton ordered him to swab-

bing decks. First the perfect morn-ng attire was exchanged for a sea-

man's dungartes.Captain Hilton said no stowaway

ever worked as hard for his passageas did the language-studying youth.

When the ship docked Van Item wasgranted permission to land. Off toparts unknown he went, once morewearing bis tiptcft-and-gbah mOftfngoutfit.

G*U Moving StainMoscow.—The Soviet capital will

soon have its first moving stairways.an innovation that makes patriotsproud of their modernization. Th?stairways will be In a new building foithe central co-operative organization*" |(Centrosoyuz) here.

For the JDME BRIDEYour Home

—vrill be the most important thought uppermost in your

mind after the wedding bells, especially so after the

honeymoon. No doubt you are planning now just where

everything U going to be placed. We know that bare

wall* alone a love nest will not make, so why not let us

assist you

3 Piece Living Room Suite $98.00

4 Piece Bed Room Suite $98.00

$'

18Months to

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Beautiful5 Piece

BreakfastSet

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DUMOND IWAfCH

•PlIKUK in no need to bujmi the old

method "plunking downKOTBI mnkpn It po«-

fnr you to wearAntiit

n th» p««iw>t ot credit•ml at prlrei •«

ri-imnnsble aa to nuke pur-within r«ach of i l l

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Thousands upon thousands of satisfied customers the country over know"Royal!" The mighty confidence we have built everywhere is our greatest asset.Open a charge account at Royal and discover the pleasure of buying on credit.

ADDED FEATURE!MAN'S 15-JEWEL

BREWSTER BULOVA

$37-S0A strap watch of unusual handsomeness and accur-

acy. Radium dial, handsomely engraved, comes in Awhite gold filled case. Woven mesh hand and a 15-jeweled movement.

WHY PAY CASH

bJM POYAL«» ** ROYAL WLIB

STURDY-15 JEWELS15 jeweled moTement; radium dial;

sturdy; 25-yenr gunrantee green orwhite gold filled ^QC AHcase ^ O D . U U

$1 A WEEK

3-PC. ELGIN OUTFITPopular 12 size; thin model; natural

goldf filled engraved case; gnarnntecd. 20 years. Wnldcmar * " " " "~ 'i clmin and knife-

$1 A WEEK

Finest Qualityds

.50A diamond of UQUBUal

brilliance act In & mount'Ing of solid 18-bt- Whitegold.

$1 A WEEK

15 Jewels

Mans handsomely en-graved, HtimUty construct-ed, 15-Jeweled movementBulova, while rold-tllli'lcut .

$1 A WEEK

Perfect "100"

llur "luMfri't 10<>" dual-ity. UiiKiiL-tlo atteet on

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BulovaWith Bracelet$OO75

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lova; lB-Jew«leU movement: comes with fLeitbhbracelet.

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MALLEY TRADING CO., Inc.1153 ELIZABETH AVENUE

Phone Enwnon 8636Open Evenings

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i i . i I . . - 1 = . . i . i • i .

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ui<

BD04DST.OPEN FRIDAY

ANDSAWRDAYEVENINGS

Page 4: RESS - DigiFind-It

S t n pEdison's Invention

A j.crjil two i- nt postagw stampto rntnmrvnmrutP t.hf fiOth annlvem»ry "f tho first- IricandMieent lamptfiTrmo'l by Thnm«* A. Edison willfe> insuwl by the United States Po»tOfflco Department.

The now tUunp will be the M«ne

Sntral dMlgn w U I W e • plrtore ofthe original lamp with ray* lamln*th*r*from. Immediately «»>OT* andportly ftnriirlinir the lamp will be *rlbbnn with th*1 wnrvl« "Bdiiwn'NPirnt Lamp"; above this and reachingthe top of the RtMnp will t>« n m>mi-circalar panel wjth the words "Unit-ed State* WnUff*" in whit* RomanUttara In both upper corner* arerihbon scroll* with the year "1879"at the left and "1929" at th« rightOn either »Me of the lamp and

nrnWl "S" wfll m*x to bo* Hnr«r M m n i within <brk etrelea, whichwil! be connected by a dark panelfnrmins; the bane of the stamp andcontaining; the word "Cents" in whiteRoman letUrm.

The new rtamp will ftrwt h*plarrdon »al« June S at the post office atMenlo Par t The •tamps will be available at otter port office* as soon af-ter that date as production will per-mit

<{;.

SIXGooDiveasons

why you should buythe new Ford car

Triplex shatter-proof glass imMteff

Silent, fully enclosed six-brake system

Four Houdaille hydraulic shock absorbers

55 to 65 miles an hour

Vibration-absorbing engine support

Typical Ford reliability and economy _XiLL of these features combine with smart, low body lines and ichoice of beautiful colon to make the new Ford an unusual value ata Ipv price. Call or telephone for a demonstration.

Note these low prices—Roadster. Phaeton Business Coupe Tudor Sedan Ctmpt

1450 *460 $525 $525 $550Sport Coupe fordor Sedan

$550 $625 ,"(4& rtte» /• 9- *• Detroit, pins charge for freight and dtHrtrji. Mmifm and

spare tire extra.)

DORSEY MOTORS, Inc.i'DOBSEY SERVICE"

Maple and Fayette StsPerth Amboj, N. J. Phone 3600

AT THE PRIMARIESVOTE FOR

FREDERICK E. BLODGETFFOR SHERIFF

"UK IS THOROUGHLY ACQUAINTED WITHTHE DUTIES OF THE OFFICE, AND PROMISESTO FULFILL THEM TO THE BEST INTEREST OFTHE TAXPAYERS,"

"Personal integrity arid ability make for trueservice ,. , . Mr. Blod&ett possesses that personalintegrity and ability."

(Paid for by Moae Clark, campaign manager).

An oM *r«Nt*r fans** OtUA-lowing:

A pprf<>ct hnnhand— who c«n find

UP pntteth *he r»t out hy nljrht

His overcoat dofth him gli sea-

He [Mwcelreth »o t l h e eitatenceother women.

He wearetbsewetb on hh own button*.

He hooketh up hl» wife's Arttmm atthe back without muttering*.

With hll own hand^ he runnath thelawn mower and waahfth the dog.

e l s athet fill not npon the oar-pets, and hta dgarette borneth nothole* In the draperies.

Be openeth hit month with prutaeand not«th her new (rock, and theword of flatter; la on hla tongue.

He luncbeth meagerl? apon t sand-wich that lie may adom his wife withJewels, He frnmbleth not at the bills.

Six day* of the week doth he laborfor hll money, and upon the seventhdoeth chorea within the house for re-

P . O . Awaits OutcomeOf Utilities Hearing

The outcome of hearings whichhave been initiated before the NewJenty Board of Public Utilities Com-missioners will largely determine theability of the railroads to increaseand expand their service to the peo-ple of the state, by supplementingtheir train operations with bus lineson the public highways adjacent totheir righta-of-way.

The ceses now actually before theBoard involve only the question ofbus operations over the white HorsePike between Camden and AtlanticCity. It u the intention of the Penn-sylvania Railroad management, how-ever, if its position in this instanceis sustained, to extend its bus linesto other portions of the state nowserved by its trains, as the publicneed* require.

The hearuigs were opened beforethe commissioners sitting in AtlanticCity, on May 3 and 4. The case wasthen adjourned to a future date tobe set by the Board. Meanwhile, it isto the interest of the public that thebroad principles involved tie thor-oughly understood.

The Pennsylvania Railroad andthe West •Jeroey & Seashore Railroad,in which it is the majority stockhold-er, ore seeking a permit to operatebuses between Camden and AtlanticCity, with intermediate stops. Therequest has been made in the nameof the Pennsylvania General TransitCompany, a subsidiary of the Penn-sylvania Railroad.

It was the contention of the Penn-sylvania management at the AtlanticCity hearings, that the right to oper-ate through bus lines of this charact-er should be reserved to the railroadswhich have for many year? furnishedthrough train service between thetwo terminals, Camden and AtlanticCity. POT this reason, the Pennsyl-vania is opposing the applications ofseveral non-railroad bua enterpriseswhich also wish to operate throughservice between Camden and AtlanticCity on the White Hone Pike.

Windshield Wiper GoesBad Before Worn Out

The average windshield wiper goeabad long before it Is worn out. Constaat contact wltb the surface of theglass puts a kink In the rubber edgeso that It will not bend back and forthto dean the glass as It should. Thepicture below shows bow to avoid thUdeterioration.

Take a small place of sheet metaland bend It tnto t triangular shape:

8nii.ll Metal Guard Stop* Warping ofRubber Windthltld Wiptr.

Then cut or file small notches In theupper edge. When the windshieldwiper is not In use, the sheet metalpiece Is slipped over the wiper so thatthe hinge pin will rest In the notchesand the rubber will be held away fromcontact with the glass. Tilts will preveut the rubber from taking a perma-nent set.—Popular Science Monthly.

AUTOMOBILE HINTS

Some of the modern garagea arebeing erected with hotels utturfied.

America U up and golug. It spentmore than $2,000,000,000 fur gas lastyear.

It Isn't enough for gome people toikute on thin Ice, The; want to drivetheir automobiles OD It

• * *Cued Urn caslngi are being made

Into soles fur Inexpensive glioea lufranco. The skidding must fa* terribleon a wet day.

• • a '

A man paying for bis car on the In-stallment plan should remember hecannot pay attention Uy the toad oathe same plan.

U gome eeawlatloB to 4fc« fewpedentrlani left., Tb« t a n folk* artbuying for their <ari m&r $n t a t*

noUH

Cook in Comforthis Summer the EZ--

i^OMPORT in mmmer cook-^» / ingl—you'll undentind newmeaning to the work once ha*,fan cooked the E-Z-e* W*f. TryIt this nmmer. Know die realenjoyment of adng an oil Movethat If redly coolly efficient—

odorless, trouble-free*

CASHrwca

BeautyComfort

Economy1 Fbe fc*f> t»wd Ofat H ^ d i f1 /Bring *>U*UM burners. Burn

Know alio the pride of ownet*•hip, die happinew of workingwith a «tor» » beann^il—glkten.inf antique bory md paatel greenporcelain enamel over WMtvproofgenuine Armco Ingot Iron—soeasily cared far and kept new.Only Sean, Roebuck and Co.'imammoth resources enable astow of dds quality to be offeredat a price which makes owner-ship so easy*

O Sdorttfc tr*icx coo*** ft** and fin* com*TuctU» 0***

mrfJw heat to rear coot**hole* **l warming lULf.

O OatarmuSypnportiemedbtdk'

4 Six /WlUtacooUtx Wo. See-tional Ud to accommodat*

C Large,U glau tank wttk k**vy

handleg Rigid brty—wtnmt, ta

. rein/arced uumtmcfiow

u Roebuck and Co.RETAIL STORE

Tvtephon*Perth Ambor 3«8«

275-277 Hobart Street

PERTH AMBOYStore Hourt

Daily >:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M.Saturday 8:30 A. M. to 9 P. M.

[ Auto A«0MtortM, Bbtttriet, Blankett, Electric Appliances, Gat Stov4», Hardwar*, 1H«atnv Suppli*$, Hoiuefunitkingt, Kitchen needs, Men's Work Clothing, Phono- Igraph*, Plumbing SuppUet, Radio Receiver* and aecetioriet, Sporting Good*, Tint Iand Tvi>*t. , • J

ELECTRICITV IN THEMACHINE SHOP

TjiLECTRlClTY which BO efficiently£ i operates machinery plays animportant part in its manufacture*

Take the electric orane, hi fasvarious format It moves with equalfacility light or heavy machineryparts,—the fraction of an inch foradjustment on a lathe, or the length;of the shop for transfer to anotherprocess.

And machinery manufacture Is onimportant industry in New Jersey.In 1927, the state's 585 machineshops gave employment to 47,630workmen and turned out product,ranging from giant steam con-densers to delicate calculatingmachines and valued at more than$320,000,000.

PVBLICMSEKVICE

Where power is required for anyoperation electricity provides itin im moat eiiicient and adapt-able form.

• • ' • #

Page 5: RESS - DigiFind-It

These Theatres project the world's \Afs% s^fa***finest talking pictures and are equip- ff (£0)11£t iped with SOUND

lectricSYSTEM

This Same System Is Used In the Criterion, Rivoli,

Astor, Capitol, and Paramount Theatres

in New York City '

The Result of Years of Research and EndleM* Expense by the Bell Telephone Company.

It Is No Makeshift Equipment

MAJR8THO33J

TELEPHONE IGK PERTH AMKQt

ONE WEEK-STARTING TOMORROW, SATURDAY, JUNE 1

MARY

T

CoQ|J€tte

Cur Beloved M a r /

BEAUTYjOffTHf SCREEN.

