police seek hit- b nus1 1sel1n merchant commits · 2014-03-03 · cast to include over 80 township...

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"The Largest Paid Circulation, in Township 11 T H B OLDEST NEWSPAPER IN WOODHRIIM1R TOWNSHIP PtTRLIfUIKD KVKRY FRIDAY TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE WTfilfBaT OF WOODmUDGK TOWNSHH 1 WOODBRIDGE, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933. THREE CKNTfl l'Eii COPY "BETTER TIMES," MUSICAL COMEDY, TO BE PRESENTED BY LIONS MAY 4 AND 5 Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large chorus selected. PROCEEDS FOR KIDDIES' FVND With a cast of over 80 local people, "Better Times," i\ musical comedy revue, will be presented next Thursday ;ind Friday evenings, May 4 and 5 at the High School auditorium under the auspices of the Woodbridge Lions Hub for the benefit of the Kiddies Christmas fund. "Better Times' is a musical com- edy wftli a prologifc und two acts. It tells of the trials and tribula- under the supervision of Miss tlons of a. traveling show company k" 11 * 66 Brayton, In duiker of losing their leading Anthony A. Aqulla is chairman man and playing In a town thai '» full of reformers. Bud, the lead- lag man, hau committed the crime "O( falling in love, much against tbe wishes of 81H father, und here his troubles tit^Ui. Other troubles| arlsH and The story continues through a series oi amusing situ- ations until finally at the closing . we leave the company, "headed for better times." Sergeant John Egan will take the part of the stage manager and he will be supported by Vincent Weaver as the Bill, the bill poster. Other parts are as follows: Pri- nia Donna, Claire I'feiffer; Moltle and Do I lie Adelaide Horned and Jean Decker, Dud, Jack Keating; Mrs. Wiser, AHher Kiti Randolph; proucher, Harry M. Gems. Men'tt dance, Jumes Filer, Geo. Luflbary, Stephen Wyld, Harry Prominent Men To Address Casey Mass-Breakfast Assemblyman John J. It^fferty, District Deputy James Ccvumer, of Sayrtiville, -mtl Kev. F'rancis X. liangan, pastor of St. James 1 :hurch, will be the speakers at the communion breakfast to be held Sunday morning at St. James' au- MISH LOUIHO Itrayton of the general committee and h Kurd, Anthony Acjulla, Henry Hari-'ls being assisted by the chairmen sou, Mr. Stlllwell and Andrew Long. Night Club scene: Thomas Br*n- nan, Wnulsor Lakls and Joan Short. Kadlo Bklt, tStiwsrd Mcl,eod, D. Harjy Ford and J/VilUam Messlck. »- Jfonwit^tt, Hut* ty«tk. Harry ' lager und Ernest Nttr. of the sub-committees as follows: Thomas Levl; advertising, Andrew Long; cast Stephen Wyld; publi- city, Lawrence F. Campion an Thomas J. Brennan. •* Mef Head Seeks Local Recruits For Reforestation Corp The quota for Woodbridge foi Reforestation is now being flll«! and It Is requested that all inter- ested single and young men be- twee the ages of 18 and 25, whose families are on relief, register im- tielgel, Mildred Bowers, Miriam j mediately at the Municipal Build Ing with Mr. Howard B. Jernee Deputy Municipal Director,."who ti the recruiting officer. Recrultlni blanks are now In the office and will be tilled out today and Mon day, May 1. Mrs. Haiiauu. ilr. Trainun and Andrew Long. There will be five dances, smart costumes, including a military number, a soft shot dance and a wait* number. (ilrls in the caorus include: Jean Llddle Hetty l'eterson, Edna Sermayun, Dorothy Fair, lrma Deter. Kathryn Holland, Barbara Stern, Klsie Agreen, Jane Dunlgan, Ruth Henry, Olga Uarnecov, Lor- raine Warier, Cynthia Coover, H. Short, J,ean Decker, Adelaide Harned, Dorothy Omenbelier, Mary Levl, Jean Thergesen, Claire Nelson, Virginia Leonard, Jean Dunne, Ml tared Jtauehman. Olga Dembltaky; Lorelta Kolb, Mildred Mocuey, Molly Jardot. Grace Quelch, Florence Boylan, Margar- et Black, I'anBy McCrory, Leona ByerkiiHH, Caroline Doost and Dor- othy Diddle. There will be a men's burlesque chorus In a "spring dance" which promise to be a high spot of tbe evenings. Oilier Interesting scenes are a radio skit with the house In darkneun, a bit* of melodrama,— where we see a Roman family and the worl4 s liral mirror, and an unusual ensemble scene, a synco- pated wedding where all speaking . and action are done In rhythm. Several attractive l specialties have lisen secured, which will add much in the uleauure of tlie eve- ."llette ^Junction with the |Unlted Produe-. L.-: tiona Company of Boston and is MAYORS COMMITTEE TO START CENSUS TAKINd The Mayor's committee has made all arrangements to start n Ci'tiatm of the Township to dcteniHne Just who needs relief in the Township. It Is expected that Uie Census takers will be- gin their work next week and the mayor requests that all ci- tizens give the workers every cooperation. lltorium undfr the Middlesex Council, autipices Knights Police Seek Hit- Run Driver Who Killed Woman Bronx resident fatally in- B SD AV BY NU S1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS TIIP home of Barney Dunlitan, of Uiirron -avenue, Woodbrldge, was entered early Saturday nlttht and several iirliclca taken. The thief nindt' hln escape through the rear entered the jured on Lincoln High- from door. , According to the report made by Patrol Driver Andrew Simonsen. way, Iselin, Saturday. The committee in charge of the itfalr IIRH worked hard to make lie affair a complete success. A uirnrtsinR amount of reservations Diivc been made, and without a loutit the breakfast wllf be one of he largest of its kind ever spon- sored by the local Knights of Col- umbus. Tho committee In charge of the affair ia as follows: John T. Ryan, Jr., chairman; leorge O'Brien, John Mulllns, John Dernier, David Gertly, Alfred J. Goley, Christian Witting. C. Manglonle, Andrew D. Desmond, J. Gregus, Lawrence F. Campion, Jobn D. Campion, John Turk, Les- ter Neary, Harold Grausam, Chas. Kenny, Maurice P. Dunigan, John Caulfleld, William J. Coll, Joseph GUI, 3acob Grausaro, John KUllan, Local police arc searching for the driver or the lilt-run-and-run car W\l struck und killed Mrs. Marguerite Taylor Imperatlon, 49 years old 1 , of 21oi Cedar avenue, the Bronx, 17. Y., at 10:20 Mrs. Iftiperaton came here Sat- urday to supervise the reopening or her Bungalow In laelln where She planned to spend the summer. Shortly after ten o'clock in the evening, she vim ted the Palmer Lunch room and service station on the Lincoln Highway. She was there but a Bhort time, when she complained that it was getting cooler and that she was going back to the bungalow to get her fur coat, A few minutes' later, as ahe was crossing the Highway dia- gonally to Block Avenue, she was strucR. by th^.; hit-and-run-car'. the family came home around »:20 o'clock In the evening, and he-.iru someone up stairs. WJien they nuked who WIIH there, the Intruder threatened to shoot. When they went out to call the police, the thief ran out the back door. Am- ong Uw articles taken 'were: a • .. , h . , - ~ , ,, . , . gold lire chiefs badge, a stick pin nt the corner of Benjamin avenue and Green street, helm, with six pearls and small exempt I committed suicid<> by inhaling illuminating gas in the kit- Nolata Palmer, Ihe proprietor of the service station, Bald he heard a cruflti' and rushed out and saw Mrs. lmperaton lying In the cen- ter of the road. Patrolman Jack Manton rushed he woman to |ue Runway hospital where she wate prononced dead. She had sustained a compound fracture of the skull, her left leg was badly mangled and she suf- fered lacerations about the scalp kad Coroner Ettward A, Finn, was notified and he gave permission for the removal of the body to the funeral parlors of Clinton Smith, at NSW ark. Mrs. lmperaton is survived by her husband lii taly( three chil- dren; MVs. Lucille Mendelsohn, El- enor and Paul.ofthe Bronx, SUICIDE BY INHALING GAS IN KITCHEN OF HIS HOME Body of Henry Brueggerman found by eleven year old daughter yesterday noon. Wile and other child away at time. Believe financial worries caused him to take life. FIREMEN WORKED OVER BODY Evidently worried over financial muttera, Henry Brue- , 37, proprietor of R grocery and delicatessen store B badge. chen of his home yesterday noon. Mr. Drueggeman's 'RELIEF' WORKER STATIONED AT RAILROAD CROSSING TO PROTECT SCHOOL CHILDREN Township Engineer questions as to whether Township will assume any responsibility by placing man at Freeman St. crossing—Matter referred to Attorney. DtSCVSS ROUTINE MATTERS unconscious form wus found by hia daughter, l.oti!»f-S« "yeum old, when she cilme liume from school for lunch. Stio entered the store atid not HndtiiK uliyoiie there, she triad to enter the kllchert, In the iivlug iiuarters, in the rear of the afore - Iml I'uund the door locked. She . went (Jut HIU« uiiu triiU liir ar door and found that Kicked, UecomhiK worried, the chnu told a man whose identity 1B unknown ititU «IH> oottid not K«rt Ifc 'ili* man broke a window amt.fmiud the kitchen tilled with H IM>¥ tmiUCK BY CAIt Elmer Rath, 10 years old, of 17 Nelson street, Woodbrtdge, was slightly injured early Saturday evening when he was stuck by ear driven by Arnold Therkelsen, of 162 Dunham place, Woodbridge, and owned by Carl Peterson, or 178 pigh etreet, Perth Amboy, The boy was croBBlng the street at the Intersection of Main and School streets and Therkelaon was about to make a right turn off Main Btreet, when the accident oc- curred. Dr. J. fj. Mark treated the boy for bruises or the head and left leg. Motorcycle Officer Daniel Gibson investigated the accident. ENDOK8K HYAN AND ALKXANDKH Mayor William A. Ryan and hal J. Alexander, candidate a , ftr conmttt#miw in !tL>) second at the -meeting of the Por^s-De- mocratic Club field this week. THE. Crow's Nest • NAV1UATOU What happened to Doc'a over/coat—The Shadow |nows Looking over some old records at ye towne HI, one of our friends came gcTOSsthismformtttiaB "Ehft August 1717, Caleb Campbell was given a plot of land by the Freeholders oil the Township in consideration of Ihe -fact that his wife was the first white child born in dbridKe—Shortly after Mrs. Caleb died and was bu- in M w W t u P graveyard ' • •• .An orchid sincere apologies to W. W.) to Miss Brayton for her Wage in trying to make actors out of the roaring Lions •rAnyway, here's our tip to you, the show will contain Store laughs than any other show produced in Woodbridge Who were the two shieks who felt like fish out water in their tuxes at the country club dance Saturday ght^-And who should walk in but the old flam* ..... _,.:. id Girls! have you 8een the stocking* on a certain bape* ill line? T-. Ooutinued o ? I>*i Ten PRESS CLUB HOLDS INTERESTING MEET Further reports on Assembly bill, 417, which would recognize journalism as a profession and would make news tips privileged were heard at a regular meeting o£ the Middlesex County Press Club, held Monday evening at die home of Sergeant and Mra. George Keating, 179 Decker place. Wood- bridge. President James P. Nolan president the meeting. Plans to attend a testimonial din ner to be given to Alex E*er, of the Amerik&l - Magyar Nepszava, one of the members of the organi- zation, ne.;t Sunday evening at Perth Amboy were made. Preliminary plans were ako made to coifttuct a membership drive. Each member present pledged himself to bring a pros- pective member. * After the husness session dell- clous refreshments were served by Mrs. George Ifeatlng, Those present were: Mlsa Helen Solomon Mr. and Mrs E. Kunyon, Miss Ruth Wolk, Miss Irene Fox, MIBB Louise Brayton, Sergeant and Mrf, Keat- ing, Lawrence F. Campion, Thom- as J. Brennan, Meyer Rosenblum, Andrew Hlla, Blmer J VecBey, An- drew 1. Tiltou, Windsor Lakld, James P. Nolan- The-next regular meeting will be held May 22, with Elmer Vec- aey, in charge. COMPLETE PLANS FOR ISELIN PERFORMANCE Bruce Morgan just llnishln^ a two week's run at the Palace The atre In Boston, paid a hurried vls- lty to Iselin, last Sunday to com- •plete tin 1 arrangements for the benefft performance In Public School No. IB May 5, at 8:15 p.m. Father Brennan, uaator, of St. CecellflTs Church was greatly pleased over the announcement of Mr. Bruce that sixteen artists would be present to offer seven acts of Star Vaudeville. All the meraUSrs of the Iselin Fire Com- panies in conjunction with the Men's'Club or St. Cecilia's Church have made a most favorable re port in Uie sale of tickets, and from present Indications it looks Kite standing room only. This coming attraction of an all star cast will be one of the great- est events in the history of Iselin. Vefy few_ cities can boast of the celebrities who will grace the stage on May 5. The names of all the artists will appear In the next edition of this paper. The question of whether the Township assumes any lespoiisibility by placing a man at the railroad crossing at Freeman street to protect school children using the cross- ing, was discussed at a meeting of the Township Commit- tee held Monday afternoon, at the Memorial Municipal building. The matter arose when Town- ship Engineer George It. Merrill | reported that he had placed a "re- lief' man at the croaBlng since the rallro-id officials deemed It advis- able to remove the gate tender. ^ , Mr. Mer^lU said that ho did not know -wWfetJffer or not the TQ 7 • The'nwii' foliar meeting,<fl the Woodbridge Merchants' Associa- tion will he held WedneBduy eve- ning at the Memorial Municipal building, at which time further plans will be made for the Good Will Theatre party to be held next month. ft Is expected that a committee appointed to Inspect the by-laws of the Chamber of Commerce at Perth Amboy will have a report to make. 1ION8 TO VISIT CRANBURY Members, of the Wobdbrldge Lions' club will attend a Regional meeting to bo held at Cranbury to- nlgbt AH Llone Interested In ^ Ing are aBked totneet at Hardl- maft'a OfUg store at 6:30 o'clock. I'S PHARMACY , Ed| I- Hai-dlHian, fcirmerly of aoaiuan'i! Perth Awjboy PRESCRIPTIONS C*Hed For and Delivered Cor. Hahway AvenUe and Green Street Tel. *M»1W, WoodbrWfB, N. J. Three Fined $150 For From-Local Man A fine of ?50 each was imposed upon two Now York residents and a Hobokeii whoemaker on a charge of attempted extortion by Judge B. W, ogel In .police ea ip'.ij' Detect- (3«jorgtj E Keating unrt Sergeant Ben ParBona, were: S-AI- vadore Buttylivln, 60, a shoemak- er, of 400 Madison street, Hobo- ken; Nicholas Grayiano, 23, an iceman, of 1448 E. 66th street, Brooklyn, and Conrad Massicano, 42, of 13 Hoosevelt street, (New York City. According to tbe police the three came to Woodbridge on Easter Sunday and demanded a $100 from a Fulton street storekeeper. When the merchant said he did not have it they warned him that they would be back in a week and to be sure and have It then. The three returned to Wood- bridge the following week and in- stead of getting the money they were faced by the two police ser- geante woo acted »» a "recaption and took them Into iTfan placed at the crossing or the Townanip as employee of tlie man would lie responsible in case of ac- cident. Mayor WHilam A. Ryan declar- ed that since the lights are used ua protection for tbe eltlzeua, lie said that he could not Bee wlrere the Township could ue held re- sponsible by placing a man at the crossing only as an added aafe j guar. The matter 1B in the hands of TowitShtp Attorney Hen- ry HI. C. bavin to advise the com- mittee whether It assumes any lia- bility by placing a man at the croBstiig. Temporary beer licenses were granTSd to Nicholas Radlch and Frank" TJeMeo. i ' AtTRe request of CommlUedman Joseph L. Gill, the township clerk was instructed to write to the Borough of Carteret asking them to repair their section of Blair road, from the match factory to East Rahway avenue, Mr. GUI pointed out. that Woodbridge uas kept its part of the bargain keeping tts half of the road In good shape. Committeeman Harry Gerns made* a request for repairB on Dal- ly street. iJayor Hy.m reported that arrangements were made a few days previous to take care of It, Hoad Supervisor George-Blum wun fnsli ucled to fix Cutter's lan« and lie said he would roll and scar iry the small striu of road within kre.e Or four dajftT • ' , : , V eomni'lttbeinari iUttMjr. reported from open Jets ok the PROF. LOVE ELECTED SENIOR WARDEN OF TRINITY CHURCH the annual tilling of jjf "Minister, Church Wardens, "and Veatryrfien of Trinity Church In Wooilinitlge, lield under I tit; pro- visions of tht; ancient Charter granted by King Geow of linin- land tbe following were elected for the 236th year: Prof, Jolin H. Love, Senior War- dien; Hugh Williamson Kelly, Ju- nior Warden; James A. Complon, Mark U. McClain, Melvin F. Church, Merrill A Mosher, William , KUwurd F, Christian, and ^ S. Wight, Vestrymen,; Jas. A. Oompton was elected Clerk- Secretary! Melvln F Church.Treas- urer; Kdward 1 J . Christian, Fin- ancial Secretary; and Melvin F. Church was appointed Recorder of the Churchyard. The following were elwtted as delegates to the Annual Diocesan Convention which meets In Tren- ton, on May <Jth, and 10th, at the Cathedral; Melvln V. Church, Jan. S. Wight and G-«orge McLaughlln. j and Brueggeman's budy lying on the Hoar. The man notified Put- rolmao Joseph Furku who called the pulmotor aud Dr. C. H. Koth- fuss. iselln and Woodbridge Kire companies responded. The tlreman worked under tbu direction of Dr. Rothfui* for over two hours, lining eight tanks oi oxygen. At times tbe man appear- ed to show some signs of lite, but apparently weakened by tho length of time he remained in the gas tilled house, he suecumbed ut 2:10 P. M. firueggeinan's wife wan at work In a Hahway office and hUt other child Hilda, age 12, was lu hlB lift;-"•'••***. In an adjoining room *o the kit- chen Investigators found a caOU too, had died of gas. Coroner Ed- ward Finn took charge of Brue- ggemaji'B body. I According to otle of u% who Investigated, l\ was lot otticers found that Messrs, Kelly, Jaa Compton, and BUiward Christian were elected as Alternates. The lector, the Rev- erend Edward R. Welles, at the meeting. custody. Ibaflfehud succeeded In'getting th« I^ng Uranclf train to atop h live o'oloek «wulws»> c >TH will be a3ked to allot $55,000 for hi f i-ellef in the Township for tlie monih of May. Local Cop Picks Up Man Wanted In Amboy Allan Rockefeller, of Rlverdule wanted by the Perth Amboy pol- ice, was picked up by Motorcycle Olilcer Joseph Grady, Saturday afternoon about an hour utter a teletype message was broadcast by the Amboy police. Grady recogniz- ed Rockefeller's car. Rockefeller wa,s turned over to the Amboy police and was Held by Judge I'lckersgill under a thous- and dollar bail lor hearing Mon- day on the charge of if pairing mor- of" 8 NASH and VOGEL Distributors of BOHLE AND KEG BEER "Only Distribaton in Town** MAIN STREET ' WOODBRIDQE Free D»livery^-Phonb Wood. 8-»8B COLORED BOYS STAGE STABBING BATTLE Two cplored boys, Salvadore Mayer, 12 yeara old, -of h'ulton street, Woodbrldco mul William I'enuyfeitthe'r, seven yours oht, of 63 New street, Woodbridge, staged * BtabBhig lijiUJf, a. la the \a\vnt TOovtes, eirty Sunday eveiiluJ!. The older boy, Mayer, told iioilce that In? waij , P^ltdn t nuar.^lhe Brueggeman had to meet three notes due tod-ay and evidently lacked the funds to pay them. Funeral services will be • helu Sunday afternoon, at two o'clock Interment will be In the Rahwiy cemetery. Rutgers Clinic Head Addresses Rotary Members Dr Henry K. Starr, director of the l'sychblogicul and Mental Hy- glene Clinic at Kuljgers University, was the speaker at the regular weekly tuclieon meeting of the Ro- tary Clut) held yesterday noon at the Middlesex Hotel. VK- Starr was secured By Maxwell Logan and was introflUCET; Ijy (Jra^it O. Cottd, of the trillependont. ' Dr. Starr spoke of the origin and workings of uuch a clinic. He aald tliat the first one was etftab- llBhed at the Ltniversity of Perin- Bylvanla in 1896,'by L. when lie was stabbed, not seriously on the right side, with a pen knife 4 until lBulL it * one In the-United 1 8t4^e» ^ since ttleir hrtfr been a gradual of cliniva j ^ , Coiitlnued «n Laat Faj J. J. Rafforty, of Baltlmope. Md., alleged A to have been wielded by was the dinner guest, Wedueaday the yoaffger boy. night, of Mr. and Mrs, John H. Mayer was treated by Dr. Jos- eph 3, Marks. / Concannon, of Grove avenue, Woodbridge. , A Proclamation To the Citizens of the Township of Woodbridgu in the County of Middlesex: WHEREAS, during the year 1933, in the State of New Je*rsey, the practise of advancing the time one hour, commonly known au Daylight Saving Time, will he »~IW«$-*H4 effwi fwni Ajwil HO, 133:1 to Saptem- ber 24, 1983, Therefore, I. WILLIAM A. RYAN, Mayor of the Township of Woodbridge, New Jersey, do hereby proclaim that A}1 municipal business; legal advertising »ud'&wnjhii> meetings be held unrfier Daylight S#v- ing Time, from April 80,1938 to September 24,1938.. Given under my hand and the seal of the Township of Woodbridget in the County of Middlesex and State of New Jersey, this 24th day pf April, A. p., One Thousand Nine Hundred and Thirty-three. WILLIAM A. RYAN, Mayor.