Hear the Perfect Screen Voice!Mary Pickford, the premiere

feminine star of the screen,•peaks from the silver sheetfor the first time in her careerm« ntwi »• enactment ai thetremendous stage success of thesame name.

A new Mary Pickford, mod-ern, grown up, piquant, makesher bow in a supreme charac-terization of a Southern bellewho flirted, kissed and forgottiK she met m man she couldn'tforget. Vivid! Thrilling! Capti-vating!

ONE WEEK-Starting Saturday, June 8 " '

A. SPARKLING ROMAMCE OF TODAY

HE swept all before him in thepriie-rint—he was the champ)And then a breezy, little co-edlooked at him—and he wasdown for the count!

BUI Haines was never funnieror more attractive than as thisbattler who takes it on the chinfrom Dan Cupid! And whenyou see alluring Joan Craw-ford, you'll fall for her, too!

9

withthrillingTALKING

in

THEDUKESTEPS

OUTC R A W F O R D - KARL UANE

with

JOAN

AlsoMOVIETONE'

SHORTSand

Fox MovietoneNews

"It Speaks for Itself

James CruzeProduction

Matin** Dally at JiOOET*H1>( at 7 «»J •

Continues* P*rf<Saturday, SamUy

Holiday*

THE HOUSEof

TALKIESand

SOUND

TEI.FJ'HONE IMS rERTH AMBO*

BROADWAYAttractions

for50c

Six Days Beginning Sunday, June 2

MYSTERY DRAMA

THOUSANDCO1UMBIAPICTURES

bxttotott .

DONOVANAFfAIR

JACK HOLTDOROTHY REVIER

WILLIAM COLLIERSALL-STAR TALKING CAST/ *

A

What a picture! A superb cast,a series of hair-raising thrills,plenty of love interest and baf-

fling mystery!

OWEN DAVIS' GREAT MYSTERY SUC-CESS BROUGHT TO THE SCREEN WITH

AN IMPOSING CAST OF TWELVEFAMOUS STARS!

AlsoMOVIETONE SHORTS andFOX MOVIETONE NEWS

"It Speaks For Itself"

SEVEN DAYS-BEGINNING

SAT. JUNE 8

:;t\

Also

MOVIETONE" SHORTS

and

toxMOVIETONE

NEWSFor

Sl-,'tJfc4

THE SCREENS MOST ROMANTIC FIGURE IN THEWORLD'S SUPREME ROMANCE

VNITtOX8TI9T5

THE SONGS OFTHE FOUR MUSKETEERS

A thousand thrills, a thousand laughs, a thousandgasps crowd upon one another as the most daring guards-man of all France fighta for love and country during theglorious times of "The Three Musketeers."

"One for all, all for one" rings the call of the fear-lew friends that immortalized the dynamic pen of Duma.

A MAGNIFICENT STORY 1

u.

Page 6: RESS - DigiFind-It

PAGE SIXTODAY, If AT 91, 1929

CARTERET PRESSSI #0

C a BYRNE, 43 Chroma AT*., CARTERET, N. J.Telaphona OarUret 4(1.'!

H. BYRN1 Editor and Managerat MMBd ekai mtMu ton* t, 1934, at Cartcrtt, N. J.,

Oflet, nndw the A«t •< Kmk I, 1879.

ferdn AdvwrtMnr InrastatetlTMJmtr NsJfkfcarhood Mempapen, In*.

Here She Comes D

CAN YOU BEAT THIS?The League for Industrial Democracy, whose avowed ob-

jective i« "education for a new social order based on productionfor use and not for profit," 1B conducting a campaign to obtain1,000 new members at $3.00 each a year.

The League has, as one of its directors, Norman Thomas,the most celebrated American academic socialist and a can-didate for President in the last election. The organization itopposed to the capitalistic economic system and strongly fav-ors a paternalistic government and government ownership of

So far so good. But when the League, as it states, "reaches100 colleges or so every year with speakers and literature onlabor, imperialism and socialism," it is doing exactly what crit-ics of the power industry objected to.

The League's invitation to prospective new members goeson to say that "professors and college president* are welcom-ing us more heartily every year." A strange parallel this—when a few colleges welcomed speakers representing a basicindustry owned by millions "f American citizens, a federal in-vestigation was instigated.

The reasoning of those who would destroy fundamentalprinciples of our government, which for 150 years has encour-aged private initiative and enterprise, is hard to understand.Are they to be considered better citizens than those who aWveto uphold traditions upon which this nation waa founded?

There is no reason why the League or any other organiza-tion of its kind, should not "reach" as many colleges as it canget members willing to pay dues toward furthering its work.But certainly, legitimate business is entitled to the same right.Free discussion is the touch-stone of progress.

Muzzling or attempting to muzzle the utilities or any otherindustry or individual, is indeed a strange proceeding in thialand of the free.

RIDING A GOOD HORSE TO DEATHUnder the above caption, The Lamp, published by the

Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, contends that "the pres-ent tendency to add to gasoline taxes until the public's patienceis exhausted will certainly bring its reaction in time, but notuntil a large amount of harm has been worked. It would bemuch better for the states to adjust their taxes on the equit-able basis now in conformity with the recognized principles ofa fair division of government expense.

"In 1927 the public paid $259,000,000 to the states withits purchase of gasoline. That happened to be two and one-halftimes the aggregate net profits of the oil industry in that year.In 1928 the total ran well above, $300,000,000 and for the cur-rent year indications are that collections will exceed $400,000,-000.

"Last year this item amounted to $15 per automobile inthe taxing states. Moreover, in addition to the gasoline tax theowners paid $300,000,000 out in registration and license fees.The result was that in the aggregate they were taxed about$1,000 per mile for all the surfaced highway in the country.

"The; gasoline levy » paid noi-owly by 4h& iiead of th*family but by mothers, wives and children out of small andmore closely watched allowances. Their discontent is height-ened by the knowledge that already in several states a consid-erable part of the gasoline tax money ostensibly collected forhighways is being converted to other convenient channels."

Unfair to Ask Citizens to Pass, Ly Their Vote,! on Scientific Problems

• By CIRCUIT JUDGE BOBEHT M. TOMS, Detroit

|HE modern tendency toward democracy is a vicious perversion ofour representative form of government. I am not referring tothe political parties in speaking of the democratic and repub-lican forms of government In a democracy the people them-

selves elect their own officer* and pass their laws, as they did in the townmeeting* in New England yean ago. In a republic, the government isby proxy.

In Detroit we are getting away from the republican form of goT-ernment when we submit important propositions to the people for vote.And what fools the people have made of themselves! A recent electiondemonstrated the folly of asking the voter, the man of the lathe or thegrocery counter, to vote on an issue which should be decided by scientificand economic eipcrts. At that election- the rapid-transit propositionproved to be a popular "no" issue. Consequently the voters rejected thetwo other propositions on the ballot, which had nothing to do with theexpenditure of money.

The people vote b cycles. Eight or ten years ago, we had a "yes" epi-demic anioug voters. After the people got stuck on a couple of proposi-tions, they began to vote "no," and they are still voting "no" regardlessof the menu of the issue.

A few jears ago Detroit voters decided they wanted street car tracks«u the Belle hie bridge. Th«y voted "yeR," without tuking engineeringproblem* mto conjideration. The tracks were laid ami are there today, anioiiuDJHit of public legislation. They go nowhere, and not a wheel hasUTII turned, but thousands of dollars were wasted. •

It M not fair to the people to submit such matters to them. Thecity should nut expect the public to make deeiBipns that can only bere; ' <-il I v ni-ii wientifieally informed. This government either federalor municipal was never intended to be democratic. To cull on the people

JW tiitir own IUMH and ordinances is a vicious perversion of repubU

Liberalism of the Modern Woman Designatedas "Almost Reckless"

By BBV. DR. B. W. SOCKMAN (MethodiBt), New York.

Men ratlter than women most be held chiefly responsible for oarsnonJ standards; the idea is fallacious that men make our money and

<vmen make oar morals. It is futile to assume that, with the changing

i -'jtatua of womanhood, society will continue to insist on a higher ethical'*'*•-*--1<' nl for women than for men,

v>« have reacted from tbe old unfair attitude which made women bearmyontibuity for certain tins. Theje are tigni which make

•Diacttwions of Problems of Life Are ProperlyPart of Our Religion

By DB. KAIL REJLAHD. Mew Tort

Them is bond to be a conflict bctven scknre and religion, at-coiding to the commonly accepted mramngt of those words at the pres-ent time.

Ninety-five per not of iD orthodox idigiout beliefs are opposed tothe atmiaiMt wbkh ariener afords as.

WhatercT tooehsa bonus lift • a part of religion and consequentIj certain aspects of politics rigbtfitty are diamaed in churches.

Those who bate their bdiefi no* tmAwd m what their ancestoriset op as right are in error. Then m so Kitdation in the part which isfit to be the guide for the fwtnre. What JOB are, as you are, is your religion.

This is a world that demands work and effort, K is a world of erolution and not evasion. The awwnt we get better acquainted with prob-lems and thought*, DO Matter how hard or opposed they may seem atthe start, we nod in then snwthisg asefal and helpful. The result itworth the effort.

Increase in Crime Conditions Among Youth ofCountry a Deplorable Fact

By SUPEBJOB COURT JUDGE HOWAKD, Atlanta.

MICKIE SAYS—

It there scene ranedj for the "boy nmrder wave" and other crimeamong yonths atfll in their teent?

While I'm to optimist, aad bold the opinion that the human race issteadily growing better, I cannot but feel discouraged over, the constantincrease in crime conditions among oar youths.

I believe thttOlidt liquor b a t the nnt of most of the caaea. Crimesactuated by whisky always show a sharp increase during the months ofNovember, December and Jamary. l b s I ascribe to the influx of liquorfor Thanksgiving, Christmas and Her Tear holidays.

~"T recall that when I wat a"boy H was a rare occasion that a wniteyouth appeared before a criminal court. However, that condition hasnow reached the point where the namhrr of white boys hailed into courtexceeds that of ah other racea. **

THIS UEWSPAPEft »SLIKE A RESTAURAUT* V/E

MAME B/EfdrmiMe OH OURMEMU, t m M S S TO SUTT A U --TASTES. SO H&PWER9ELF

•TO WHAT V U K E » AUD IF THEVIS SOMETHING OU OUR.

EMM.-OF-FARE YDOMT UfcB, JESTf »S3 rr Uf> WITH QOMMEWV,LUCE VDO M A RESTAURAMT

A nixed metaphor Is some kind ofcocktalL

A normal school Is where they teachnormalcy.

The weather bureau Is part of •bedroom set

A grid leak to a ralratom o» afootball field.

The board of education hangs oatIn the lumber yard.—Pathfinder Mag-azine

POINTED PARAGRAPHS'A man should know the

avoids.

Tbe earlboars.

Tbe owner of a n u t dogof tbe barking.

The wmskr ftm Ismas; a loud drinker.

Marriage la ettbet a,flrt or

Tbe harder a man labors the lewtime be has to whine.

Lucky Is tbe maniei M n « Wcan tell a lie—whea she heara t t

Tbe mother of oaa baby always(eels sorry for tbe mefher of twine,

A man no eoooer gets • • la theworld than some weeaan eaua Uasdown.

An amateur la a very joong per-«m who beUeves that he kecpa all tbeprDfesslonals gncvahit.

Beauty may be only skla deep, iw»the Imprestion It makes sometimes ex-tends much deeper.

MM

SLINGSHOTTnke a tip from na'are. Man'* can

areo'i made to sbot; bla mnolb Is.

AD enemy ts Jut like a friend, exCept that 70a don't understand Mmas well

Love I* tbe lever that levels alltilings—It elevates tbe low and bringsdown the high. <

A "stiff upper Up" and, a •dbetrfulfront" and the "beat foot forward"will help to get there.

"Duty makes us de all (htapi weP,but love make* us do all of then beau-tifully.11—Phillips Brooks.

In toe case of the average healthysmall boy, cleanluwsa If not next togodliness It la next to liBpflsalhla.

Ia trying to do two tbla«s at once,the oaa nterferee with the other*"This one thing I do" la attt • goodrnU tat an bv

} . , • .

LOUISE fAZRNDAWtart This Fattmt

Sty It

fAMI

"May Mc4*o» rtiemmmMiJapUx Hoi$*ry (« M and TUneommend it t* 0t4 W«rU.Ntvtr bt/art ham 1 won fflJhotUry with M wtueh tt*UTitty nun* than

A Tribute Froma Famous ScreenStar who Know*

ONE TELLS

ANOTHER

IT MUST

BE TRUB.