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Page 1: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

"The Largest Paid Circulation, in Township11

THB OLDEST

NEWSPAPER IN WOODHRIIM1R

TOWNSHIP

PtTRLIfUIKD

KVKRY FRIDAY

TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE WTfilfBaT OF WOODmUDGK TOWNSHH1

WOODBRIDGE, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933.THREE CKNTfl l'Eii COPY

"BETTER TIMES," MUSICALCOMEDY, TO BE PRESENTED

BY LIONS MAY 4 AND 5Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack

Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to haveleading roles—Large chorus selected.

PROCEEDS FOR KIDDIES' FVND

With a cast of over 80 local people, "Better Times,"i\ musical comedy revue, will be presented next Thursday;ind Friday evenings, May 4 and 5 at the High Schoolauditorium under the auspices of the Woodbridge LionsHub for the benefit of the Kiddies Christmas fund.

"Better Times' is a musical com-edy wftli a prologifc und two acts.It tells of the trials and tribula- u n d e r t h e supervision of Misstlons of a. traveling show company k"11*66 Brayton,In duiker of losing their leading Anthony A. Aqulla is chairmanman and playing In a town thai '»full of reformers. Bud, the lead-lag man, hau committed the crime

"O( falling in love, much againsttbe wishes of 81H father, und herehis troubles tit^Ui. Other troubles|arlsH and The story continuesthrough a series oi amusing situ-ations until finally at the closing

. we leave the company, "headed forbetter times."