ThousandsCan't B e W r o *

FOR TOMORROW ONLY

12,000 Pair, of

Beautiful Colored Border (Picot Top)

SHEER < I U K N

HC/E

. Regular Price $1.954$M«U9ulI Vashtoned * <M\ Length -

And Quaromteed Terfe*.All O* pqswlar gunkuru »bade» including Cuban 8*Dd, Ttt TISM

•ad BtM* T*a, tfc* osw ihtde* for &e|)Ui»ber.

Habay I t73 Broad Bt

Whyarc Concrete

streets preferred?

Because they are—Most durableSmooth and even-surfacedRigid and unyieldingEconomicalClean and beautifulSafest rn any weatherLow in maintenance costs

No other paving material canbe "just as good"l

Pave with concrete exclusively.

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION347 Madisoo AvenueNEW YORK CITY

OFFICES IN 12 CITIBS

PORTLAND CEMENT

CONCRETEF O R P E R M A N E N C E

Marks Your Entrance

TomeWorld's BroadestHighway

It it the Telephone Highway Kafcblngnearly every place you wish to go.

Travel, it swift, simple, ditto*, on dwTelephone Highway.

Destinations ate only minutes away.

New Jeney people jnvckd die world'sbroadest highway 797,000,000 tuneslast year. Thty will travel it much morett>l« year, getting things done with leastexpenditure of time, energy and money.

Number Pleaser*

New Jersey Bell Telephone Co.

SURGICAL AND ORTHOPEDICAPPLIANCES

TniMes—Supporter*—Belts— Braces-Arches, in Fact a Complete Line

of These Needs.YOUR DOCTOR'S ORDERS FILLED

HENRY FRAHME SS

U K33 BROAD ST. Near Regent Theatre ELIZABETH

Phone Emerson 9108 Hours 9 A. M.-7 P. M.The Only Practical Truss Maker in Union County

THE

Paulus DairyMain Office: 189-195 New St., New Brunswick, N. J.Phone 2400 Established 1890

U S E PZULUS'OS1TIVELYLKFECTLYASTEURI2ED

MILK

Walker-Gordon Certified MilkvVendmese Farms Raw Golden Guernsey MilkSuydam's and Kutger'a Special Raw Tuberculin

Tested Milk

DISTRIBUTION COVERSNew flrunawick. Highland Park, South River, SayrevilU,

Parlin, South Amboy, Perth Amboy, WoodbridgeCarterat, Fords and Metuchen, N. J.

FLITKills Flies

LARVEXmothproofscloth.,.

Spraying Larvtx:Mothproofi fabrics not

Page 7: RESS - DigiFind-It

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Carteret High Scores 4th Win; Smashes N. Plainfield 7 - 1Sato Making Baseball History

By Play InJM Atlantic LoopBrilliant f laying °f Carteret Boy Wins Many Paragrapht of

Praise From Clarksburg Telegram In First Week of Sea-ion Sabo Is Main Attraction At Every Game.

Ernie Sabo, the most popularvou'th to represent Carteret in pro-L,i0nal circles this summer, is play-f e ball at third base with the

team in the Middle At-according to word re-

Johnny Beck got a free lunch ticketin honor of hitting the first two-bagger of the season."

Split"S«bo Shinct M GcneraliTwin Bill"

ix***-, - > - "Ernest Sabo, Clarksburg's infield-from tne Clarksburg camp r«- er, furnished the sensation in both

games with hard-hit home runs overWith one week of playing in the me left held fence, as Clarksburg

" & Clarksburg nine split a twin bill with the Cumberland!:Te.5inTthe

byci«1uit. As t h e m . , ,delphia Americans are known to all«, the Athletics, the Clarksburg teami. known aa the Generals. The fol-d i n g art a numfbern?f_wtracU from

p h t CumberlandColt*. Sabo made three hits in asmany trips to the plate in the firstgame, when the Generals dropped a4-3 verdict to the Colt*. He battedbrilliantly in the second game, whenhe collected two bingles in threetrips to tho plate. Batting five outof six for one day is going some, andbesides sending three runs across th«

log methe Telegram, the Clarksburg newa-P*P"!Sabo Balling at .824 Clip"

"Ernie Ss*», wfto has been in _«ua»4uune, is crashing t n e J"11 a t * P l a t e i n t n e »«cond, when Clarksburg624 g»ot, and'Is'now leadhlg the j won By a B-s *cu~ns. Brnte hart a

team. Ernie participated in seven perfect day afield, handling four as-.. '- | gists in the first and two assists in

| the second without an error.The summaryFirst (fame:

Clarkibnri

made \Mimes, scored" seven rung,eleven hits in 21 trips to the plate.Ernie is folding the ball at .033mark. He accepted twenty chancesat third antonade only two miaplayn.jerry Sitalerof who has been playingin the outfield, follows Sabo with an Fillingham, If,even .500 average. Morrissey, who Spitaleri, If,

AB.Iit. R. PO. A. E.

i$ third in line, is hitting the apple Collins, 2b,«t a .400 dip. Morrissey, at, ...

"Sabo L**4< L M | > * with Thre* Pritchard, rf, ...Ham* Rani " Schrk, lb,

"Erne* Sabo, .Clarksburg hard- Sabo, 3b,hitting third baseman, took the lead Hastings, cf, ....,in home runs in the Middle Atlantic t Beck, c, 4League »t Curoherland yesterday Thompston, p, .... 4afternoon when he traveled the cir-cuit one* in eaCh of two games, giv-ing him a total of three in the firstWMIC of th« season. Sabo is calledthe Babe Ruth of the Clarkaburg

0 113 21 11 21 0

7 24 13 2

Spitaleri, If,Colling, 2b,

"Although Clarksburg did not win Morrissey, s«,the opening ball game with Fairmont Pritchard, rf,Sunday, aeveral of the players won Schcrie, lb, .ptiies offered by the merchants of Sabo, 3b,the city. Joseph Fillingham scored Hastings, cf,the first run, and thereby received Sheehan, c,a necktie. Ernest Sabo made the Proctor, p, ...first hit of the season and will get Ihis shoe, repaired free o f charge.

35 3game:

CUrkiburfAB.I&.R. PO. A. E.4 1 1 0 04 1 1 2 24 1 3 3

31 6 10 21 11

8th Inning RallyLocal Team Swamps Jersey

City Leaguers In Sunday

Maurer A. A. To PlaySt. James on Leibtg Field

The Saint James baseball team wilplay their second game of the yearSunday afternoon on Leibig's fieldwith the Maurer A. A, of Perth Am-boy, The Maurer A. A. licked theCarteret Cardinals recently, and the

G a m e — M e d w i c k Contribut-' St. James players, should they win,that '

esing.

innInn-Last Sunday's game with the New

Brunswitk Sacred Hearts was call-The Cardinal baseball team regain- ed off when the county seaten faile<

ed its winning stride, tSusdsj- =<*-«.' to appear. The Amboy nine defeatedn.,.in, on the high school athletic ; the Fords A. A. in their last go by anfield, and easily defeated the J«ts«y 11-6 wore. <I ity i/eaguers, by a score of 13-3, Horai of Mullen will do the twirl-nmking Sixteen nits, while Mickey' in* for St. James. Trosko will catch.Miglecz came back to check the in- • The infield includes Culry Sullivan atviukrs with seven scattered tingles.; fiwt, Bill Biesel at second, Johnny

Leshick at short, and Bill Casey ath hot corner. In the outfield will beMickey Dapolito, Al Biegert and BillDonovan.

Patsy Fleming pitched the ninth inn-ing and allowed one hit. A crowd, es-timated at 400, saw the game.

Mickey Migleci pitched a greattram a and excelled Hayka, the JerseyCity ace, by a wide margin. He had(.•nly one bad inning, the fifth inwhich the visitor* auuiafad tosqueeze two runs across the plate.The tinal Jersey City run came in theninth with Fleming on the mound.

Medwick's leat of hammering outUu triples in the eighth inning wasthe outstanding feature of the one-sided game. Medwick's two three-base blows came in the eighth, when „ „ „ _ . „ . . „ „.,the Cardinals were having a wonder-1 ^.(j an<i w e j j known to the police of

THAT LnTLEPitching of J M Medwiek and Work of Stutxke Behind

Plate Are Features—Carieret Has Game Won InBut Throws In Three-Run Rally For Good Measure.

R a splendid six-hit frnnw, trailing by a 4-0 score. The firstJoe Medwiek, the Blue and White nee, two batters hit weakly over th« ia-i»rovo<l to be the main cog in Coach field. Leonette rame to bat and bHMcCarthy's diamond machine, whicheasily romped away with a 7-2 vic-p ytory over Howie Krau»che'a NorthP1»infield nine, on Tuesday

P l i f l d f

a high fly to Jake Chodosh, who play-ed Uie ball wrong and the batter wM"credited with a three-base hit. I»

after-; the meantime, two runs came acrossthe plate. Cart«ret put the gam*"on ice in the seventh with a three-run rally.

nnnn, at Plainfield, before a fairlylarge roprescntation of Carteret fans.It, was Carteret's fourth miccpwrivevictory. | The outstanding feature of tW

Medwick's twirling stood out in game was Stutikrs performance be-I'arteret'B win over Plainfield. He hind the plate. Poll's runniag.flipped >m up in air-tight fashion,' ratone* in the field drew a big hana> '•'?limiting the home team to six hitn and Medwick waa robbed of two flomtML f

two nina, unearned run* by the way; Two of his mighty blows went l o i ,nning nine of them and offering a by inches.

'ft

The box score:C«rt»r«t Hi

'ABzelag, cf, 5Richey, 3b,

l

Btuttke, c, ......Romnblum, as,"Rubel, 2b,

pass to only one member of thenion County team. "Der JOP," aa

is called by many of his friends,lowed five weak infield hit* and one

ile that should have been an out. :

arrington, the PlainfieM pitcher, I Woodhull, lb,even men during; the entire nini> Medwick, p,id some tall hurting, and fanned Poll, If,antos. He wan hit ouite freely byhe Blue and Whit* midiri'ts, who col-ected no lens than eWen hitu and«v«n run*, -Modwick pitched a can-iitcnt game and only had one bad

ning, when two unearned runs werecored. Due to the slownem of a 838 7 1ielder, a hit that should have been North PLinfi.ld Highaeily eaught, went for three) basen AB. R> '.ind scored two runners. | Levine, If, ...

Warrington pitched a fairly (rood Sheppard, If,game. He had a beautiful fast bafl Rogers, cf,

Seen From The SidelinesBy a Sportsman

rs in a puzzle for awhil«. But inpinches he was lost. Carteret made Kiekler, 3b,most of her hita count, as they came ; Leonette, 2b, ..with runnem on base, with the re- Jackson, c,»uH that runs carn^ in freely, l ittle Warrington, p,Bob Ritchey copped batting honors Spisao, p,for the loceU with three hiU in threerips to the plate. Szelag and Wood-lull made two apiece.

Carteret was first to draw blood.

COLLEGE TRACK IN SPOTLIGHT

Tomorrow, weather per-mitting, at Franklin FieldIn Philadelphia, the creamof track stars in Americancolleges will claah for hon-ors in the great "big three"meet of the year. The sauceof western college trackand field athletes will comebent on the task of lower-ing the ambitions of theathletes of our side of th«icountry. Stanford,, Califor-.

ma and Southern California will battle to afinish with such eastern colleges as Yale, N. Y.U., Penn State, Holy Cross, Georgetown, Dart-mouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Brown, Prince-ton, Pittsburgh and Cornell.

Stanford has been chalked up as the poten-tial winner of the great meet. Most of the dopeon college track this year has been upset to thenth degree, but the conviction that Temple-ton's Stanford crew will take back to the landof the setting sun the laurels of the meet forthe third straight year, would be hard to up-set. If the potential winner wins, it will be theighth time in nine years that the westerner!have carried home the bacon.

Liberty Falcons Trim* - Liberty A. C. 7-1

Batting the offerings of Bailey foreight hits, the Liberty Falcons, of

Perth A m b o y High School

And C a r t o N t In Match Today

With four straight victories totheir credit, Coach Francis McCar-

CarUret, gave the Liberty A. C, of thVa Carteret high school baseballersBayreville, a neat trimming, 7-1, at | will go in search of their fifth this af-Port Reading Monday, tose and lernoon -when the oppose the PerthWoodhull shared the pitching duty Amboy high school nine at Wood-

Man Stabbed at CampSays Assailant Fled

A report that a stabbing affray hadoccured at the labor camp of theCreosoting plant of the Reading rail-road In Port (Reading brought the po-lice ambulance-patrol there late yes-

afternoon. James Judge, col-

for the Falcons and allowed but sixnit* in aB.