Sergeant John Egan will takethe part of the stage manager andhe will be supported by VincentWeaver as the Bill, the bill poster.

Other parts are as follows: Pri-nia Donna, Claire I'feiffer; Moltleand Do I lie Adelaide Horned andJean Decker, Dud, Jack Keating;Mrs. Wiser, AH her Kiti Randolph;proucher, Harry M. Gems.

Men'tt dance, Jumes Filer, Geo.Luflbary, Stephen Wyld, Harry

Prominent MenTo Address Casey

Mass-BreakfastAssemblyman John J. It^fferty,

District Deputy James Ccvumer, ofSayrtiville, -mtl Kev. F'rancis X.liangan, pastor of St. James1

:hurch, will be the speakers at thecommunion breakfast to be heldSunday morning at St. James' au-

MISH LOUIHO Itrayton

of the general committee and hKurd, Anthony Acjulla, Henry Hari-'ls being assisted by the chairmensou, Mr. Stlllwell and AndrewLong.

Night Club scene: Thomas Br*n-nan, Wnulsor Lakls and JoanShort.

Kadlo Bklt, tStiwsrd Mcl,eod, D.Harjy Ford and J/VilUam Messlck.

»- J fonwi t^ t t , Hut* ty«tk. Harry' lager und Ernest Nttr.

of the sub-committees as follows:Thomas Levl; advertising, AndrewLong; cast Stephen Wyld; publi-city, Lawrence F. Campion anThomas J. Brennan. •*

Mef Head SeeksLocal Recruits For

Reforestation CorpThe quota for Woodbridge foi

Reforestation is now being flll«!and It Is requested that all inter-ested single and young men be-twee the ages of 18 and 25, whosefamilies are on relief, register im-

tielgel, Mildred Bowers, Miriam j mediately at the Municipal BuildIng with Mr. Howard B. JerneeDeputy Municipal Director,."who tithe recruiting officer. Recrultlniblanks are now In the office andwill be tilled out today and Monday, May 1.

Mrs. Haiiauu. ilr. Trainun andAndrew Long.

There will be five dances, smartcostumes, including a militarynumber, a soft shot dance and await* number.

(ilrls in the caorus include:Jean Llddle Hetty l'eterson, Edna

Sermayun, Dorothy Fair, lrmaDeter. Kathryn Holland, BarbaraStern, Klsie Agreen, Jane Dunlgan,Ruth Henry, Olga Uarnecov, Lor-raine Warier, Cynthia Coover, H.Short, J,ean Decker, AdelaideHarned, Dorothy Omenbelier,Mary Levl, Jean Thergesen, ClaireNelson, Virginia Leonard, JeanDunne, Ml tared Jtauehman. OlgaDembltaky; Lorelta Kolb, MildredMocuey, Molly Jardot. GraceQuelch, Florence Boylan, Margar-et Black, I'anBy McCrory, LeonaByerkiiHH, Caroline Doost and Dor-othy Diddle.

There will be a men's burlesquechorus In a "spring dance" whichpromise to be a high spot of tbeevenings. Oilier Interesting scenesare a radio skit with the house Indarkneun, a bit* of melodrama,—where we see a Roman family andthe worl4 s liral mirror, and anunusual ensemble scene, a synco-pated wedding where all speaking

. and action are done In rhythm.Several attractive l specialties

have lisen secured, which will addmuch in the uleauure of tlie eve-

."llette^Junction with the |Unlted Produe-.L.-: tiona Company of Boston and is

MAYORS COMMITTEE TOSTART CENSUS TAKINd

The Mayor's committee hasmade all arrangements to startn Ci'tiatm of the Township todcteniHne Just who needs reliefin the Township. It Is expectedthat Uie Census takers will be-gin their work next week andthe mayor requests that all ci-tizens give the workers everycooperation.

lltorium undfr theMiddlesex Council,

autipicesKnights

Police Seek Hit-Run Driver Who

Killed WomanBronx resident fatally in-

B S D A V B Y N U S 1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITSTIIP home of Barney Dunlitan, of

Uiirron -avenue, Woodbrldge, wasentered early Saturday nlttht andseveral iirliclca taken. The thiefnindt' hln escape through the rear

entered thejured on Lincoln High- from door. ,

According to the report made byPatrol Driver Andrew Simonsen.

way, Iselin, Saturday.

The committee in charge of theitfalr IIRH worked hard to makelie affair a complete success. AuirnrtsinR amount of reservationsDiivc been made, and without aloutit the breakfast wllf be one ofhe largest of its kind ever spon-

sored by the local Knights of Col-umbus.

Tho committee In charge of theaffair ia as follows:

John T. Ryan, Jr., chairman;leorge O'Brien, John Mulllns,

John Dernier, David Gertly, AlfredJ. Goley, Christian Witting. C.Manglonle, Andrew D. Desmond, J.Gregus, Lawrence F. Campion,Jobn D. Campion, John Turk, Les-ter Neary, Harold Grausam, Chas.Kenny, Maurice P. Dunigan, JohnCaulfleld, William J. Coll, JosephGUI, 3acob Grausaro, John KUllan,

Local police arc searching forthe driver or the lilt-run-and-runcar W\l struck und killed Mrs.Marguerite Taylor Imperatlon, 49years old1, of 21oi Cedar avenue,the Bronx, 17. Y., at 10:20

Mrs. Iftiperaton came here Sat-urday to supervise the reopeningor her Bungalow In laelln whereShe planned to spend the summer.Shortly after ten o'clock in theevening, she vim ted the PalmerLunch room and service station onthe Lincoln Highway. She wasthere but a Bhort time, when shecomplained that it was gettingcooler and that she was going backto the bungalow to get her furcoat, A few minutes' later, as ahewas crossing the Highway dia-gonally to Block Avenue, she wasstrucR. by th^.; hit-and-run-car'.

the family came home around »:20o'clock In the evening, and he-.irusomeone up stairs. WJien theynuked who WIIH there, the Intruderthreatened to shoot. When theywent out to call the police, thethief ran out the back door. Am-ong Uw articles taken 'were: a • .. , h . , - ~ , , , . , .gold lire chiefs badge, a stick pin n t the corner of Benjamin avenue and Green street, helm,with six pearls and small exempt I committed suicid<> by inhaling illuminating gas in the kit-

Nolata Palmer, Ihe proprietor ofthe service station, Bald he hearda cruflti' and rushed out and sawMrs. lmperaton lying In the cen-ter of the road.

Patrolman Jack Manton rushedhe woman to |ue Runway hospitalwhere she wate prononced dead.She had sustained a compoundfracture of the skull, her left legwas badly mangled and she suf-fered lacerations about the scalpkad

Coroner Ettward A, Finn, wasnotified and he gave permission forthe removal of the body to thefuneral parlors of Clinton Smith,at NSW ark.• Mrs. lmperaton is survived byher husband lii taly( three chil-dren; MVs. Lucille Mendelsohn, El-enor and Paul.ofthe Bronx,

SUICIDE BY INHALING GASIN KITCHEN OF HIS HOME

Body of Henry Brueggerman found by eleven year olddaughter yesterday noon. — Wile and other childaway at time. — Believe financial worries causedhim to take life.

FIREMEN WORKED OVER BODYEvidently worried over financial muttera, Henry Brue-

, 37, proprietor of R grocery and delicatessen storeB

badge. chen of his home yesterday noon.Mr. Drueggeman's

'RELIEF' WORKER STATIONEDAT RAILROAD CROSSING TO

PROTECT SCHOOL CHILDRENTownship Engineer questions as to whether Township

will assume any responsibility by placing man atFreeman St. crossing—Matter referred to Attorney.

DtSCVSS ROUTINE MATTERS

unconsciousform wus found by hia daughter,l.oti!»f-S« "yeum old, when shecilme liume from school for lunch.Stio entered the store atid notHndtiiK uliyoiie there, she triad toenter the kllchert, In the iivlugiiuarters, in the rear of the afore -Iml I'uund the door locked. She

. went (Jut HIU« uiiu triiU liirar door and found that Kicked,UecomhiK worried, the chnu told

a man whose identity 1B unknownititU «IH> oottid not K«rt Ifc 'ili*man broke a window amt.fmiudthe kitchen tilled with H

IM>¥ tmiUCK BY CAItElmer Rath, 10 years old, of 17

Nelson street, Woodbrtdge, wasslightly injured early Saturdayevening when he was stuck byear driven by Arnold Therkelsen,of 162 Dunham place, Woodbridge,and owned by Carl Peterson, or178 pigh etreet, Perth Amboy,

The boy was croBBlng the streetat the Intersection of Main andSchool streets and Therkelaon wasabout to make a right turn offMain Btreet, when the accident oc-curred. Dr. J. fj. Mark treatedthe boy for bruises or the head andleft leg. Motorcycle Officer DanielGibson investigated the accident.

ENDOK8K HYANAND ALKXANDKH

Mayor William A. Ryan andh a l J. Alexander, candidatea ,

ftr conmttt#miw in !tL>) second

at the -meeting of the Por^s-De-mocratic Club field this week.

THE.

Crow'sNest • NAV1UATOU

What happened to Doc'a over/coat—The Shadow|nows Looking over some old records at ye towneHI, one of our friends came gcTOSsthismformtttiaB "EhftAugust 1717, Caleb Campbell was given a plot of land

by the Freeholders oil the Township in consideration ofIhe -fact that his wife was the first white child born in

dbridKe—Shortly after Mrs. Caleb died and was bu-in M w W t u P graveyard ' • •• .An orchid

sincere apologies to W. W.) to Miss Brayton for herWage in trying to make actors out of the roaring Lions•rAnyway, here's our tip to you, the show will containStore laughs than any other show produced in Woodbridge

Who were the two shieks who felt like fish outwater in their tuxes at the country club dance Saturdayght^-And who should walk in but the old flam* ....._,.:.id Girls! have you 8een the stocking* on a certain bape*ill line? T-.

Ooutinued o? I>*i Ten

PRESS CLUB HOLDSINTERESTING MEET

Further reports on Assemblybill, 417, which would recognizejournalism as a profession andwould make news tips privilegedwere heard at a regular meetingo£ the Middlesex County PressClub, held Monday evening at diehome of Sergeant and Mra. GeorgeKeating, 179 Decker place. Wood-bridge. President James P. Nolanp r e s i d e n t the meeting.

Plans to attend a testimonial dinner to be given to Alex E*er, ofthe Amerik&l - Magyar Nepszava,one of the members of the organi-zation, ne.;t Sunday evening atPerth Amboy were made.

Preliminary plans were akomade to coifttuct a membershipdrive. Each member presentpledged himself to bring a pros-pective member. *

After the husness session dell-clous refreshments were servedby Mrs. George Ifeatlng, Thosepresent were: Mlsa Helen SolomonMr. and Mrs E. Kunyon, Miss RuthWolk, Miss Irene Fox, MIBB LouiseBrayton, Sergeant and Mrf, Keat-ing, Lawrence F. Campion, Thom-as J. Brennan, Meyer Rosenblum,Andrew Hlla, Blmer J VecBey, An-drew 1. Tiltou, Windsor Lakld,James P. Nolan-

The-next regular meeting willbe held May 22, with Elmer Vec-aey, in charge.

COMPLETE PLANS FORISELIN PERFORMANCE

Bruce Morgan just llnishln^ atwo week's run at the Palace Theatre In Boston, paid a hurried vls-lty to Iselin, last Sunday to com-•plete tin 1 arrangements for thebenefft performance In PublicSchool No. IB May 5, at 8:15 p.m.