The Falcons scored all their runsin the eighth inning. Batting Baileyto all corners of the small lot, the lo-cals staged a picnic and made sevenruns and incidently won the ballgame. Rose had a perfect day at bat,making two hits in as many tripe tothe plate.F.icom

H

ful time, scoring eight runs. No lessthan eleven men w«re at bat. Six hitsafely. Three batters walked. Ei«htruns came home, and the Combamenculled it a day.

The Cards started the performanceearly, and scored two runs in the firrtepoch. Skurat's single with two menon did all the damage. Another Car-

Carteret and Woodbridge was foundwith an ugly but not serious stabwound in the head.

Judge gave a hazy account of analtercation between himself and a ne-gro named "Henry" in which the my-sterious "Henry" UBed-the knife toJudge's undoing. Judge's injurieswere patched up at the camp. Other

'ellegrino, lb 4Barna, c 3

4..... 3

21

...... 4_... 2

22

AB < H E

Bylecki,Anzivino, 3bBaleris, rf ....Dwonski, cfS J ' H \f 11* r n n j V J t ' B B ^ • * » *

Woodhull, pYustak, 2bBazaral, cRose, pDaPohto 2

dmitl tally was chalked up in the | negrot*t there professed to know littlethird. The visitors decided to do of "Henry" who had escaped in tfie(something so they scored two runs1 meantime.in the fttth. The Cardinals retaliatedin their half of the fifth inning bylidding two more runs to make theBO ore 5-2.

It waa all over but the shoutingfor the Jersey City boys in the

h th C d d

Liberty A. C.Dittman, 3b ....Butler, lbUnkel, cf ...'Dolan, ssHartraan, rf ..Lynch, 2b

ighth, when the Cards staged a be-lated rally that netted tnem eightruns, and the ball game. K&pucy of~Ik'laud.

The box score:Ctrt.r.l CanJiaali AB R H 6Masculin, If j 4 3 2 0Bmolenaky, as ,. •* 1 0 . 0Kara, 2b, If 6 4 4 1Medwick, cf >. 5 2 4 0

3h B 1 8 0. p 5 1 1 0

p 0 5 0 0/rf, lb 4 1 1 0

Siekerka, lb ..„ 2 0 1 0l unrad, 2b ..._ 2 0 0 1l-tlvanek, c . 3 0 0 0

2b '. 0 0 0 0

Bad Spot! in dcaaaiProbably Hie roughest bodies ot

water In the world are the bay of Bis-cay and the waters Immediately SOT-rounding Cape Born. Some of theroughest and highest breakers awlaand off the coast of Guinea.

y ,Kupich, If -... 4Newman, c , 4Bailey, p 8

31 7 8AB R H

0 0010000.00

bridge or Rafaway. The game will bethe final game of the year for bothschools. Amboy holds a victory overthe Blue and White team. Joe Med-wick will do the pitching for the Car-teret (boys.

The probable line-ups:Crteret Hif h P«rtb Antwy HighMedwick Thullesson

pitcherStsutzke ..: Rezniak

Woodhul) Puccifirst bam

R u h e l - S e ' S d bats " J a * °Rosenhlua, _ _ OUido

Score of G a m e Between

Carteret and South Ambo;

The following is the score of theg&mei lhst week .between Carteretnigh school and the high school o:South Amboy, Carteret won the tiltby a Score of 8 to 2. The score wasomitted last week on account of lackof time.

The box score:C«rteret AB R H

335jJ. ChpdwlL rJL..,,., j

M. Ohodoah, rf, .... 1

fhat kept the Blu« and White bat-

i l f hil B i

g , ,Lawrence, lb,Van Danberg, ss,

1885

00001100002

Richey singled in the first and camehome «n Wodhull'a two-base blow.Two more runs were tallied in the

The score by innings:N. Plainfield 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0—1Carteret 1 2 0 0 10 3 0 0—T

The Summary—Two-base bit;,Woodhull. ThreeJbase hits, Medwkk

tecond. Three successive singles and and Leonette. Struck out by War-a passed ball accounted for threo rington, 7; by Splaso, 3; by Medwiek,runs in the second inning. All the! off SpisBO, 0; on Medwick, 1. Win-while Medwick held the Plainfteld ( 9. Bases on balls off Warrington, 4;batters at bay. Another run was Warrington. Time of game, 1:56.Added to Carteret'B total in the fifth.' ning pitcher, Medwick. Losing piteher

Plainfield c*me to feat in the sixth Attendance, 200. Umpire—Boyle.

ft^ftft**«#*4HHHHt«**«*#4HHHrft

Penknife OperationSaves Friend'* Life

Budtipest.-l'rnr. Brnst Pol-inrsrh. noted -pharyiiKologlst,auved the life of his frlemtI'nif. ituilnli Bhllnt. at theBitlint home recently tiy usingills penknife for a hurried operatltm. Hiillht smldvnly fainted and WUB suffocating whenPoliticals pullef) out his knifeand Bill bis friend's throat, Sav-in; him from strangulation.

HE SELLS JAIL TOFELLOW PRISONER

Szelag, rf 4 1Richey, ab 1 2Woodhull, lb ..._ 3 2Medwick, If 4 2Rubel, 2,b .-._ 1 0Stutzke, c 2 0Poll, cf 3 1Rosenblum, ss 2 0'MttHaft,-p- 3 0

23 8 12AB R H

third baseJ. Chodosh Kosmyna

left fieldPoll .-..._ Dolan

center field.' j&ela« L... Lattell

right field

34 1 6 0

EJuc»tion'§ Valm 'It hut been estimated that the dally

value of education In an elementaryschool la $8; In a high school, 140.and in a college, $100. This studywas based opon a surrey of less thana thousand people and for that reasonIt kj'subject to inaccuracy.

Reese, lb , -.,.. 3Longstreet, cf 2Callucci, cf 2Brinamen, rf 3Kurtz, 3b 3Ajppiegate, rf ..-.......:. 8Vox, p .... 2 0 1

26 2 5 1Errors: Longstreet, Poll, Rosen-

blum, Two Ibase hits: Lamberteon,Newmark, Woodhull.| Sacrifice: Rich-ey (2), Stutzke, Ruibel. Left on ibas-e«: Carteret, 5; South Amboy, 9.Bases on balls: off Mullan, 5; off Fox,4. Struck out by Mullan, 8; toy Fox,2. Losing pitcher,, Fox. Umpire, Bald-win.

89 13 16AB R HJertey CUy

Jysk, 3b 5 0 1Jabo, c 4 1 0 0Uunski, lb _ < 1 1 0Krawoak, as p „... . 5 1 3 0llauka, p, M .. . 8 0 1 0Ktann, cf 4 0 0 0

If ..,.'.'.,'„..,".'.»"•-'..- 3 0 1 02b ..„...„.. 1 0 1 0

. 2b 2 0 0 0t lesala, rf 2 0 0 0Huznak, rf 1 0 0 0

34 3 H IThe 8COM by Innings:

Jersey City 1 ) 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 l— 3Crteret .. 2 0 1 f > 2 0 0 8 x—13

The summary: Twp base hita: Mas-culin, Medwick (2]frK**ha and Kra-^"ak. Three base hits; Modwick (2),»nd Raw. Winning piteher: Miglecz.^ P i r « : Kanucy.rnr 7 .. ' •——

NOTICEIN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY.TO MICHAEL PBTO:

By virtue of an order of the Courtof Chancery of New Jersey, madeon the day of the date hereof, in acertain cause wherein Julia Peto ispetitioner and you, Michael Peto aredefendant, you are required to ap-pear and plead, answer or demur topetitioner's petition, on or before the24th day of July, next, or in defaultthereof such decree will be takenagainst you as the Chancellor shall,hink equitable and just,

The object of said suit is to obtain„ decree of divorce dissolving themarriage between you and the saidpetitioner.

Dated: May 23rd, 1929.LEO G. LOWENKOFF,Solicitor of Petitioner,175 Smith street,Perth Amboy, N. J.

C. P. 6-31; 6-7, 14, 21.

Every Day Is "Cleaning Day" for the.Public Service Street Cars and Buses

D. P. DE YOUNGRaal EtUt« »nd lotur»n»

95 Av«n«l St. Avonel, N. J.Phone: Wpodbridge B20-J

The Frederick H. Turner Co.: : Insurance : :

4S9 E«tt Avo., Sowar™Telephone Woodbridge 239

BUY THISVo! family; one flat for rent. Closed in back

, tltwimi>»»tf all improvements j S rooms and bath°«* each floorl 8 car garage; located 145 Emerson.street.

Salesman Closes Deal,Sheriff Balks.

but

STRAWS

Grand Island, Neb.—Once npontime the Brooklyn bridge was fre-quently sold to yokels, but tbe busi-ness acumen of n prisoner ID the i'<>"nty Jail.here..*bo, sold, the Jail Itselfto ft fellow prisoner, overshadows thefeats of1 the smooth-talking gentlemenof Che past

The salesmnn In this case wasCharles W. (Tubby) McMillan, whobecame a county gpest by calling abootlegger from the local Y. M. 0. A.. The "purchaser" was Elroy Guy, ayoung farmer, who was charged withwriting checks without funds.

Wlwo G»y aKlnei at the Jail Mc-Millan rafliinlty told htm that the joMwas leased from the county by JailerRing. Tbe Jailer. McMillan said, lindin furnish equipment, such as bedding and tuhleware; bni that thecounty paid him so much per prisoner—enough to make a nice profit.

Furthermore, snld McMIJIan, JailerKing was anxious to go to Californiaand wanted to sell the business chenp

Guy was deeply Intereeted. withMcMillan guiding him, he spent twodays inspecting the equipment andchecking over the tigareg.

"H'« » good buy." he announced Bn-ally. "It beats farming."

Guy tola McMillan' that he had$3,000 loaned on a second mortgageand that he could get some of themoney to make » down payment. Mc-Millan eald the Jailer would lake S2AUdown and SI,(KM) more ID monthly In-stalments. Guy said he could get thefc!S0, and would meet the monthly In-stalments out uf his profits.

Mt'Mlllun assured Guy that the papers would he rmidy for his signa-ture In a few duyg. Jailer King andSliuilff Palmer learned of the dealwhile It was in progress, but decidednot in spoil the plot. Now thuy arewondering how to hreak the sad uewsto tlie prospective Jail magnate.

tC yoij lure tver owued. an automobile you willappreciate what a ]ot> it Is to k«ep It slwaya look-

in* c W But imwlna tha work t e^

a car or bun him complated Its day'b ruu,tbe u«r cleaueru take It in fcaol If it uhould uuedwa*ljl«|,« wtU, |M |iy«n ft thorough hath and swept

Boys' Prank AlmostCosts Live* of Three

Herryville, Vu.—A trick which twoyuunis uiouiitalu boya neur hereiliiuight to piny ou a third who hudtjwii« "a-cuunln1" fur Ills" tlrBt timenearly CIIBI 'the lives of three Alesnndrla men who were driving fromiheir hniiie Hi Winchester.

Willie luiiler, twelve years old, millAndruw Jatksdii lilgea, thirtee^. aresuld lo liuve made a dummy In [hefin HI of a person and placed It In Hit-uiiiltlle of the road lh« other night withe tup of the Blue llldge In t.'lurk«-t'ciuuty.

As Tliotnaa McVVhorter, MelvliiItiunlio aud W. R. Wilson, all of Ale*uiKlrla, rounded a curve they took Hifdummy to be S child and the driverswerved the car' tu avoid Btrlklng U.The ear wwt over au euitwnkintuimid turned over. The three nifti wereinjured. Wilson ssrlously.

Suits wer« filed by thetrlj agalpt <b«t pareiUs of Cprder

95C $1.45$1.85

Values up to $4

Imported Leghornsand

Genuine iPanamas

at Reduced Prices

Goodknlt Triplewear

Union Suit$1.00 each

3 for $2.75

SHIRTS a n d SHORTS

50c 75c $1.00New Colors

New Values '

A , DOYLE a,CUNNEEN

"Anywhere-Aii)DRAKE'SSTORAGE

Page 8: RESS - DigiFind-It

I>AGE EIGHT

Yearsof service in

MODEL T FORDSTHE Model T was to strongly and sturdily built that itis itill rendering reliable, economical serrtee to motor,late in every section of the country. Millions of theseear* can be put in shape for two, three and five moreyears of a*e at very email cost.

So that you may have this work done economicallyand natufartoriry, the Ford Motor Company is still de-voting a considerable section of Its plants to the'manu-facture of Model T parts. It will continue to do so aslong as they are needed by Model T owners. The follow-ing list given the approximate labor charges for recon-dhionmg the Model T Fordi—

Engin*Tune motor (tadodlng replacement of commutator ease,

brah and vibrator pointo if necessary) - • - $1*00Grind valves and clean carbon $3.75 to 4.00Overhaul carburetor lInstall new pistons or connecting rodsTighten all main bearing! -Overhaul motor and transmission

. - 6.00• - 6,00$20.00 to 25.00

Rear SystemReplace rear axle assembly . - - ~- - • • 150Install onivenal Joint 3.00Rellne brake iihoca 1.50Replace rear axle »haf t, drive abaft pinion, or drive gear 5.00Overhaul complete rear axle assembly - • - $5.75 to 7.00Rebtuh (prlng and perche* 1.7SOil and graphite spring* 5.00

Front SystemOverbad front aria* .«.• $4.00 to 5.00R e b n a h i p t n d l c b o d i e s a n d a r n u ( b o t h t i d e * ) . . . 2 . 5 0R e p l a c e o r s t r a i g h t e n s p i n d l e c o n n e c t i n g r o d . . . . 7 5T i g h t e n r a d i o * r o d o r s t e e r i n g b a l l c a p . . . . . 6 0T i g h t e n a l l s o c k e t s a n d j o i n t s o f f r o n t e n d - • • 1 . 5 0R e p l a c e f r o n t s p r i n g t i e b o l t o r n e w l e a f . . - - 2 . 5 0S t r a i g h t e n f r o n t a x l e 3 . 0 0

( ChauU. . . . 1.73. . . . 3.50. . . . 1.00. . . . 7.50. . - . 25.00. - . - 25.00. . - - 20.00- . - • 8.00. . . . 15.00. . . - 4.00. . . • 3.00. . . . 2.60

'' These prices are approximate and are for labor only,because the need and number of new parts depend onthe condition of ««ch car. The charge for these partsis low, however, because of the established Ford policyof manufacturing and selling at a small margin of profit.

FORD MOTOR COMPANY

R e p l a c e r e a r f e n d e r . . .O v e r h a u l • t e e r i n g g e a r •R e p a i r m n f f l c r . . . .O v e r h a u l r a d i a t o r . . . .R e p a i n t C o u p e . . . .R e p a i n t S e d a n . . . .R e p a i n t T o u r i n g C a rR e n p h o k t e r R u n a b o u t -R e u p h o N t c r T o u r i n g C a rR e p l a c e t o p d e c k ( C o u p e o r S e d a n )O v e r h a u l l U r t t n j m o t o rO v e r h a u l g e n e r a t o r

• « • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

vll

J Saws Save Post OfficeFrom Village Fire

Mnlnn.-TlitiIngfi hnii no fire fightingmenf, hut It hns cm** mi miws,logging rhalnn, nnil Innje nutomobile trucks, nnd these unveilthe pout office from destructionby flre.

When lire broke oat tn » rwIdence, a ««tlon of whichhonaei tbe post office, tbe vlllagers Rawed the two portionsn W , booked on their chains.on \ dragged the burning struc-ture* to a safe distance, wherethey let It burn. The blaze didnot spread to the post office noran adjoining bam.

••+•»»••»•••«*»»•••»••••*

RADIUM DEATHSAROUSE PUBLIC

Three Women Dead and An'other Dying.

Wtttftrbury, Conn,—Three knowiraiJTutn" fleafEs,' OB' hpproa<!KIng deafliof a fourth victim, and the ponlhllItv of other cnaw at yet unreportedID Waterbury, hare stirred public unrilegislative concern In Connecticut.Whnt hns aroused official cognlzanctof a "grave Industrial wrong," as l<Is called, Is the fact that the vuluntion of the life of Mrs. Mildred Cardow, the latest victim, as assessed b,\the clock manufacturlDg company forwhich she worked and tbe state compensntlon act, li $43.75.

The young woman worked one yeaiIn the radium watch dial departmentof the clock companj. the largest andwealthiest producer of timepieces tnthe state. With the other 30 or mowgirl* ID tbe department, tbe bad beenInstructed to point tbe brush, dl|ipe<>In radium solution, with her toiiRii*before painting watch face* of th«-kind one reads tn ,the dark.

Tbe Instruction was given, accordIng to C. H. Granger, first vice presldent nnd superintendent, by a womansupervisor, unidentified. Mrs. CardwKM paid $12.50 a week. She laterleft her employment to serve as awnltress In the Wnterbury hospital,where she subsequently died.

Falling 111 shortly after her marrlage, recently, she complained of vio-lent pains In her neck and head Doc-tors at first diagnosed her conditionas sinus '"•"TP<>t|nn.

Thought for TodayWhy U It that a mother regards her

own bad little bo; as an angel andber neighbor's good little boy as—not?—Jotut Andrew Holmes.

Lebifh at WuWBarr.

COALW. allow B0« MI-tea raduotko If pal* far

fan 1Q days or CMS.

ICE and WOODGirt Us A CrU 111 S Par* Aafce*

RYMSHA I CO., Inc. .Mt State SL

HOLOHAN « S .GARAGE

Dunlop Tire* and Tube*Tire and Tub* Repairing

Full Line of Auto AccessoriesCor. Amboy Ave. and Second St. WOODBRIDGE'

W O O D B R 1 D G E

NEW YORKCANDY KITCHEN

Uanufacturers and Dealers inStrictly, Para

CANDIES AND ICE CREAM

66 Main St. Woodbridge. Tel. 43

GUSTAV BLAUM

Groceries and Provisions82 Main Street Woodbridge

for Cats and Weundf1 Prevent infection! Treat

every cut, wound orscratch with this power-ful non-poisonous anti-septic Zooite actuallykills germs. Helps toheal, too.

,—Please mention Woodbridge Independent when buying.

ANNOUNCING OPENINGOF ANOTHER

Warner-Quinlan Gas StationTHURSDAY MAY 31

At MAIN ST. and AMBOY AVE.WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Our "Mileage Gasoline" regularly 17 cents including t«T

On Thursday, Friday and SaturdayWiU Be Sold At

M cents per gallon/I I le n^\(Including Tax)

Refineries at Warner, N. J.

WARNER-QUINLAN CO.Petroleiim Products

"MILEAGE GASOLINE ff

NAVICOALBRIQUETS OF THE BEST CLEAN ANTHRACITE

SmokelessHigh Heat

OdorlessLow Ash

New Prices Effective May 1Cash Price* Delivered in

WOODBRIDGE SEWAREN CARTERET AVENEL

Chestnut $9.75Stove $1Q.75

Navicoal CorporationMail AddressP. O. Box 393

Perth Amboy, N. J.

Telephone2781

Perth Amboy, N. J

I THE PERTH AMBOY II

I GAS LIGHT COMPANY

I206 SMITH STREET

II

I2 Heating and Cooking Appliances J

I Ruud Automatic and Storage I

Water Heaters JNew Process Gas RangesI

i

Ia

I

Con-Den-Rit Radiant LogsOdorless—Efficient—Inexpensive

Telephone 143 Perth Amboy

4I

II

IFINNEY OF THE FORCE Reilly WilLHave a Good Cry — Pleue mention this paper to

advertisers. —

THE FEATHERHEADS .. J65*=r

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WHAT A TOEMEMD0U& SUfOVS

HtlOHAOMAOS OFYOUft,

JUSTOCCoOQeOTOME-

iINTO SOWS OF NOUft PfilENDSTOWWlWONltTSU.VOOWMW*6 BUTMTHUWSWfcLpKOFHCWitJUWADBWUP WAT BOTTLK BOSWHS KR

UASlg/

The Big Bottle Man Sneaks Home

ATUECACWDOOUA800T W£SESG<3S~UT Mt- 51IP OUT WEfQQNT.Wli4.V00?.

WH. F. MURPHYSHEET METAL WORK

Tin ti Copper u Shaet IronRoofing and Hot Air Heating

45 MAIN STREETTel. Woodbridye 98

Painless ExtractionDr. Mullas' "Sweet-Air" method meansi scientific and pain-leas way in whichto do extracting.Thousands can tes-tify to this. Charg>

i ea moderate for all(leiiUl work.

s, Bridges and Crowns

Inserted Most Paiidesa

X-RAY YOUR TEETH

FREE EXAMINATION ANDADVICB ANYTIME

So* Me First I

Have Ito Offer I

On* well appointed and thorough-ly modern offices enable us to per-form any Und of dental workwith must) and comfort to the pa-tient and at the game time do ftss quickly u fa consistent with(food work.

Dr. Mallas»* BROAD ST. /

,r

Page 9: RESS - DigiFind-It

Jrroni? I" his most crafty cnrse.

An(Cpr Injures your body, stultifies•our mtnd, B n d w o n n i 1* ?mt «ol)l- "Injured yon t a T m o r e t h a n y o n r foe-

EnrnentnfWS flonWes eaergy, Inrronac" speed, lengthens enduranrp;fiirnestness Is the great multiplier Inall effort

In helping some one younger thanTou y n are probably reaching fartherinto' the fnture wan yon could In anyoilipr way.

Say the thing briefly, but nst tootirl«fly to be remembered. Do thething quickly, but not too quickly tobe well done.

Courtesy Is brotherhood In speechnnd action. Do not talk about thebrotherhood of man until you can becourteous to t i l

cngo Dully n e * lEton at Hi*'

ACTIVITIES OF WOMENSeveral prominent hnnkn In Peking

anil Shsnehnl, Thins, lire nnw efficient-ly mannged by women.

Mm. I.cflh Arcupt Chile* of Kenll-worth It the first woman mayor to beelected In North Carolina.

There are IB widows of soldiers ofthe War of 1812 still on the pensionroll at WO a month each.

Senorlta Ortuzar, the new consul (orChile at Hull, li the first woman tobe appointed a conaul In England.

In Ruula marriage doee Dot changenationality. Thla li true also In Argentlna, Chile, Colombia, Panama,Paraguay, and Uruguay.

HOUSE OF TALKIES

FRIDAY and SATURDAY 2—FEATURES—22—FEATURES—2

BUSTER KEATON in"Spite Marriage"

With (SOUND)ADDED FEATURE—

BOB STEEL In "HEADING FOR DANGER"

SUN. - MON.—June 2 -- 3100% SINGING AND TALKING

SEE and HEARJWARNER

inVITAPHONE ACT—THE HAPPINESS BOYS

Comedy SUraSTAN LAUREL In "EARLY TO BED"

TUESDAY— J u n . 4 2—FEATURES!*

"BEHIND CLOSEDDOORS"

WithGASTON GLASS

"MORGAN'S

WithTIM MC

LASTRAID"

COY

WED. - THURS.-June 5 - 6

Douglas MacLean inThe Carnation Kid'

(SILENT)VITAPHONE ACT—"REALIZATION"

(ALL TALKIE)THURSDAY-SILVER NITE

Conquered_At Last!We can now boast that our Talking

Pictures are not only GOODBut THE BEST

After Many Sleepless NightsWE CONQUERED OUR SOUND PROBLEM AND WEARE HAPPY TO STATE NO MATTER WHERE YOUGO AND HEAR TALKIES YOU WILL TELL YOUR

FRIENDS THAT THE

STATE THEATREWOODBRIDGE

Has TALKIES as TheyShould Be

SEE AND HEAR THEM HERE — THEN YOU WILLTELL YOUR FRIENDS WE HAVE NOT MADE A

FALSE STATEMENTSigned,

THE MANAGEMENT.

GOOD DENTISTRYcannot be valued in dollars andcento.

Our Dentistry is GOOD.Our Dentistry la Painless. r \ . ^ l f T

by t u AIK Main-Our prices are MODERATE and oa.

within reach of the ordinary wage • * « • E»amta.ti«iearner.

DR. SCHWARTZ87 Broad Street, Elisabeth

9 A. M.—6 P. M. Mon. Wed. And Frl, 'till 8 P. M.

Decides to F W 1I'ontlat. Mich. - nnlzar, pei

flnnll wlui came to lili home Infondue liy mine misstep In hisenrly life whlrh landed him Inshipment of hnnnnns from Hnnriuras, at lust tins ended til,"sulks," and come out of hi*<hell for fond.

Fot several months Halmtvoald have nothing to du willhumanity and the food his—oiIs It "her"—human captor* 01fered. At last, however, hungnovercame timidity and the fetn»was on.

It was a quite a Job to find ouiwhat Balgar craved as nourishment, but an offer of breadsoaked In milk, overcame th>last vestige of shyness and h.(easts copiously on this concortlon.

>••••*<

Judge Sentence* OhioYouth to Have Haircut

Akron, Ohio. — Basllo Conterem.fifteen, received a nnlque punishmenthere when he was sentenced by Juvcnlle Judge .1. 0. Splcer to hnve hi*long, girlish hnlr cut.

Hasllo was extremely proud of hl»five-Inch tresses that lay In perfectwaves over bis head, and pleaded withthe court (or Mercy.

"T'lease don't cnt my balr," heliPRged. "1 like It long." Bnt JudgeSplcer wns firm.