Father Brennan, uaator, of St.CecellflTs Church was greatlypleased over the announcement ofMr. Bruce that sixteen artistswould be present to offer sevenacts of Star Vaudeville. All themeraUSrs of the Iselin Fire Com-panies in conjunction with theMen's'Club or St. Cecilia's Churchhave made a most favorable report in Uie sale of tickets, andfrom present Indications it looksKite standing room only.

This coming attraction of an allstar cast will be one of the great-est events in the history of Iselin.

Vefy few_ cities can boast of thecelebrities who will grace the stageon May 5. The names of all theartists will appear In the nextedition of this paper.

The question of whether the Township assumes anylespoiisibility by placing a man at the railroad crossing atFreeman street to protect school children using the cross-ing, was discussed at a meeting of the Township Commit-tee held Monday afternoon, at the Memorial Municipalbuilding.

The matter arose when Town-ship Engineer George It. Merrill |reported that he had placed a "re-lief' man at the croaBlng since therallro-id officials deemed It advis-able to remove the gate tender.

^ , Mr. Mer^lU said that hodid not know -wWfetJffer or not the

TQ7

• The'nwii' f o l i a r meeting,<fl theWoodbridge Merchants' Associa-tion will he held WedneBduy eve-ning at the Memorial Municipalbuilding, at which time furtherplans will be made for the GoodWill Theatre party to be held nextmonth.

ft Is expected that a committeeappointed to Inspect the by-laws ofthe Chamber of Commerce atPerth Amboy will have a report tomake.

1ION8 TO VISIT CRANBURYMembers, of the Wobdbrldge

Lions' club will attend a Regionalmeeting to bo held at Cranbury to-nlgbt AH Llone Interested In ^Ing are aBked to tnee t at Hardl-maft'a OfUg store at 6:30 o'clock.

I'SPHARMACY ,

Ed| I- Hai-dlHian, fcirmerly ofaoaiuan'i! Perth Awjboy

PRESCRIPTIONSC*Hed For and Delivered

Cor. Hahway AvenUeand Green Street

Tel. *M»1W, WoodbrWfB, N. J.

Three Fined $150For

From-Local ManA fine of ?50 each was imposed

upon two Now York residents anda Hobokeii whoemaker on a chargeof attempted extortion by JudgeB. W, ogel In .police ea

ip'.ij' Detect-(3«jorgtj E Keating unrt

Sergeant Ben ParBona, were: S-AI-vadore Buttylivln, 60, a shoemak-er, of 400 Madison street, Hobo-ken; Nicholas Grayiano, 23, aniceman, of 1448 E. 66th street,Brooklyn, and Conrad Massicano,42, of 13 Hoosevelt street, (NewYork City.

According to tbe police the threecame to Woodbridge on EasterSunday and demanded a $100 froma Fulton street storekeeper. Whenthe merchant said he did not haveit they warned him that theywould be back in a week and to besure and have It then.

The three returned to Wood-bridge the following week and in-stead of getting the money theywere faced by the two police ser-geante woo acted »» a "recaption

and took them Into

iTfan placed at the crossing or theTownanip as employee of tlie manwould lie responsible in case of ac-cident.

Mayor WHilam A. Ryan declar-ed that since the lights are usedua protection for tbe eltlzeua, liesaid that he could not Bee wlrerethe Township could ue held re-sponsible by placing a man at thecrossing only as an added aafej

guar. The matter 1B in thehands of TowitShtp Attorney Hen-ry HI. C. bavin to advise the com-mittee whether It assumes any lia-bility by placing a man at thecroBstiig.

Temporary beer licenses weregranTSd to Nicholas Radlch andFrank" TJeMeo. • i '

AtTRe request of CommlUedmanJoseph L. Gill, the township clerkwas instructed to write to theBorough of Carteret asking themto repair their section of Blairroad, from the match factory toEast Rahway avenue, Mr. GUIpointed out. that Woodbridge uaskept its part of the bargainkeeping tts half of the road In goodshape.

Committeeman Harry Gernsmade* a request for repairB on Dal-ly street. iJayor Hy.m reportedthat arrangements were made afew days previous to take care ofIt, Hoad Supervisor George-Blumwun fnsli ucled to fix Cutter's lan«and lie said he would roll and scariry the small striu of road withinkre.e Or four dajftT • ' , : ,V eomni'lttbeinari iUttMjr. reported

from open Jets ok the

PROF. LOVE ELECTEDSENIOR WARDEN OF

TRINITY CHURCHthe annual t i l l i n g of jjf

"Minister, Church Wardens, "andVeatryrfien of Trinity Church InWooilinitlge, lield under I tit; pro-visions of tht; ancient Chartergranted by King Geow of linin-land tbe following were elected forthe 236th year:

Prof, Jolin H. Love, Senior War-dien; Hugh Williamson Kelly, Ju-nior Warden; James A. Complon,Mark U. McClain, Melvin F.Church, Merrill A Mosher, William

, KUwurd F, Christian, and^ S. Wight, Vestrymen,; Jas.

A. Oompton was elected Clerk-Secretary! Melvln F Church.Treas-urer; Kdward 1J. Christian, Fin-ancial Secretary; and Melvin F.Church was appointed Recorder ofthe Churchyard.

The following were elwtted asdelegates to the Annual DiocesanConvention which meets In Tren-ton, on May <Jth, and 10th, at theCathedral; Melvln V. Church, Jan.S. Wight and G-«orge McLaughlln.

j

and Brueggeman's budy lying onthe Hoar. The man notified Put-rolmao Joseph Furku who calledthe pulmotor aud Dr. C. H. Koth-fuss. iselln and Woodbridge Kirecompanies responded.

The tlreman worked under tbudirection of Dr. Rothfui* for overtwo hours, lining eight tanks oioxygen. At times tbe man appear-ed to show some signs of lite, butapparently weakened by tholength of time he remained in thegas tilled house, he suecumbed ut2:10 P. M.

firueggeinan's wife wan at workIn a Hahway office and hUtother child Hilda, age 12, was lu

hlB lift;-"•'••***.In an adjoining room *o the kit-

chen Investigators found a c a O Utoo, had died of gas. Coroner Ed-ward Finn took charge of Brue-ggemaji'B body. I

According to otle of u%who Investigated, l\ was lot

otticersfound that

Messrs, Kelly, Jaa Compton,and BUiward Christian were electedas Alternates. The lector, the Rev-erend Edward R. Welles,at the meeting.

custody.

Ibaflfehud succeeded In'gettingth« I^ng Uranclf train to atop hlive o'oloek «wulws»>c>THwill be a3ked to allot $55,000 for

hi fi-ellef in the Township fortlie monih of May.

Local Cop Picks UpMan Wanted In Amboy

Allan Rockefeller, of Rlverdulewanted by the Perth Amboy pol-ice, was picked up by MotorcycleOlilcer Joseph Grady, Saturdayafternoon about an hour utter ateletype message was broadcast bythe Amboy police. Grady recogniz-ed Rockefeller's car.

Rockefeller wa,s turned over tothe Amboy police and was Held byJudge I'lckersgill under a thous-and dollar bail lor hearing Mon-day on the charge of if pairing mor-

of" 8

NASH and VOGELDistributors of

BOHLE AND KEG BEER"Only Distribaton in Town**

MAIN STREET ' WOODBRIDQE

Free D»livery^-Phonb Wood. 8-»8B

COLORED BOYS STAGESTABBING BATTLE

Two cplored boys, SalvadoreMayer, 12 yeara old, -of h'ultonstreet, Woodbrldco mul WilliamI'enuyfeitthe'r, seven yours oht, of63 New street, Woodbridge, staged* BtabBhig lijiUJf, a. la the \a\vntTOovtes, eirty Sunday eveiiluJ!.

The older boy, Mayer, toldiioilce that In? waij ,P^ltdn t nuar.^lhe

Brueggeman had to meet threenotes due tod-ay and evidentlylacked the funds to pay them.

Funeral services will be • heluSunday afternoon, at two o'clockInterment will be In the Rahwiycemetery.

Rutgers ClinicHead AddressesRotary Members

Dr Henry K. Starr, director ofthe l'sychblogicul and Mental Hy-glene Clinic at Kuljgers University,was the speaker at the regularweekly tuclieon meeting of the Ro-tary Clut) held yesterday noon atthe Middlesex Hotel. VK- Starr wassecured By Maxwell Logan and wasintroflUCET; Ijy (Jra^it O. Cottd, ofthe trillependont. '

Dr. Starr spoke of the originand workings of uuch a clinic. Heaald tliat the first one was etftab-llBhed at the Ltniversity of Perin-Bylvanla in 1896,'by L.

when lie was stabbed, not seriouslyon the right side, with a pen knife

4 until lBulL it* one In the-United1 8t4^e» ^

since ttleir hrtfr been a gradualof cliniva j ^ ,

Coiitlnued «n Laat Faj

J. J. Rafforty, of Baltlmope. Md.,alleged Ato have been wielded by was the dinner guest, Wedueadaythe yoaffger boy. night, of Mr. and Mrs, John H.

Mayer was treated by Dr. Jos-eph 3, Marks. /

Concannon, of Grove avenue,Woodbridge. ,

A ProclamationTo the Citizens of the Township of Woodbridgu

in the County of Middlesex:

WHEREAS, during the year 1933, in the State ofNew Je*rsey, the practise of advancing the time onehour, commonly known au Daylight Saving Time, willhe »~IW«$-*H4 effwi fwni Ajwil HO, 133:1 to Saptem-ber 24, 1983,

Therefore, I. WILLIAM A. RYAN, Mayor of theTownship of Woodbridge, New Jersey, do herebyproclaim that A}1 municipal business; legal advertising»ud'&wnjhii> meetings be held unrfier Daylight S#v-ing Time, from April 80,1938 to September 24,1938..

Given under my hand and the seal of the Townshipof Woodbridget in the County of Middlesex and Stateof New Jersey, this 24th day pf April, A. p., OneThousand Nine Hundred and Thirty-three.

WILLIAM A. RYAN,Mayor.

Page 2: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

V ;x

Normandy DonsFestival Attire

Greets Spring With Quaint

Age-Old Ceremonies. -,

rupfirni hy NdltonKlWmthlnitdn. D. C

N'nphle RotletT.

C—VYNU Survlrn.f OKMANDY Is planning for np-

plo blossom time. Uke WinChester, In the Volley of Vir-

ginia, and other ejrunt apple-grow-Ing regions of America, Nnrmnnilyfares forth In festive nttlre whenthe buds of Its famous apple treesflujst In the spring.

Although tlie French nre largelyA wlne-lmMblng people, the natives•t Normandy brink apple cider.There, you ain't eflt a men! withoutelder, you can't be born withoutelder, nnd you can't get married ordie svithoiit elder* The old duchy,slightly smaller than the state ofMaryland, Is one huge orchard.

Even "When It's apple blossomtime In Normandy, however, theduchy has many world famous spotsUiat also attract the attention of thetraveler—Rouen, Deauvllle, Cher-bourg, Havre, Bayeux, Ilonfleur,Dieppe, Falalse, Alencon.

Northmen Bwooplng down, raiding,destroying, but finally settling onthe land and giving It a softenedform of their name; stalwart sonof duke and tanner's daughtercrossing the channel to make worldhistory at Hastings; Norman dukesreigning In England; the king of theEnglish reigning in Normandy.Armored knights, clanking about, InLondon, Sicily, Naples, at the tombof Christ. The Maid burnt at thestake. Daring sons of Normandyroaming the seas to fish, to exploreand colonize unknown lands, from•Newfoundland to the Antarctic, tothe South Seas, around the world.[Normans building lordly castles,chateaux, cathedrals, and abbeys ofdistinctive "Norman architecture,"painting pictures, writing' poetry,plays, and novels of enduring fame.pouBsln nnd Millet, Pierre Oornellle,Alnln Chartler and Malherbe, Flau-bert, De Maupassant, and others—a Norman galaxy.