Basllo was arraigned on a chargef playing "hookey" from school."t'erhaps you could get to the bo*

on time if you took lest time to combyour hair," the court commented.

A fen minutes later a barber hadshorn the long, brunette locks—en-vied by the girls—from the anguishedyouth's head.

-1"WT B S ^ f p 7 —• W T T » 't TGfb-Whtt-may prut* to be

a precedent for other wluml *y*temsthrnughont tne country tins boon sotby New York city. In HIP mrtitllment,and In mnny enses the cllinlnntlon ofhome work.

The new policy won announced hyDr. William J. O'SIIOR, suiiprlntondpot»f sfhoota. Lioctor (VRlwm's w nmpndatlons, effective linnvedlntely, pro-Tide:

Elimination of all homo work Inthe first three years of elementsryschools.

Light home study assignments forthe next three years.

Only the most essential and attractWe forms of home work for tbe D[vper grsdes.

Junior high schools to be limitedto not more than an hour and a halfof home work a day.

Abolition of sll monotonous form*of home work.

Doctor O'Snea made It plain thattie did not approve parental aid Inthe work of students. De also classlfled as "monotonous and useless repetltlon" hyne work that Involved writ-ing a large amount of formal penmanshlp drills or words a comber oitimes, or the copying from1 books andthe analysing of complicated sentences.

FURNISHED rooms, centrally locat-ed near hus and train; »PPJy 40Green street Or phonn 597-J, Wood-bridge, N. J.W. 1. fi-17*.

LARGE boarding house, completelyfurnished all improvements. Writ*

Box RM, Woodbridge Independent.W. I. 5-17*.

FOR RENT

TWO Furnished rooms; light house-keeping if desired; apply 829 Co-

humbus avenue corner Grenvillestreet, Woodbridg*.V . I. 6-24.

FURNISHED Apartment—2 rooms•nd kitchenette and bath; also

large room for light housekeeping.531 Ra.hw«y avenue, Woodbrtdge, N,

W. I. & C. P. 6-17,24.

Con»ul'» Two-Ye&r WatchTraps Killer of Three

Prague, CMchoslovaklu.—The vigi-lance of a Czechoslovak Inn consularofficial at t'arl* was credited recentlywith solving a two-year-old murdermystery Involving three young nativesof this country.

Rudolph Skalsky. thirty-three, a me-chanic, confessed that be shot thethree. Skalsky was apprehendedthrough ills passport signature aftertbe official had scrutinized every sig-nature since the murders.

Skalsky said he accidentally shotUacborovksl and Kilka and Muellerattacked him. He 9re<1 at them andkilled both.

Loaf of Bread Bakedin 1853 on Exhibition

Slweed, LuL—1 small loaf of bread,said to have been baked Good Friday,March 22, 1853, Is on exhibition here.It Is pwned by Mrs. Bee Hough Bart-lett, eighty-nine, and was baked bjher mother. Mrs. Hartlett says alegend that a loaf baked on Good Fri-day will endure forever prompted Itsmaking and its preservation for 76years.

FOR RENT—April 1st; B-room kousewith basement and garage; all im-

provements; splendid location; phone114 Woodbridge.W. I. 8-22tf.

BRANTONDepartment Store

142 Smith StreetPERTH AMBOY, N. J.

Branton's Millinery Dept.

HOUSESHOUSES for sale or for rent; money

to loan. DeVoung, Avenel, N. J.,Phone Woodbridge 929-J or Wood-bridge 240-W. 8-ltf.

6 rooms, bath, shower, garage, fireplace, and aU modern improve-

ments, inchidinff porch and Windowscreens;1 apply 152 Grove avenue,

MILLINERYSALE

FOR SALE

Eatat CUaai UpSpringfleld, Mo.—The champion food

consumer of Missouri Is Billy Slierman, of Springfield He ate a meal of24 sandwiches, In doughnuts, 24 friedeggs, two T-twine steaks, trench friedpotatoes, and a whole cherry pie. BeIs six feet, two Inches tall, and weighsSM pounds

Car Skidding It Studiedby Iowa State College

A brawny motor truck dragged atouring car sideways across a smoothhard-surfaced field near Des Molnes,recently, to find out exactly how muchforca It takes to make a car skid.Knowledge disclosed by this test byexperts of tows State college Is toaid 1n the design of banked turns onImportant highways.

The poll of the truck was measuredby a dynamometer, an Instrument re-sembling a spring scale for weighing,that was inserted In a link In thetowing chain. A pointer registeredHie pounds of force required to dragthe car.

LIBRARY table, combination deskand book case, also child's high chair,stroller and toys, very reaaonable.

oodta-Mfce 260-M,W. I. B-24tf.

SEVEN piece oak dining room set,price $25.00; also 1 re*d porch set

four pieces; price $25.00I; Mrs. W.Bening, Ridjrely avenue. Iselin, N. J.W. I. 5-24. gl.

FOB SALE—8 piece Oak diningroom suite; also Columbia Phono-

graph and 70 records, ch *A. Rice, 28 Nielson strGreen street, Woodbridge.W. I. tf.

Thousands of BeautifulTrimmed Hats Up To

The Minute InStyle

near

FINANCE Company h*v« 18 Grandand Player Piano* which they will

tell for unpaid balance, If yon arcgoini to purchat* i nit rumen t In nextthru* years write (or appointmentand ae« thete wonderful bargains.Addreit Box R, Independent.

666ii a Prescription for

Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,Bilious Fever and Malaria.I ii the most ipeedy remedy known

Motor Busses to CarryYoung School Children

A growing tendency to use schoolbusses to carry city children betweenhome and school is noted In a recentBarvey of the motor coach.

School officials have Been the wis-dom of using busses to keep childrenoff the streets, avoiding traffic hatcards and preventing loitering on tbeway to or from school The surveyalso showed that busses offer speediersertfee than furnished by other trans-portation facilities. SLx-cyllnder schoolbusses with four-speed transmissionsand four-wheel hydraulic brakes arebuilt by a reputable firm. Capacitiesrange from 13 to 52 children.

BUNGALOW, 4 rooms and bath,electric light, gas, water, sewer,

concrete street; price {3,500; easyterms; 5 Wedgewood avenue, Wood-bridge; inquire J. E. Hamed, PostOffice Building, Woodbridge.W. I. 2-15t£.

BUNGALOW—Five rooms; all im-provements; telephone Woodbridge

260-R or 675.

GRAND PIANO—Only mad threemonth*; will sacrifice. Time Pay-

menti to reliable, people. AddreuBox L, Independent.

TODAY and TOMORROW—On the Screen

SEE AND HEAR

NOAH BEERYOLIVE BORDEN

—In—"LOVE IN THE DESERT"

ON THE STAGE

5-Big Acts-5VAUDEVILLE

HARRY "SID" WHITEMastar of Ceremoniee

And His. Gang

CLASSIFIED AD1

SUN. « MON. -TUES.SEE AND HEAR

WithSOUND

GRETA GARBOIn

"WILD ORCHIDS"With

LEWIS STONENILS ASTHER

Also

VITAPHONE ACTS

WED. « THURS.SEE AND HEAR

WithSOUND

"7 FOOTPRINTS TOSATAN"

WithTHELMA TODD andCRE1GHTON HALE

Associate FeatureGLENN TRYON In

"THE KID'S CLEVER"

NEXT WEEKFRIDAY — SATURDAY

See and HearWILLIAM HA1NES

TALK — In"ALIAS JIMMYVALENTINE"

—Also—5—ACTS VAUDEVILLE—S

COMING—SUN. - MON. --TUES.—June 9 - 1 0 - 1 1

See and HearDOUGLAS FAIRBANKS

Talk—In'THE IRON MASJK"

Classified-advertisements only onecent a word; minimum charge 25c.

MORTGAGESWE have a $3500 mortgage which

can be placed immediately, onWoodbridge property. J. P. Genty &Co., Woodbridge. Phone 283.W. I. 5-31; 6-7.

AUTOS FOR SALE1927 Ford Tndor.1926 Ford Sedan.1926 Ford Coupe.1928 Chevrolet Coupe,1826 Chevrolet Coach.1926 Star Roadster.1926 Essex Coach (2).1925 Studebaker 4-door Sedan.

GREEN MOTORS, INC.,363 New Brunswick Ave.

Open Evenings. Tel. 3526

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

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

WANTEDCLEAN RAQ6 mates , else «* ham4

kerchief oi larger, 5c a poundMiddlesex Press, 20 Green street

WORK WANTEDALL kinds of cement work. Side-

walks a specialty. Hans Sorensen,Port Reading, N. J. Telephone Weod-brid«e 502-R.W. I. 5-3, 10, 17.

CARPENTER AND BUILDERSCREENS hung comphfte, fS.50 and

up. Screen doors, porches_ enclos-ed, garages, repairs and painting. De-ferred payments. One tihird down,balance over period of months.Write, Newton G. Burns, LincolnHighway,; Tselin, N. J.W. I. 6-24, 31; 6-7, 14,21, 28.

CHAUFFEURA refined man age 30, wishes to act

as chauffeur or escort evenings andholidays. Write care Box W. B. D.,Woodbridge Independent.W, I. 5-17, 24, 31; 6-7.

TINNING and sheet metal workdone. Expert job work also fur-

nace work. Phone Woodbridge 1246,or see Henry Jaiiaen, Allen street,n«ar White Church, town.W. I. 5-4; 6-24*.

NURSERYFlowering Shrubs, Golden Bell, Maok-

Orange, Bridal Wreath, Coral Dog-wood, etc.,

3 to 4 feet high, 60 cents each, 10for $4.50.

Pink, White, Rose Climbers, 50 centseach.

Rhubarb, 4 year clumps, 9 for $1.00.Bargains in Fruit Trees.Evergreens of all sizes from f 1.60 np.All plants grown locally and dug

while you wait. JANSA'S NURS-ERY, SEWAREN, N. J.

W. I. 4-5 to 6-17*.

DRAFTINGBUILDING and quantity survey serv-

ice, P. G. Fredericks, Barron ave-nue., Woodbridge, N. J.W. I. 6-17, 24, 31.

HELP WANTED

RADIO SALESMANMAN capable of installing and ser-

vicing radio seta. Box S. Wood-bridge, independent.

EXCELLENT opportunity for manbetween the ag*i of 25 and 85 who

has had experience in chain storework. Prefer man now employed aaassistant to manager and thorough-ly acquainted with general merchan-dise Box li., Wuudbridge Independ-ent. ' ,

MEN to iell F m o . , Radio and Fur-niture in thii (Action. Foreign

• peaking preferred. Salary and torn-mi»ioni apply LUDWIG'S, 283 Mad-i.uu avenuo, Perth Amboy.

APARTMENT WANTEDAl'ARTMKNT, 1 or b rooms, unfur-

nished with iin|>n>vuinenta, locatedin tfuod resuit'tiLisil section of Wood-bridge or vicinity, fox family ofthree, U yeai uld cliild. O Jagielaki,160 Avenue C, Buyomw.6-24*.

TRAINING SCHOOL ORINSTRUCTION

NEWARK BETH ISRAEL SCHOOLOF NURSING. New 360 bed non-

sectarian hospital offers a general 3year course of training to young wo-men who have had at least 2 years ofhigh school and are over 18 years ofage. Unexcelled hospital and educa-tional facilities, allowance, books,uniforms furnished while training.Further details furnished by Directorof Nurses, Beth Israel Hospital, New-ark, N. J.W. I. 5-17, 24, 311 6-7,

— Classified Ads. Bring Results —

ROOM WANTEDBACHELOR Engineer desires room;

Urge, clean, *iui«t. Bunny, com-fortubliy furnished, wall illuminated;preferably with running water.' (Re-ftnml American family with oa room-era), either in Wuodb ridge Barronnvenue vicinity or in Railway, SouthWest residential section, side streets

only. Pleue write particular*,-, BoxC, Wdbrjd«e IndepeEd^ut

ThrowAway

Nothing!YW can inakt; that old suit

look like now- -why throw itaway'.' Don't be wasteful. Werehabilitate old garments atridiculously low prices. Justbring us your old clothes—we'll make 'em like new cloth-es.

You can't go wrong whenyou let us do your cleaning anddyeing1—we are experts of longexperience.

NEW YORKCUSTOM TAILOR

68 Main St. Woodbridge

PutetFelts

Those featherweightfelts that are both su-perior iii quality andfashioning—models forstreet, sports, businessand better wear, inlarge and small head-

• New SmartStraw*

All the new strawsthat are fashionablefor summer, axe in-cluded in this gala hatsale. This is a timelyopportunity to secureyour hat wardrobe.

4

Here you will' find a wonderful selection ]for the Baby, The Flapper, the YouthJful Matron and the Mother.

MILLJNKRY DEPARTMENT . . , MAlfl F

'&'h

Page 10: RESS - DigiFind-It

News of the World Told in PicturesTo Try Comeback \-\ First Lady Attends Horse Show

The latest photo of Mrs. May Button Bundy, former national andworld's champion woman tennk player, who Is now staging a comeback. ,

Salvaged

SNAPPED AT FIRTH OP FORTH, SCOTLAND—Not a strange newkind of houseboat—but the German warship Seylitz, which was scuttledat Scaoa Flow, being towed under the great bridge here to Roeyth, whereIt will be broken up. The salvagers aie camping out on the bottom ofthe ship, j

A'ter Eleanor Smith's Record

Marjuilu Urawluul, twenty, avminx, ol Uw Angeles, whu Is }planning lor June an assault on tlie women's world record for eiidur- :ante flying that is now held by Miss Klemtor Smith ol New York J

Studying Scientific Farming

one oi Uie ulrl MudeuU ol Stud ley Colice. >•walking titrough a fldfcery arbor armed w1'.; i»~la one of ISO girl agricultural student* wr.u •/« .*•liiK within the wall* of old atudley

o.', ,;\n

Urui-

The "imoossible" Is Fact

Mrs. Hertwi H»cn« n i r * i s in* E^esubnriftj i. m. watching trip o.eius at me National capiiai r.orseShow. Left to ridrt: MJ» ft oft. rwniiw. KKTTOBJ K Mn Hoover; Mrs. Hoover; Melvin Hazen, Vice President

j of the Harm Shorn, xni Csraraannfer md Mm TaHtfcna, naval aide.

Studying Crime

G. A. Opsha** al "ax &mttea&. Cal. Police Department, who holds the national free pistol shootlnj 'recorij, is sho/r^ nxmmmt Siw liiufieajf -'aKchanlcal men," with which the Police Department Is now prac-ticing u a crime deterrent- Tie Jiunmiia ire moved about on tracks, ,

Ride "Em, Cowgirl

SNAif ED AT CHSCMJO-1TUwsr nw jjrl» Wote asd crained these broncos themselves and they cando all kinds at tfarillnn «iinD* « m auar it<ed& They are Viola Breckenildge and Barbara Brown, twonoted co*pri nder» i< Wtotsskuv lU S

L Potted for Atlantic Hop

GUOtHSEYL.'TT GROJH0 •

I::'1 airplane "joysiiijc. cne on eitivr side ot the above milk wagon,and Drakes and clutch c:n:ro:s also on th" outside and on either side.The wa?on can be eontro^Ied from the sidewalk, and Is especially de-signed lor ihe milk deliverers short stop routes.

"Shoots" Out Trapped Men

SNAPPED AT 8PEZIA, IT*AIA-The exit and entrance to the newBelloni escape tube on the submarine Humaya, which was successfullytested in the Gulf of Spezla. A diver is shown in the compartment,which to filled with water. When the submarine was under water com-pressed air forced the divet out ol the tube, and he came safely to the

, surface.

I His Father Gained Fame as Driver '

.in udd "shot" ut young William H Vandtroilt holding tae "box" ,ot ti'e famous old London-Dover coach Venture at the Jacob's HillHorse Show at Seeltonk,

A "Movie" Generation Passes

rvUvwakc

tlut i

v «m 1m& otf am. mmm mttlnc at Rouxvelt Pieid, N. Y, fordtgbt to Paris, u t ail set and are hoping

n.nry wajthall wai a slur in fllms twenty y«ui ago To-day b« ll•p^.-jr.ng ait the lather ol Charles "Buddy" Rogers ioPmrnawnt'i i l l -dh'i-i iu, titled "A Man Must Fight," Fifteen ye»n ago Waltlall pUyedo. .-»*«te Mary plckford. A year ago Rogers w u her leading man.

Page 11: RESS - DigiFind-It

job in Chicago and left. ,nr|) G E H B R W W Stifm t» • V*> » OIIC«RO ana i«nL " ' u F A V O R S T O Hiintlnntnn. Her Inst words (o her

WITH f"'w _ . . — n former hiifllinnrt wrrr, "If ymi ore flvprPHOTOGRAPHER

r h f «£t Virginiann<1 hired M l *hired "Sfllyers

t Virginihired Ml* A4ell« Thorntonhired " ^ f e l , ,„ l 0T( !l0T(!

wd1 " •

they WWtt «m«

divorced nnrt wnnt tn rpmnrry mi>, I'llhe wnltlnR for ynn."

"Whrn ahe mild that," Rftys Sn!yets. "1 wns on the point of ffolng withher for rtnrlnR the period of time wehad bwo divorced I hnd hnd the op-portunity to atml.v her from t!ir> Mnnfl-point of nn rnitnliler nnii I hnd grownto rtnllre thnl 1 RMII 1ovod her. But[ let her go nnfl we didn't write. Rhedidn't want to cnnse me or my wifeany nnhnpplnesn nnd tried to dropcompletely out ol our lives."

Ri MarrlM Flrtt Wlf#,But It didn't work out that waj

could not forget hit formerThe fwennfl Mrg Snlyerg re-

ft ; iind ftnallj » few weeln ago.she nnd Rnlyern were divorced.

8nlyeTg promptly began tracing theflrtt Mrg. Snl.yer*. He located her InChlcngo. He wired her that he hadbeen divorced Promptly he got a wirefrom her laying:

Tour telep-iim made me happierthan I ever haTe heen since the daywe were rnjirrled. Coming at once."

go she came bach. And a few dayiago they wer« remarried.

"1 believe everybody la happy atlast,' aays Salyert.

In a short time ineIn IOT

torc—-we tried to forget and mbmerge

i « h» taking on more and morel occnpy our into*." aayi Sal

on-tbnt In falrnesa to everyI.honld divorce mj wife

"4 , „•„" mantod on Jane 9, 1027" 1 nl l three remained the bMt offrlfmu And wher, 8aly«n and hli

•'.">!;

Jealous of Fiancee,St«*U H«r CUthinf

Cl»y.—Becanae he waa leal-of Mis* Thelma Mlcham, bit fl<

Icee, Roy nrewer, nineteen, robbedher of her line clothing and JewelryIn belief thnl the Ion to her wouldaffect Mlna Mlchnm's popularity withother men. Brewer wn» arrested andpleaded entity. Judge Clarence A.Bnrney gnve the youth three years Inthe state penitentiary to "get over be-ing Jealous."

Can Run Too Slow;Youth Steali One

SL Louis.—Stuart Overlie was lategetting home and bad tired of waitingfor the owl car to 4ake him there.

He went Into a car barn and helpednlmself to a street car In which besturted home. He was overinken trypolice after a twn-mlle ride.

The First Mrs. ftatyere Went Motif.

new iirlde went on their honeymoon,tl:e tirst Mrs. Salyers went along, too.Tii. v cnme back to Huntlngton and ailthrtu wvrked together In the studio,

winn vacation time came they allwent rnm>iiipr on another, trio. After

Admit They Don'tLike Women Smokers

Syracuse, N. T.-A few aidelights on students of Syracuseuniversity were revealed recently by the resulu of queatloiinalres circulated among them 0)Prof Jnllan D. Corrlngton of UW•oology department.

Of the 8A collegians taking thetest, 30 admitted falling In anr>out of love at random, 57 laiothey wise-cracked, « devouicantaloup* sans Reasoning, and51 are "agin" the present-da>usurpation of grntleuttn'lJggJLIng rights by women.

The profesaor said be gavethe leMs not as a psychologicalexperiment but u a means ol

, discovering variations of thougbi1 «mODg tne atudeota. They were', allowd three seconds ID which' m answer eAcb question.

— Pleas* mention this paper to ad-yertlsera; it helps you, it helps themit helps your paper. —

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of

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The service ia in accord withour excellent cuiBine. Thitfia adelightful place to dine forthose who instinctively rejectthat which is not the best.

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nttttnrt in rhnrmfnji rmiod ityU—mmlrr/uiiw r>uU«. with, borad/iiliMinut )tnUh—4UU-nctbn ant at-trnrttv* th4 tximplttt ni((« ha»hani*ome /«ili tin b«d, roomfcAut o/ drauxrt, targt itrcner andtharmtnf rmch vanity. Don't

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168 Smith Street, corner Madison Avenue Perth Amboy

""By A.FQreiner

Often Neglect is (!arules»iityet in auoh soil the hailiit of In-ditferenct: may jfrow. W« arebeing thoughtful about, our owncontentment when we arethoughtful of tht; lmi>i>mese andcomfort of others.

People exproti confidence inour service and know that w«••rre with contideration everymoderately pricod otc»iion.

FUNERAL HOME44 Green Street

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Est. 1004Tel. Woodbridge 284

R. A. Hirner A. F. GreinerFuneral Director*

Moderate Prices andEasy Terms

on

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HERE'S the ideal washer forthe small house or apart'

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Only $99.75 cash or $105.75 on terms.

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What part tboes this bank play in community

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More than half of oar new business comes frompresent depositors and borrowers speaking goodwords for us.

The Perth AmboySavings Institution

210 SMITH STREET,, (X)UNKR MAl'LE STREET

The Oldest Bank in Perth Amboy

BR1EGSMEN'S STORE

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^Thor laundry equipment may bepurchased separately or togetheron terms of $5 down and eight-teen months to pay the balance.

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Keep youthlonger!

cleanse the systemof poisons

Two of the great enemies to youthand vitality are delayed elimination•nd intestinal poisons. To keep your-self free from both these common diffl-cultiee will help you to stay young.

With the use of Nujol you can do ittoo. For Nujol absorbs body poisonsand carries them off, preventing theirabsorption by the body. Nujol alsosoftens the waste matter and bringsabout normal evacuation. It is harm-kes; contains no drugs or medicine.It won't cause gas or griping pains, oraffect the stomach or kidrays, Jilvaiyturner druggist has Nujol. Make sureyou get the genuine. Look for theNujol bottle with the label on the backthat you can read right through thebottle. Don't delay, get Nujol today.

Feen&mintThe Laxative

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NKWAHEN Mrs. Frank UFnir.j

cr lit her homo in Rroml Mrppt, f o r ,MMU (',. Ifnrilrt AnnVrftnn, who is tolie niarrifil on ./"ly 20, to WalterIhill.tn <>( r.iirlt'rcl. The hriilc to bercroivfvl many h<»nul iful jrift**. Rc-frcBhmonfs w^ro ^ervwl. Thow* pros- ^rnt. WIMT: 1

Miss Ethyl Woinblatt, Miss Anee- ,1 iTir- Puroi, Mins Hcttina (Jalassi, Mrs. j(>. (iHluuii, Mr*. A Ilnuer, Mm. C. ,IlniiiT, Mr*. John lago, Sr., Mrs.John H. .la)fo, Mrs. Georffe .lago,Mr> M. IftRo, Mrs. William Jenkins,Mr-H. Lulu Courtney, Mrs. Willis Hull,Mm. Mary Hulsmnn, Mrs. GeorgeVan IVvpnter, Mira Thelma SchwartzMiss Edythel Hook of Perth Amboy.

MTH. ohn Mfldv«r, of Newark; HisaQniifR, of South Amboy; Mrs. LouisI'pterwin, of Fords.

Mrs. H. B. Slater, Mr*. Grumtn,Mas Helen Augustine, MtM RuthAuiruBtine and Mm Rothweiler, ofWoo<lbrid(re; Miiw Emma Thomaa,Miss Mary Thomaa, Mrs. JamesSmith. Jjunen Smith, and Jerry La-Uoccz, of IStaten Island.

Mrs. l/ouin Schmidt, Mrs, RichardGardner, Mm. Smith, Mrs. Pehrirurer,Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Hendershot, MissMae Moore, Mrs. John Thomas, Ifrs.Frank L»Farrp Mrs. Henry Nickenig,Mrs. H. Dayer and Miss Anderson, ofSewaren, and Mrs. Charles Dalton, ofCarteret.

Early Railroad Sifonl.There were oo signals In the earlj

days ot railways. When drivers oftrains met on a single line they had toargue " ont Later, a post was erectedmidway between stations so that "hewho had passed the pillar must go on.and tb« coming man go hack."

Ifaortnc* It BltaaProbably the most trusting nature

Is lliut of'the person who goes fromhouse to boose with a sample case,trying to get orders for something,nod thinks no one Is at home becausethe bell Isnt answered.—Ohio WattJournal.

PARENTaL "BUNK"

"Nero bas a heart ot gold. Bewouldn't hurt a fly."

"My Uttle boy Is going to be PresIdent some day, aren't you, Benedict,r

"Salome Is a Uttle angel. She doeseverything out of consideration forHim*."

"Cleopatra takes after me; a typi-cal home girl. And as for boys—shecan't see "em."

"Judas Is going to be a great mansome day. Lie has such a knack ofmaking friends."