Normandy does more than sitaround and dream of the long ago.Through Havre, second seaport ofFrance; through Cherbourg, It sawsome of the legions pass to thewestern front. It hna grerted kingsand queens, admirals ant] generals,and heard the roar of cannon sa-lutes, the hum of sky craft. Throughthese ports todny pass travelersfrom the western world, and pro-cessions of consuls, agentB, buyers,salesmen, ambassador of commerceof every kind—hunters all, scenting

. the romance and adventure in for-eign trade, In anything from an-ehovles to antiques.

Dress designers, looking to Parisfor tho first nnd last word on fash-ions, send "scouts" to the goldenbeach.es of Deauville and Its lessaristocratic vis-a-vis, Trouvllle.Here, where the beau monde dis-ports Itself In season beneath gailystriped tents, at the casinos, alongthe promenades, and at the races,the gods and goddesses of style dis-play their latest creations on beau-tiful women.

Back from the white chalk cliffsa nd sandy beaches stretches agreen qnd pleasant land of wind-ing streams, fertile grain fields andpastures, hedgerows, orchards, well-kept farms, and villages of thatchedcottages. There are hills, and dalesand glens, forests and waterfalls,and the. typically Norman long,straight roads. ,

Famous for Cattle.And cowsH» Innumerable herds

spot the lushjnneadows everywhere,but especially In the Contentln, thepeninsula which points toward Eng-land. It has given Its name to aNorman breed of cattle famous, forbeef, but more BO for milk produc-tion. Purls drinks Normandy's milkand erenin, and both London, andParis eat Its fresh butter ana* cheese— Camembert, Neufcliatel, PontL'Eveqtie—with histories as distin-guished as the duchy's own.

In one field, men In hltfe s pocifs

ponderous bw«s.^ -"/Wi«y4kse *««fce-rons 1" exclaims the h»r$e lovfflr fromthe Middle West. "My Indiananeighbor used to Import carloads of.them. Don't they reoilud you ofttt*st'"fe6rineur'a "Horse Ffttrr Aa 1a matter of fact, most qf her mod-els for that picture were perche-rona."

Another Normandy product is itspatois; one's school book FrenchWill not serve, here. In the dallycommon speech one authority hascounted some 5,000 words which areforeign to French.

On an early visit to England, thefuture Conqueror found Normanseverywhere. There were "Normanprelates In the bishoprics, Normanlords and soldiers In the fortresses,Norpian cuptulnB and sailors In theseaports." Tbe Conquest Itself af-fected every phase of England's na-tional activities, especially 1U po-litical and social Institutions. Onewriter has caned attention" t» tfie''fact that for more than 800 yearstbe British parliament has usedNorman French when Imploring-theking to approve or reject Its laws.

Though tho o)d Ntj^ppkujfmtgedied out quickly In Normandy, Itleft tokens of Its Scandinavianorigin In such place names asDieppe, •'deep"; In Harneur and

- Barfliur, fleur, the Norse fllot, menu-ing "small river"; in Yvetot, Ivo's"toft" or "Inclosure," Another proof

that thli Is the land of William theConqiftror lies In the fnlr-hnlredScandinavian types which persist totills dny In various district*.

As to the origin of the Norman'*Inclination to "hedRe" on every;question, let historians argu* t sthey will, but It Is a fact that onemuftt usually labor hard to extract apfortif ye« or no from him. "Was theapple crop large this year?" youask. His classic reply Is: "Well,for a good apple year, It Is not toogood; hut for n bnri apple yfhr, Itie not too had 1"

The tendency to avail himself ofsubtle distinctions may account forthe Norman's reputation ns a some-what grnsplng character, and thefondness for legal forms and law-suits has earned him and his fellowsthe title of "the lawyers of France."

Natural Curiosity.

Thirty miles southwest of Vlre, asthe crow dies, on the border be-tween Normandy and Brittany, tow-ers the duchy's most Imposing nat-ural curiosity and Itfc finest coastalmonument of the Middle ages—Rtu-pendous Mont Saint Michel. It Isa granite islet 8,000 feet In circum-ference, girt with Immense wallsand towers, plastered with housesclimbing up its sides, and thewhole crowned with nn ancient ab-bey, shrine of the Archangel Mich-del, saint of high1 places. Loversof the antique find In its historicalassociations, In the grandeur of Itsoutward aspect, an appeal and afascination similar to those ofCarcaRSonne.

East of Vlre Is Falnlse, whereRobert the Devil, the Magnificent,looked out of the castle window andsaw Arlette, the tanner's daughter.

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933

N*?w S. S. Washington Off on Trial Cruise

Wrestling With Task ofCutting Postal Deficit

Norman Women Astroll.

Another story goes that he first sawher washing clothes at the fountain one day when he was returnIng from the chase. However, Itwas, her "pretty feet twinkling Inthe brook" led to her becoming themother of the Conqueror.

North of Falalse Is Caen, a Norman Athens and unrivaled centerfor the study of Norman ar,t. Herethe Normans' extraordinary facultyfor adaptation appears nt its best.Though they invented little that wasnew, they adopted from other coun-tries, developed and Improved.French language and literature,French feudal doctrines, and Roman«esque architecture in particular bearthe stamp of their genius. In Nor-man hands this architectural formfrom northern Italy becama a dis-tinctive, living thing, marked bygreat size, simplicity, and massive-ness and love of geometric orna-ment The two abbeys founded hereby the Conqueror and his wife aresuperb examples of the architecturewhich, preceded the rise of the earlyGothic In the Thirteenth century,and which also crossed the channeleven before the Conqueror.

The Conqueror was burled In oneof these abbeys, and Matilda, hiscouslo-wlfe, In the other.

What a courtship was William's *A soven-year siege of Matilda'shand, disdain from the lady, slightsnot to J)e endured, and finallywrathy lover rushing Into Matilda'spresence, seizing her by the hair,dragging her about the room, strik-ing her, flinging "her to the floor,After-that she said yes!

Gathered Hi* Hosts.Still farther, jwrth Is piyejs. Here

Ian to Increase Revenue

and Curtail Outlay.

Washington.—Legislation designedi halt an annual post office deficit

which rose to a new height of200,000,000 for the last fiscal year,

now being drnfled hy the houseommlttee on post offices and postoads.

It Is expected to be Introduced aspart of the administration's econ-

my program either at this sessionfter emergency matters have beenmposed of or early In the nextgulnr session.Members of the committee are an-

dersftood to, be working on bothrails of the problem, seeking to in-rense revenue and to curtail out-ay. Their major efforts along theret line, It la reported, Will be thepstorjilion of the former two centnte on first class postage whichvas raised to three cents In theevonne net of 1033.

Three Cent Rate Causes Los*.A recent survey conducted by

Representative James M. MeadDem., N. Y.) comuittee chairman,ndlcatetl that Instead of realizingi promised $;tO,000,000 In postal ln-oroe, the Increased first -lass rate

Is going to lose some $100,000,000n the current fiscal year. He:ermed the three cent rate one ofhe "greatest blunders" In the his-.ory of the mall service.

Efforts to stem the outlay of thePost Office department will be di-ected at a curtailment of air and

>cean mail subsidies. In tbe fiscal

together "&n ,jnnumerahl^host atliorsemen, stingers, and foot sol-diers,'' wild, adventurous spirits, tinwar strength of northern Europe.,eager Tor tile battle over fltelliti river's mouth lay some 700ships. The largest could hold fiftyknights with all their horses andueu; the smallest boats were noeven decked over, and were loadeito the gunwales with stores and provisions, Including small grindingmills for tbe grain.

For pictorial history of the Cooquest, go to Hflyt|tu and look athe Fi8 scenes embroidered on Hnea—the famous Bayenx tapestry. Probably no other fabric anywhere Intbe world surpasses it In Interestand Importance, Crude though Ila in design, an^ partly defaced,nevertheless recreates'a momentousperiod in the world history.

But all Norman roads lead to

Queen of France" and the duchy'ancient capital, where "eachtalent la a book, each stone a sou

.". Yet, more tain architec-ture, mam tk«uArc is the 'strtiq

utj<jiv Ju¥&'; forT

o gfWen

is her town, saturuted with gloriousand tragic memories of her. Herspirit still hovers over the marketplace where, condemned for "hav-ing fallen back into the errors," shewent to fiery martyrdom.

The S. S. Washington of the United Stales lines irate*xlal cruise to test her motors before entering the I Milted

York shipyard. Cntndcn,lines passenger service.

year 11132 atenmslilp mf)!1

totnled $21 .GOG, 1 OH, while subven-tions to aln" transport companies enpnpe.l in carrying the mulls amount-ed to $20,586,107.

Recently the committee complieda comprehensive report embodyinga new plan of sir innII payment un-der which subsidies would be com-pletely abolished within five years.It Is expected that this programwill be Included In the legislationwhich Is to-be brought before thehouse.

Representative Clyde Kelly (Rep.,Pa.), author of the original airmailact, declared that "a completechange In the method of paymentsto contractors must be mad* Inthe Interests of Justice and econ-omy."

"Whatever Justification there, maybe for a large subsidy as a meansof establishing the new aviation in-dustry," he said, "It ts now timetn look forward to the cessation ofsuch payments and tlie establish-

of t:,e air mall service on tself Fiistnlnlrig hasis."

Deficit Mounts Rapidly.According to Representative Kelly

the record of decreased revenues Inthe postal service during the lastthree yenrs has never been par-alleled in history. In 1fl*l he de-flared, postal revenues were $705,-48 000. In 1931 they dropped bjnearly $50,000,000 to a total nf $«Wi,.4(13,000, nnd In 1032 hey declinedanother $08,000,000, to a total ofonly $588,171,000. In Hie two yearperiod the aggregate Uw amountedto more than 1117,000.000. while Inthe period from 1921 to 10.10 postalrevenues showed an average yearlyihcreaBe of nearly «27,<KK).ooo.

"he post office deficit has beenmounting swiftly, according to fig-ures compiled by the department.

In 1029 there was a gross defi-ciency of $85,000,000, Includingpayments for air and ocean mallssubsidies, franked mall service andnonpostal functions, while in 1032the deficit, on the same gross basis,jumped to $205,000,000—an Increasein the red <Jt $120,000,000.

The 1929 net deficit, representingthe outgo for purely postal purposesagnlnst the Income from postal serv-ices, amounted to JM.OOO.OOO. The11)32 net deflc was $152,000,000.

$5,000 for $10.00f T YOU were one of th« million or mor» person! who »ro In

Jured In automobile accident! In thii country every ynnryou would welcome the liberal payment* of an Aotim

Special Automobile Accident Policy.AKTNA BPKC1AL AtlTOMOBILB ACCIDBNT POLICY

PAYSU jron a » injuredPAYMENTS

tar low of

Papuient* for |(M« oftime and

LifeBoth ByM, Both

Hand*, BothFeet

Hnnd »nd rootEye

Hum! or FootHni) Bye

Arm or LeiHnnd or FootSlRht of On*Thumb and In-

dai Finger

$6,000

6,0006,000

on6,0003.0002.600

(a) while operatingdriving, demonitrat-[ng, id jUt inf . crank-ing or repairing eprivate passenger au-tomobile;(b) while rldlpi in apublic or private auto-mobile:(c) In consequance otthe explosion or bum-Ing of an automobile;(d) by being struck orrun down by an auto-mobile.

expenseTotal Dltabllltj

*2fi per week, n<exceeding 2g UPP|,

Partial Disability$12JSO p«r wenk n-

exceeding i weeksftaopital and Ormlim

Nuras Ben«n«.|15 ptr »i»k. not *•ceedinK 4 wrrku

Non-Dttahllng [nurlr110 for «nrjeonii f,.Identification tnclr-

600 mobile. nltjr tlOO.net sorer ehaoflenn, auto meebaalei, and eertala ethet

while enraged la taelr eeenpatlmp«rion>

l imed le emploj** end wemplojred n u t and women, ag«i tt-Et l*el«iivs

RKfC ' —

J. P. GERITY & CO.M HUH BTBKKT QERITT BI.OO.

Dorsey MotorsI N C O R P O R A T E D

AUTHORISED

Maple & Fayette Stb H T i PertKAmboy

Cbutcb

Ocean Depths Yield UpStrange New 'Creatures

New Spanish Justice IsSlow, Records Indicate

Madrid.—Justice moves unusuallyslowly in Spain and there are par-sons who have been under arrestince the proclamation of the repub-

lic, April 14, 193i, without trial. ,The principal prisoner of this

type Is Gen. Dnumso Berenguqr yFuste, premier of Spain from Jan-uary 28, 1930, to February 14, 1881.le la held In connection with the'responsibility" investlgntlon of the

execution' of Capts. Fermln Galanand Garcia Hernnndea at Java inhe December (1030) republican up-

rising. Berenguer has been held onvarious occasions in the Mndrld mil-tary Jail In a castle at Segovia, and

has also been allowed to remain un-der arrest at his home, where henow Is.

In their cells tn the Madrid Jailstill are the three Mlraies brothers,ardent monarchists, who were ar-rested during the excitement aroundthe ABO building on May 10, 1031.On that occasion a mob attemptedo burn the monarchical,/lewspaper

Police and civil guards intervened.ShotAiwere Bred. Two persons werekilled. Various monarchists were ar-rested and all eventually releasedexcept the Mlralles brothers, at-

. no (lcllnltetfiBrgea

Show Evolution Wrought

by Struggle for Survival.

Washington.—Umlor the tossingsurface of the southern sens ts aninfernollke world of everlastingdarkness inhabited hy multitudesof curious creatures which eilst al-most altogether by the laws of clawand talou.

Such IJ the picture of conditions

GOVERNOR OF ALASKA

John W. Troy, publisher ot theAlaska Dally Empire, Juueau, hasbeen nominated for governor ofUncle Sum's Far North territory byp,r«*ldei\t ijooMvel^ $ jocratic leader fn Alaska.

a few hundred fathoms below, thesurface of tlie Puerto Rico Deep, thedeepest part of the Atlantic ocean,as they were found by Dr, PaulBartsch, Smithsonian Institution bi-ologist who led the Johnson-Smith'sonlan deep-sea expedition whichtma Just returned to Washington.Some of the crentures brought backby Bartsch, many pT them believedhew to*sclence, aje grotesque be-yond the reaches/of a nightmare.

As the collection Is unpackedmore and more strange forms offishes, crustaceans and mollusks arerevealed which, while closely relatedto surface forms, differ weirdly be-cause of their utterly different en-vironment.

Countless generations- ago theirancestors, driven by quest of food,abandoned the familiar s\inllt worldfor the perpetual ttiglh of theabysmn! depttA, where the temper-ature never rises above freezingThen, with each family, It was-aease of survival of the fittest—varliitinn of form and structure to fitthe environment.

Consequently there have emergedfrom the fierce struggle for survivecreatures mostly conspicuous fortheir defensive and offensive equipmeiiL

Among the weirdest specimensbrought back by Bartsch wasshrimp with long, rqzorllke clawswhich fold up after the fashion ofa razor. Any small creature* tha1

came within striking distance othose "razors" probably would be

Immediate victim. In the cot-

Threat Writers Hit by New LawSevere PettsHtet. InfiicU*? \

Conviction. ' .

Chicago.—Effective uselaw passed by congressthe kidnaping and murderCharles Lindbergh, Jr., which

of the

ofde-

fines the mailing of threat lettersu a felony, resulted in the convic-tion of one youthful Chlcagoan andthe prompt prosecution by federalauthorities of an Evanston garden-er, both of whom confessed writingletters demanding money andthreatening death to members ofprominent Chicago families.

Toe convicted youth, Walter J,Radarlcius, eighteen years old, B14West Eighteenth pla.ee. was sen-tenVGCrtS "BeWe" We years in thefederal reformatory at ^httltcorhe,Ohio, by Federal Judge Job*fa P.Barnes. He had written** series orletter*, daniaiwOng. a total aLflfyflOflt 4fc A, Weeton Armour," LaurancHS H. Aruionr, liSd £. WatsonArmour III.

Mrs. Jfamet A. Patton of Bvanston, widow of the wheat king, wastbe intended victim in the secondcase. Sbe received five letters, all

$60,000 and threatening

lection areshells like

strange mollusksand

with

i (

EPISCOPAL

t:OQ A. M.—Holy Eucharist andshort sermou.

9:45 A, M.—Church School.1:00 A. M.—Morning Prayer and

Sermon.1:00 A. M.— Wednesday, Holy

Eucharist.9:00 A. M.— Friday. Holy Euch-

arist.

BT._ JAMBS7:00 A. M.—Low Mass8:00 A. M—Low MassJ:00A. M—Low Mass

10:00 A.M.—HIgnMasi

PIlBSltVTKKIAH

9:46 Au M.—Church SchoolH:00 A. M.—Morning Worship.

S:00 P. M. Junior C. E.1:00 P. M.—Intermediate O. E1:46 P. M. Young Peopla 's Sfe

cte^y.T:46 P. M.—Evening Worship.

METHODIST

1:46 A. M. Church School11:00 A. M. Morning Worship.

1:45 P. M. Evening Worship.

CONGREGATIONAL9:45 A. M.—Church School

11:46 A. M.—Morning Worship.4:16 P. M.—Vesper Service.5:00 P. M.—Christian Endeavor8:00 P. U.— Wednesday. Mid-

week prayer »rrice

AVENKL PHKSBYT.RIArl10:09 A. M.-yBlble School.11:00 A. M—Morning Worship.

| : 0 0 P. M,—Communicant* classes at manse.

F1BST CHURCH OF CHRISTSCIENTIST

A branch of the Mother Church,Th« First Church of Christ. Scien-tist* la Boston, Mass.

V/nce upona time—-"Yep, once upon • time, hark

In the days of baggies ami

dirt roads your grandfather

on his way to town wouM

draw over to the side of th<*

road, atop the rig and rcai!

a sale bill posted on a fence.+

But t imeshave changedWe whiz along the rgful to

day in oar cars—no\n>p-

ping to read some dinir

handbi l l . . . We're going to

town W buy something we

read about in oar newt*

paper.

For high speedresults advertisein this paper

H Q]30 TwHCfl KI ^iMflpiy, -SfWI^Axel Peterson, ifty-lwo years old,

Elmwood avenue. [Evanston,who ts married and the father ofthree daughters.

The entrapment and arrest of Pe-terson, who then made a completeconfession, was one of the greatestachievements of the Evanston police department In many years.

Peterson told Chief Freemanthat he needed money to meet amortgage on his borne. This waslater denied by bis wife, who ex-pressed amazement at what herhusband had done.

Next day he was taken to thefederal building, His bond was aelat tlO;000 I'Mlillllfl a. frwn»i •••-raTgninenjL Assistant District At-torney Edward A. Fisher announcedthat fre'wotild^ba Indicted- soon andtried Immediately afterward.

Tim attempt af>

the Armour family was bulked by atrap set by the Chicago police.KudaVlohiB was not caught at tbetime, but when tu realized nt badnarrowly escaped arrest he bid forseveral days ID a railroad jard.Ihea decided to- surrender.'

sharp beaka' One of the most curioua creatures found was a shrimpwhich burrows far Into the laterloof sticks of water-soaked wood foiprotection.

Food In "Cold 8torsg«."Tfie reiioa tbe great dejuTw g »

Inhabited. Bartsch erplaineflVTB be-cause of the sinking of vast num-ber of dead organisms from the sur-face which, once they are below thefreezing point, are preserved lp per-petual cold storage. They furnishan enormous supply of "fresh meat."It Is possible, that surface animalsfollowed this supply downward sndgradually became adapted to thedepths.

With this strange environmentand living without any mltlgatlugcircumstances by the law of "eator be eaten," the creatures devel-oped form* which might be suitableto fabulous, animals of another'Planet. * ~

Cou8lderabl« new light on funda-mental laws of life is expected todevelop from this systematic ttudyof animals living and dying underk t f t lon» «o different

8:00 P. U.—Wednesday Testlmo-. niat meeting.

B:00 to 1:00 P. M.—Thursday]reading room.

7

— -.-- - =

WANTSOMETHING

•ADVERTISEFOR IT INT H E S E

P

I. Mann & SonOPTOMETRISTS

Hoars: Daily, 10-12, 2-0, 7-»Wednesday 10-12 Only

89 SMITH STREET

PERTH AMBOY

Tel. ['erth Auit)oy 4-20^7

W* mrm alwrnrt w—df to*«rra yoa with food print'(•*. J U ninMar' irhit tilt

..•alar* of tM Job M r »w« mtm r**df to 4* U «t •rrls« that will b«ftctory.

ylng under I•o different) JUiawrfattUn

Shoat Not MatesSpringffiald. 111.—A shop window

thief who itoDPstx shoes tor theright foot came back to Again smashthe window and take lU tfeoei forthe left foot.

QftORGE R. MERRILL

mm.•tJRVBTOE

WooflbrMf., M. J.

YOUR,. . . N A M EIt It on our subscription H ^

Wa wttl guirantet ytw

FULL VALUEFOR YOUR MONEY

PATRONIZEth* merchants who »'•'vertUt in this paper-They will t m t you right

Page 3: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRJL 28, 1933 PAGE THRU

The Fable of

ppDress Suit

By GEORGE ADE, Bull SyndlcaU—WNU S.rvlct.

NCE there was a Kid wholived In a tall-gran Settle-ment Just two miles this side

Jumplng-Off Plnce. Theret Railway through the Town

Fast Trnln ever stopped atsvllle unless It had a HotSherman Wlilpple spent his

Youth In this benighted Burgthe Lender of the most ex-

l?e Set worked at the Hard-and Implement Store, put

11 on his Curia and thoupbtdressed up If he had on hisMulfTcr. The most popular

In the plnce had Coral Enr-aud would sing "In the Olnnm-at the slightest Provocation,

requested not to do so.leu only three years old Sher-Blzod up his Knvlronrnent and

that ho WBB in Dutch. Afterhe wasn't Interested In any-ezcept Tlme-Talrtes. It maye that the Sharks on Socl-who cunridt understand why

lenve tho villnges and flockBright Lights, never served

in one of these out of-tlie-Hamlets where the only regu-

iltors, in the old Days, wereSparrows and Drummers.

Picture Palace smiles whereFee<) Store wns. The Sky

of Ajitennne and the Monkfflenry Is heard at 2 a. m,•0, however, when the Earth-

r of Sherman Whlpple wasIn Its Springtime.. The Town

Wlmpusville had a complicatedMopes and Chldders. II had

•tung by a Llook-Worm. It wasfor the Not-so-

It was a Dump.