"Tes, our little Saul hns such asweet disposition. He wouldn't say across word to anyone."

"Nobody can say that my littleAttlln ever started a fight. He's aperfect little gentleman."—KansasCity Star.

-•««^rtt'r * " W » f ••

: tnnoc«nt M M Serre*Seven Years in Priton ;Dctrolf. — For wvpn yenrs

Boh Flniiuhpr. with thrP« cltatlon* for hrnvpry tn the »Wnrlil wnr, wns H nnnibpr tn.Inc-liHon Btnle prismi bucauso,oin<-l:il* tinw belli-vp. he wn»

onvliied (if bank ronnnd mntpiu-eil to serve

from 1.") to HO ypnrs.Flmighpr has bppn relPBiied

on parole. Illi flnrt days offreedom will be devoted to aneffort to completely clear hl»name.

Flangher my* be bad -woo agirl away from Fred Thompson. ;Later, Uk' 1022, Thompson and .Flangher were arrested as 'members of the Rang of fonr •bandits that robbed a bankhere. Thompson pleaded gallty

J and, to avenge the loss of hligirl, Implicated Flangher, aoconllnR to the latter.

Flnugher proteited his Inno-1 cence In vain. Tbe gtrl now ts' ' married and has a family.

I l l l l I I I I I IM I I 111 I III1HH

EERIE GHOST FOUNDTQ BE SIMPLY AIRY

GraT*y»rd Mystery IsFreak of Radio.

Only

Say* & • Sag*"Utter no falsehoods," said HI Ho,

the sage of Chinatown, "and be con-tent with much silence. Rememberthat truth Is most precious, to beweighed with care and expendedsparingly."—Washington Star.

POR RHNT—7-room house, all im-provements, one-car garage. In

Carteret; apply to Stephen Toth, 87Second street, Woodbridge, or callWoodbridge 1178.C. P. 6-31; 6-7.

Buffalo, N. Y.—Sounds of music andthe qnaverlng voice of a woman Is-suing from a mausoleum In Pine Hillcemetery at last has been esposed nsthose of—bot It's a bit too early Inthe story to tell everything.

It all started a few weeks ago whena couple parked In a car near thecemetery heard a voice of eerie sweetness singing In the darkness.

The couple tarried no longer. Theword went around that the ghost ofa woman sang nightly In the ceme-tery. '<

Crowds collected along the roadsideto listen to the voice that Issued fromthe grave. Some, a trifle bolder thanthe rest, entered the graveyard tosearch for the source of the voice.

Coming upon the mausoleum, thebold ones heard a woman's voice andthe notes of s pipe organ. Fear-stricken, they rushed back to tell (hefaint-hearted ones outside the fencesof their discovery.%

The crowds grew larger each nightWhere no policemen were needed be-fore to handle traffic on the roadsnear the cemetery, five were C4HMnoon to direct the great number ofcars that drove by.

And then things reached a climax.A small group of Investigators, Includ-ing a reporter, decided to get at thebottom of things—ghost or no ghostIn they went, leaving a gaping crowdat the front gate. ' •

"Hear that," one said, as they ap-proached the mausoleum. Sure enough,a woman's voice came qoaverlnglyfrom the tomb.

And then oat of the darkness•trolled a police officer.

"That's no ghost," he said. "Listenmore closely and you'll find tnafs anoutdoor speaker on a radio shop overthere on Harlem road. The mauso-leum catches the sound waves andwhen yon stand close by yon can hearthe music and talking."

Thus the voice that was thought bymany to be supernatural was later re-vealed as that of WGB, one of Buf-falo's largest broadcasting stations.

and Drowns in Bathtubnoffglo, N. T.—To escape desth In

the swirling currontB of the Niagarariver after his rowhoftt was npset byMI \f* floft, only to loss his life hjdrowning In his own hnthtob n WPPVlater, was the fnto of John n. Ol«t.twenty-two yenrs old, of IIMH city,whose body was found In n tub of wa-ter.

A defective RIM heater was stillburning In the bnthroom. The cor-oner found that ftsptiyxlntion had firstmnde the victim helpless and thaiwhen unconscious he bad slipped un-der the water.

The circumstances of Olst's deathrecalled the fate of Bobby Leach, whowent over the 'Horseshoe falls tn a bar-rel, only to slip on an orange peeland suffer fatal In'nrles while travel-<ng In Australia to tell of his exploitsut NIagars fntls.

Modern Fagin TrainsDog to Commit Theft

Watsonvllle, Calif.—Henry Andrewswas,arrested for sending his dog Intoiin automobile accessory shop and di-recting the snlmal to pick up a smallpackage which the dog brought to Itsmaster.

Theft of the pncRnge WOOM naveiwn completed successfully had not al>ol Iceman observed the dog enter thestore while Andrews stood across thestreet.

The officer waited until the animalretreated with the package, which con-tained a motormeter, then nabbed An-drews.

Victors In RallyTroop SI Comes Out From Be-

hind At End Of Meet, andWins In Spectacular Finish.

The annual spring rally of thpfourteen troops in the Raritan Coun-cil, Boy Scouts of America, held atthe local Parish Houne firld Unt Saturday afternoon, drew a large crowd ;of fan* who witnessed a spectacularfinish, and who also beheld Troop .11of Fords wind up in first place. Up to jthe end of the affair, it looked asthough Troop 101 of Parlin would

be the sure winners, but the Fordsboys put on steam, and took therally meet in a spectacular sprint inthe final events.

Five troops were outstanding intheir efficiency in the meet. Fords,Pmrlln, South Anthoy, Perth Amboyand. Woodbridge finished in the ordernamed. Upon arriving on the field,about three o'clock, the scouts -werelined up for inspection, under A. G.R. Quelch who acted as marshal.Commissioner Kalquist and Execu-tive Lunn were accompanied by meetofficials in the inspection tour. Thevarious events which followed, weretypkal of boy scout training andstudying. Lack of space causes us toomit it detailed discussion of thsmeet, but the final scores and resultsfollow:

Dressing: Edward Gry»bek, TroopNo. 101; Arnold Neilson, Troop No.7 second; Ira McCabe, Troop No.6, third. *

Flint and steel fire making: RolandAbegg-! Troop No. 6, first; Ed-wardBalog, Troop No. 51, second; WalterNorman, Troop No. 6, third.

surtwiflilr! *#>^pk * » * . -ii---.-Ptech, Trobp No. 101, first; PredReese, and Andrew Peterson, TroopNo. fll. second; Walter Norman and.lack Longwtreet, Troop No. fi, third;David HrxlesRnd Frnnk Miller. TroopNo. 51, fourth.

How and drill fire makinc: RudolphPiw:h, Troop No. 101. first; l isterLaniren, Troop No. 3, second; Wll-linm Peifrelbark, Troop No. 91, third;Carl Fritzini?er, Trodp No. 6, fourth.

Potato relay race: South AmboyTroop No. 91, first; Perth AmboyTroop No. 6, second.

Water boiling: Alton Wolny,Troop No. ai, first; Raymond Peter-son, Troop No. 31, second: John Do-bntj-nski, Troop No. 91, third; JohnGardner, Troop No. 61, fourth.

String burning: Christian Tn<jmp-son, Troop No. 51, first; Alex Staub,Troop No. 51, second; Thomas Mc-Keon, Troop No. 101, third; WilliamRansen, Troop No. 10, fourth.

Knot tying: Troop No. 51, Fords,first- Troop No. 13, Perth Amboy,second; Trbop No. 91, Smith Amboy,third. „_

Th« final point score was: TroopNo. 51, Fords, 27; Troop No. 101,Purlin, 23; Troop No. 91, Perth Am-boy, 13; Troop No. 6, Perth Amboy,15; Troop No. 81. Woodibridge, 13;Troop No. IS, Perth Amboy, 8; TroopNo. 3, Perth Am/boy, 6; "Troop No.10, Perth Amboy, 6; Troops No. 7of Perth Amboy, and No. 82 of Car-teret, 4 each; Troops No. IB of PerthA,m*>oy, and No. 82, of Woodbridge,3 each; Troops No. 33 of Woodbridgeand N». «} «f CoUmi*, 1 aach.

Daty'i l*p«rativ* C*IIIf we take to ourselves the wings

of the morning, and dwell In the ut-most parts of the sea, duty performedor duty violated Is still with as, forour happiness la oar misery.—Ex-change.

On Trespass ChargeSong of Siren Leads T h r e e Men,

One Marr ied Into C l u t c h e s

of L * w — P a r o l e d To P a y Af-

ter Repr imand .

James McCann, 29, of Cliff roadPort Reading; George PrisUs, 23, OfMilton avenue, Woodbridge, and Roland Gutnecht, 24, of 61 Randolphstreet, Carteret, were arraigned inpolice court this morning on chargesof treapassinjr on railroad propertyand were paroled to pay fines of$7.60 each byt Recorder Vogel.

The men were arrested last nighton complaint of an official of theReading railroad. In police court thismorning- McCann was severely repri-manded for getting into the affairwhich led to the arrestR. He is a mar-ried mftn. Gutneeht and Pristas, bothsingle, were accompanying a womanto a boat docked at the local docks.They said that she invited them togo with her.

McCann who was with the twomen and the woman when the arrestwas made, said that he was afraidthey might all fall overboard becausethey were, under the influence of li-quor, and that he went with them tomake sure they arrived safely at theboat.

PflstM aftmttted that the yvrprmof the journey to the boat with thewoman was questionable.

As le Belai DaaabIt'i not so bad to be dumb, but It's

s great mistake to be dumb and trjto appear smart That's when It Isdiscovered how dumb we are.

"It Is always more difficult to de-termine the consequences of a greatevent than to determine its causes."—Emily Ludwlg.

APPLEGATE'S DEPENDABLE USED CARSYou are doubly sure that regardless of the savings offered at APPLE-GATE'S you are getting only dependable automobiles that have beentested and approved by expert mechanics.

We have a splendid selection of dependable used cars. AH canry a30-day guarantee. Our S-day trial assures you of satisfaction. Here area few of the many for your selection:

No. 197. 1928 STUDEBAKER DICTAT-OR SPORT COUPE—Just traded in ona Commandfr 6 Victoria. Car drivenvery low mileage by one owner. Originalfinish still bright and attractive. Equip-ped with 5 new General Balloon tires.Upholstered in a very fine grade ofwhipcord with leather rumble seat. Ademonstration will convince you of itsquality.

No. 200. 1926 CHEVROLET COACH—A 2-door model that has had the verylinest care. Tires all new. See this finecar and get our low price before goingelsewhere.

No. 203. 1927 STUDEBAKER DICTAT-OR SEDAN—A 4-door model upholster-ed in genuine Chase mohair. A very at-tractive Sedan at a very attractive price.No. 201. One of the. late model HudsonTouring cars. Motor, tires, paint, topand upholstery excellent. Just the car todrive back and fortlj to work. $45.00

No. 9. 1928 ERSKINE CLUB SEDAN—A 4-door model just out of the shop. Re-conditioned and refinished a very at-tractive Atoka Blue. Worth immediateattention of a new, low-priced car pur-chaser, A chance to save a substantialamount.

No. 188. 1928 CHEVROLET SEDAN—Original finish. Good tires. A popular 4-dpor model with many extras. Ask fora demonstration.

No. 117. 192« BUICK MASTER 6SPORT TOURING — Refinished Jetblack with white trimmings. This car isin excellent condition throughout andcan be bought right.

No. 52a. 1926 STUDEBAKER SPECIALSIX COACH—In very fine conditionthroughout. Balloon tires like new. Avery attractive 5-passenger closed carpriced right.

Applegate's Dependable Used Cars

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:30

J. ARTHUR APPLEGATEPHONES 251647 373 DIVISION STREET

PERTH AMBOY •NY OTHERS* E A S Y T E R M S . . . . T R A D E S A C C E P T E D

CRESCENT THEATRETHE THEATRE BEAUTIFUL

PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

SATURDAY - SUN&AY-

'THEWith An AH Star Cast

4th Episode of "THE HOUSE OF TERROR'*

MONDAY and TUESDAY-

"CHILDREN OF THE RITZW

WEDNESDAY-

SURPRISE DOUBLE FEATURETO BE ANNOUNCED LATER

THURSDAY - FRIDAY-

"THREE PASSIONS"' , , Featuring

Alice Terry and Ivan PetrovitchSATURDAY and SUNDAY-

UND'Also Episode 5 of "HOUSE OF TERROR"

CHINA NIGHTS Monday and FridayMATINEES: ADULTS 15c, CHILDREN 5c

Holidays, Saturdays, Sundays -Children 10c, Adults 25c

This Theatre is Now Being Wired for the

WestenSOUND

lectricSYSTEM

of talking Pictures