I t toppeni'd that when our Hero•Ifout 8 years of Age he saw

fa a (tory Paper, which his Ma read^Itta great Regularity, a beautiful

j "Wood-Cut depicting a Scene In High

Wai in a Conservatory withi all over the place. There was

1 who was very Slender at thejfolat and much less slender Just

and S!IH WHS In c<hnpleteck and wore Diamond Ear-

and had two Cubic Feet ofand was, according to the

of Pre-(Jolf Days, a rav-of the Statuesque Type,wns Alys. It was Alys

tie. Up to the time that ourSng Managers moved the

one Fill/lit up from thelioora, It was Impossible to

a Play without having atle Montague In It.Correct Soup and Fith.

i Picture It seemed that Alyseved over some Proposition-

been put up to her by thean In the Long Tall, whone other than (jeoffrey Du-Whatever may have been

iivate Murals uf (jeoffrey.-heuinly tliu Class so far as

and (ift-L'ji wert concerned,a wavy Mop and a spiral

HChe, and his Regalia was theSoup and Fish Including

udn and Hows on his dancingUu was the Cut's Goatee,

pliant'H ICye-I.asht's, the Eel'sthe Panther's Pajamas, or

Words) to the'same Rffect; ai they don't mean anything, t

Kli it (showed lu the Picture'

wus shrinking away'from[By until only a clever Illustra-tfd prevent tier fcom doing a

although the Heading Mat-Ucuted tlittt Geoffrey hisseda Care!" when Alys hinted

had learned of his Secretage to Gladys Marston—even

the Circumstantial Evidence|tcd that Ueoffrey was a ter-

lilsi Wardrobe saved him.ntly he was a Villain, but still

btlemau.aan Whlpiile was fascinated

and Shermanan Apartment oft Balance at theof a Life-Time

'nns Reality. Hehad arrived for

Df the Shell andnd let the Worldrrlved.Heal Tailor andDress Stilt with

than ever hadnudcvllte Stage.one Velvet Col-

a little Dew-he Buttons Ind mitcb Braid

The Tailor11 that Evening

or Formalmay choose

jhntaBtle Garb,,ed by an un-I (1 not ComplI

atlniiH whichby Song-and-onner Sodabejjun to Im-

.flstocrnta on

for Him.cutting out

•< went forhnd waited

Irivnl of Theis about toNifties and

he didn'tI were quietit I a "Dress

;e a Saxo-

r the Hothe spenthe Mirror-iiinglnaryhe Oppo-tnown tor that is.tlusli the

• Chanceo attendnbers of

throiiRh the Clfound himself whis own and aBank. The I >was to become afelt thnt the Tlhim to hreak r>\Crow three tlmeiknow that be ha

So he went tosaid he wantedmore Satin Llibeen neon on aHe wanted at 1lar and he wanflicker to connfront and bedown the Troutried to tell SherDress, or FullDress, or whateveito designate theshould be charactObtrusive E!eganc<cated by those Iseem to be favorDance Micks anClerks who have lapersonate Europeaithe Screen.

No Quiet RalmAll that Stuff a

tho Decorative ICSweeney. Mr. Whlnenrly 30 years foDay und now thathack Into a real Scurry his own Seewant any Vestmentsand sedate. He w,Suit that would souphone.

He had his wish.Raiment was dellvmany an Hour In fro:and had a greatChats with Memberssite Sei who were nthe Haute Monde,

He could hardly w.proud Apparel,came when he was Ina Smoker given bythe Twelfth WardWhen he showed uplie had on everythln.Ilouge. There were339 of them had camErrors by appearing 1although It Is only fnone of them wore aMr. Whlpple had toOne about going to athe Evening. Some oiIf It was going to be aParty and he said It wupon several of thetheir Heads and coulunderstand It.

He thought he was eattended a BanquetAlumni of his Almahappened to be a Slio:lege. The Ladles werethe Toastmaster had tlv20 tongue-tied Moronsbe called upon to Speiithat Kind. Sherman dl<go lonesome at this Affair,Walters had Spike-TallToaatmaster wore the obreasted Prince Albertto be found on Earth ouEmbalming Profession.

Bad Newi for the DriOne Day, after the bea

na«nt had hewn In thy Cua month, Mr. Whlpple fothing In a Magazine willfroze lite Blood. The Plecto say that the Man of l<*awished to be En Uapportthe late Wrinkles could n-lllgeur, a la Mode andRaumagaBh even If he woner Coat at Gatherings attLadles. It Is said that tWeskltv the expensive Ptall Dicer and the Whitewhich can seldom bewould continue to be AuMetropolitan Opera House'Weddings, but for Dinnerwhich were more or le»8 Enthe Dinner Jacket Comblmito the Mustard, because theof Wales was doing ft ammore was there to say?

It was just Hke stickingInto the Henrt of Sherman VHe couldn't scoop" tip ulf

OUR-CHILDREN

By ANGELO PATRI

MONDAY MORNING

'TUKB It any way you look at II-I Monday morning Is a bad tlmt

for the children. The week-endbroke their routine. Their bodlMhave heen forced to adjust them-selves to'another rhythm and thatalways makes children, and grownpeople, Irritable. They don't moanto tie bad tempered, they just are,and cannot help It When yourwhole body IB grumbling yonr mindcannot maintain a sweet and strongattitude. That would be too muchto ask even of one's mind.

Things are always lost on Monday morning. The brief case thaiJohn left "right there," ennnot hefound. The belt of Janet's drewwhich she knowa Bhe fastened tothe dress the very last thing Fri-day afternoon, has vanished.

The schoolroom fares no better,indeed It fares worse. The childrenarrive In various degrees of dlstress. They got up late, the break-fast wasn't right, the milkmanhadn't come. The teacher feeldull, tired, weighted down with thcares of the aces. Monday morningIsn't the happiest time lmnginabl

i'unction'pt Lipent and

Social: Suits,Id thatr also.ie Olditer Ind himDressvhere-shook•m to

hethe

for any of ua. It takes a long tlmto get by It and thnt means so muchtime wasted. What Is to be donabout It?

For one thing, don^ begin Satur-day until Friday Is nearly com-pleted. Too many children thinSaturday begins Friday noonKeep them to their schedule. Alessons are to be completed Frldaafternoon and no excuse for leav

• (Ing them until the week-end Is tcbe allowed. That means that nrother will be saved hunting for a foun

Colands ofe towasFeelthe

' thelie-

' Kit

tain pen and a sheet of note papeion which to write an excuse to thiteacher on Monday morning.

All school clothes, books, whaever has to do with school on Monday morning Is to be tald waitinand ready before going to bed o:Friday night, exactly as It woulbe if It were Thursday night. Thameans thnt mother won't havehunt for somebody's shoe, belt, bflland whatnot

When things have been arrangecfor school on Monday morning le'the weed-end have Us way. Chldren need to break routine as weas to maintain It Let the chlldrerest and play, secure In the knowl-edge that ttiey are ready for Mon-day morning. We -won't hare t hun-dred ppr cent perfection but wewill save a lot of trouble and time.

THE TEACHER'S DRESS

Scenes and Persotu in the Current News Our Government—How It Operates

By WUIkm

1—Some of the 300 convicts who were rnlled out hy Governor Conner of Mississippi ti> relnfnrco thesag-

glng levees In the Mississippi river delta Just norll, of llelzonl am" thus snvo the homes of hundreds of fnmilies. 2-Vangunrd of tlm President's reforestation army at Wind Rlvor, Washington, pulling up two-year-old fir trees for shipment to vnrlous lowilllleg whore they are beinK transplanted. 3-Prlnco nmnrnn Dnm-rong Devakiila, new Siamese minister, at the White House to present his credentials, with Wnrren D Robbins pf the State department.

Making Buddy Poppies for Memorial Week;

Veterans of Foreign "Wars of the United States making buddy popples for the nnnnnl'sale during me-mortal week, the proceeds of -.vhlch are used for relief work among ex-service men and widow* and orphansof dead' veterans.

HOWARD CRAGHEAD

j'TMIE teacher's dresB Is part of!i *• the classroom atmosphere. I

i |

yits. .Never, In Real Life.B seen any one all diked out

eeu and the Odd.Trek From the Hom«-Town.Wood-Cut practically deter-bls whole Career. He made

t§ ito* hawholn smftttt, ln-

Uiiderwear and a Mon-i on his Shirt-Sleeve. You

1 that a Dress Suit was their of his Existence. He

[ Ua whole subsequent Coursesward a Conservatory, in

might have a banteringwith some Heiress whoFan and used good Per-le Fact that the TJlstancepusvllle to Social Wml-ued to be at least Fivei}es did not dishearten

aan. lie bad learneds with plenty of 3ack

T Nature can butt Injol u

Srde of the Tfpper T W .packed his Wicker Suit

' did a tail Trek from theIt was not suspectedand Bumpkins of hit

pwnsblp that he nursed thisto write his Nama«H,et-

Ire mi thePaper,

not follow him through

Money which t i r bad tied nipSwell Harness was goingTotal Loss, l ie bad no Clmbe among those present at thropolitan Opera House, tinWeddings were out because tliFriends he had In the Worl

married for yearsrLittle remains to be told.

man still has the Drees Suit Ibinds across the Shoulders miPants are so tight lu the Legsthey no longer conform to the Tlaid down In that sparkling Vement headed "Styles for Men."

Often, as he sits by the Kutil:waiting for Sprlug to show up, Siniao wishes that lie had savedCoin and bought a Radio Set wlLoud Speaker.

MJJRAL: Those destined to vRoyal llobes are born with talready on.

would say that It was a very largeimrt of It. The children look at theteacher nil day long. If what they

) r M>e 1s pleasant, If the colors ar#^ bripht, If the style Is good, the pic-it hire attractive, the children feeln hf'tlcr. Anything that makes themj, feel better makes them do better, jI The teacher's dress affects them one!, way or the other and for every-. i body's sake let us hope It Is for the

, better.j- Iirisht red clothes are not foretossroom. A red costume would

/ s t i m u l a t e a class out of bounds.The teacher would have a bad day.

; lied Is cheerful but It has other. qualities that make it unfit for

(school wear. Blue Is always good.The children love It.

Teachers ought not to wearDKiiirnlNtr clothes In the classroom,!Tf they feel they must wear thenv•hey ought to be laid aside during;"•cliool hours. |

It In our duty to make school alK'i-rful, pleasant, pla«e. Oar trou-

fiis. our disturbed feelings, ou;f^inHir* Are no* tp (fUdJ°ther'llldrW If w* c^n he*p ft. %t wlH• rry our ghosts with us and

After two

the ,

y^ji rs of disappoint-may

Howard Craghead,

I " i

fStruggles to tell Of the"rs durlng.whlcb, If he bad

rof his two Collar Buttons,i have been practically Ues-

say that at lait the' Eunjammed, fU

~ftai 5eripturar>Quol»ti,onThe phrase, "He tempers the v

to the aboru lamb," Is not, us xhave suppesed, a Scriptural quotjtlon, It Is a variation of the litfrom "Maria/ bj Uureuee Sterij

"Qod temiiers the win

cautiful In that dress. I neverof her save In that gown an J

•iiouuht never falls to giT« mein', I wimted my elothea to'hat very clean, smooth, pleas-i allty (hat was In hers. TheyI <4) well with her fine face andifl'ul manner.

• re la Biiotlier picture,! hareII iniuiory. It ro men every tlm*•'• mi untidy, careless, colorleea"MI. A u-iirhcr gave me that'"• too. rihe never had a chance

traced back to a passage lu "JaeulPrudentum," by Georgey11O88'16S2), "Ton close-uhoruGod gives wind by measure." Aboul1BW, however, Henri Bstlenne wrota

l

iiu>I'1' >i ,-,-d tifiaiMit what my^ J'• imurireil unfit.

u -i -IHT'H iir<'».<4 ought to be a''•in, „„ impirutlon, a Joy to' 'lii!lii|i In hr» care.

In "Premises, etc.," "Pleu mesurefrold fi laMeasures

brebls tondue"the cold to the

(Qod

lloct oftii,,,. Ml, fin,i them that waj. It

{ional person whoMil- eIi'i'P:

. i i,at one U too many.i .. njudleii*.-— WNUI

CHICAGO'S MAYOR

1! nmke themselves felt to t h e : w h o w a 8 Purchased from the Oa6-•\'ln-n without dressing the part.! l a n < 1 c l u b o f t h e [ > a e i f i c ' ' o a s t

.. should leave our mourning at l n 1 0 3 1 - Craghe-d • showed up so)i(1 J-welJ In training camp that Manager,, , , . ! > , ,iA».n. „• tl. ' Peckinpaugh eipetts to make use of

' liililn-n note the details or tne . . .,l,,rH . t m « and these sUy « l « i h - ° ° t h e m a J ° r ^ ^ l ^ m -

'fn. •<fftpy bewtBW 'ttnndards forr children In school when they• [rood. Tlif.v become plvota npoo! ii to hung personal dislikeI 11 they ar«' not good. I have a'••' net memory of a teacher who'•i.. a drown tailor-made dress•'ii. H narrow silk braid down the

s. With the dress she wore an-,. bow at her throat. I thooght

This Cameraman Got His Picture

SPIRIT OF THE HOUSE

A NTONR who observe the court** * followed by t public offleUlfan hardly fall to •rrlve at the con-elusion, eventually, that there la on«ohflracterfBtlc common U> all olthem, namely, a dalre, an In-fcatuibj© APtermlnatloii, to be vlndl-citted for what they have done. Thatreally Is the Important factor In themreer of any politician, and he or•h« clmrETa course accordingly.

There is no higher exemplifies,tlon of this spirit to be found any-where than among the rcpresenta-Ives who constitute the house.

There may bo t few Individuals, In-deed, there must be dome, who fallto keep a wmuharpje on the trendof the sentiment In their districts,>tit the number Is negligible when

compared with the total house mem-ip of 4;ir>. Frequently, one

hears loitl pronouncements of In-dependence on the floor of tnehouse, vociferous dwlarntlons thatthe folks "rmok home" have beenmisled by propaganda or by preach-ments from the opposition for ul-t.-rlor piirpoHiw. But thnt very In-

idftHi- In tl,e (intMt sort of anappeal for vh.dlruilon berniiMt it la

niplc aiti-iiipt to Justify . thicourse followi-d, or to be followed.

lint tlHTf really ought to lie neliunrri'l with that procedure. I»okIn-hind It. Certainly, after all, ttjgfnmjorlt.v of voters In a cotigrM-Mlonnl district sent thnt Individualtn.fi»n«r«w. H« h responsible totin-in. They know It, m well a» he.When ht< UIH-K wron): *m the "horn-Ini? Issue," they retire him. -Thus,they attain n responsiveness to theirwill, Tlv^ reprt'seriTfiTTviii*s vaItT7e» "sire for 11ndication of Mn uct» re-NIIIIK In nisiiuly the thing for whichtin- II.IIISI. mi* created, a proper re-ui'iUon ol Ht-ctkuwil and local view-points, a iiii-ltlng pot from whicheniiTKeH I hut thing which la called•'tin- will uf thn'^fmle."

All uf tin* HIMIVTO by way of say-Inj,' Unit the bouse is a highly i»n-Klthe lioily, jnoitlniily, Hecelpt ofmull from t he home district over a[M!i-loil|Of (i week, mall that deal*wlili miw partlnilnr queutlon, buslitfii known to cliniige enough votesIn tlif hou)«! to overthrow an appar-ent Htrong mnjoiity. Take, for ex-ample, the upHtt through which the.house paiiHOfl when It was consider-ing the revenue act of 1032— thelux bill. Under most circumstance*,putty iMnlorahln controte flrmly, al-tlwugh dither cuslly. But partyle.idm mt'jiut nothing to the hou»iifter scores of Us members beganhe.irliiK from "Imck home" In 4>pp<>-•iitlon to tli^ sjiles tux that bad beenretomini'iHli!<l for |»twMge by lt»v.ivsnml nwariH committee, I lepre-iiiiiiiilvrs of all HIIIICJW of opinionMere pitnk-ky. Why? th?ca»isethey\UI]I|CI| to hnvt- the votern vln-

itii tlutiii nt tin! polls in the neiti-tioii tiiid they were not sure

11 y coiliil convfiice the electoratetlu> propriety of their couriK.- had•y Hupjiortwl a direct tax onn^s ive liny.

\ rt-prefwiilutlve'i term Is only\\<i yeiir* Once he U elected, he

•Nsarlly muNt start solidifyinglie position thus gained. He knowsiat opposition will be out there Inie Meld nil the time, making bayhilt? he mayH In Washington., It

'lay lm In Ills own political party orn another party. But It usually lahere, just waiting for an opportu-

'*\Vhen parts of soutlnvent Philadelphia were flooded by the overflowof the Delaware river und Djirhy creek*(he f tws plioto^raiilicrs liad dlffl-cully getmiir thp plcturea they"Wt'nied, pqe4>f'lheni.'U «howa ibo'veperehed precariously lu a tree with lift nffl!er*a fa'actlon."''

Bdward i. Kelly, former presidentof the Chicago south park board andchief engineer of the sanitary dis-trict wag elected mayor of Chicagoby tbajrlty council to all out the ao-tiplred term of (be late Mayor

Springtime Scene in New England

Poeu who ling of t*ws beautiful tpringtlma ts New RngUtDd wouldb« taken aback somewhat by thU mow KCIM. Jb« bllxurd fell la Aprilwhen other Darts of the country ware enjoying the opening of the base-ball tea«ou. Auto* wer* marooned all along UM highways in tb.« ridoltyof Boateo. -.•

the successful candidatemust look to IIIH Inurels from thestart, and he usually docs so by fox-

leglKlntloti of particular ben-tit to IIIK dlbtrlit. He hus tohouse a side, 1 howeter, on queH--m» of liiiptirtance* to the whole

atlon, and oh these his ordinaryrtinw—ulhl (•nAltftt—lit tO alljTJ bil»,

thirt 1Ho rhe life n( r«prex«ntatlves dur-

ns ids two-yciir term ts Just oneittempt after tttiotlier to gubse whathe (lujurity in his district d'Anre*.

The (tesin: for power seemti to gomid in h;md with tbe desire furliifllcftil-Hi. It ajwtja..

<aid that, In•Ipoiu g<> to the victor, and the|ioll» uci'iiiipiinylng control of theIOIIH« art worth tonalderlog fromtic standpoint of well-bulrt political

out in the home dtotiict. Themajority jiurty In the house, a* Intie dilate, J5«ins t|tie chslnflanrtlp*

nf nil (•(•mioltteeg. It means controlor Initiation; it means appointment

r (Jozeiia of job teekerii, and Itnt-au« •* voice ID maaagefnent ofIn- party throughout (be* nation..Vlth that iiniTrol goes the «fi*ak«r-ihip of thp house, an honor of great*•st con>*t-f|ijfiirt) to some araaber of

r°°J"*"r turty U U « U . « part

of a treat giime called mMtlca.

When alt things are considered,however; wtien all factor* and hvJuyiut-a and cauttes uad effects aretveiKhed, the^ scales appear to baUanet) to tbu fide if ftlm^li to thfl

grip every fpan or Woman ant tothe houa« eannot be enujlnated Inoar tw« party syatem rf tq*etWmum, bat why should R be "4e-•ti*<ry«d when the sum total of It*effect la to make reprea^nutttoO pos-sible for a people too namerotn tol«t tog ether In • town hall

0, tilt. Watl*t» M«»«p*P« lltlm-

Page 4: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

PAGE FOUR WOODBR1DGK LEADER. FRIDAV NfRU- 28, 1933

"MIND READER" A STARTUNGEXPOSE OF OCCULT ARTS

AT THE CRESCENT

"Mu**olini Speaks" and "Mind Reader" Doable Attractionfor the week end — 'Unknown Heroes' Tuesday to Thur.

KTMMar

M I T.A'-:i

won!

Ift

St <•*!>•? to i .r .v

<«<ar*

eed ot Sun Is Foundto Vary. Study Effects

i* *rviM-*'--"f».1

f f

EEPING

THOT

Fords Recs DropLEGION B

T E AAMB$ CLOVERS Opening Ti l t Toi i r , ^ : ; Crack Newark 9.ii nip.- an »•.

iKinc-*'. « th< Mayor William A. RyanW » B

yOfficially opens season.

iry and

Yiriirlt)'-t**G con , ' ~~am s vlciorv n y \ J V . I * * « »<wir „ ,„ ,„ , , , a r , , , ,.,

u n to -I~tit t l ' ? ' n l*3*1 firBt t U n l l ; a - ">• 'ord* H.it* an>. (*i»raii«' c r '"* I i o 1 1 ! o t l t i w 1 r oww'n* f^

^ ', t I uK r ' f '*"* t f a w n - a ' H."*«rt>- .•-•:..!." .. 1 '•• ftHd. .Sunday, 6 1o Svto th.» r!klnd !<xinar .too W p U , P r A >A' Qf N ^ r k

' *v ' , " " r , Mayor William A

;rr:* . •>(

Ar. .01 •

Warren Wilham >n "Mind Reader"

i t - S-,**.KJ»n.

ITEMS OF PERSONAL INTEREST-.* WE*

\V.:V-.: .: \_v.l:*r.

'•?*• HP - " A ^;.< is l . f *

'^Sr in >•::*Jf s: rr.^v-^i

K t

T >• *

<\ to b* in ,.„,„„

. leadorrjjfSVand the tj*i<- v.V*.

I on. The R*c» outbJt lifcir ov. •l^yion broke In- or-nta, 9-ft. but'wer* not mier-*?,

hen on" run wa« !«j hitting at the rnont oppor- •1 11 In the third wid_ tJme Krrort, too, aided in 1 .

1 hut a bit: fourth downfall a* five in all %T* wrir.lovi-rs i-raa^d thl* In th«- s«or«b<H>k.

he wort 4-3 The I>ann*y;andor( and Nappi » . •i> ai toif all In (h< l n P oPPq^ns; [•((rh*r^ Mirk. > T-.the viltorsi woriKt Mart«-d^(i»«- R**s in lh«-lr first 1

|nin t asuautt. 11 «• drow a flu;anKPd asain in (he ' n *"* " " ' 'I"1* "P- Koi»,>*i-»a'e Jocals put on thflr • inK I* *n<i Hire haw- on lall^ ti:

iich four rung wire l t h e d x » P f l and Vonnf? r«-?.i;,..n« X6 ihf Clover* b l r a o n U i * rootir>d w l l b l w » r..,ate effort to tie up : i lr**!> j " K f i M a n d M a ^ "

?.:.

Hi*? LVJ K«!.~ -rT:rr*l-Aac isv:i •7 IWt

i;,-.^ Vis-rr

The Man of The Hoar

:.TTI*SOB.

tit

aby Crying for MilkSares Family From Fire J H.

~" A ":'*tmfmablr ••:?-it i : i ; i f

"r of i r*.:-- ir.-^r t l ;

P -

rf

f t t t mboy C

. . ^ 'othtr two runt for Fords.n r**"™1 ' ' In flie-ninth Inning Toth a .i;ab r h. P s U r t e S - th? hail rolling He ;.

• ; ' » " offi with a double, hi* orcoM5 0 rt 0 | t l e gaBj^ a n < | 8r e r?4 ^ a s j | , ,4 2 o o K r t M - u n e t 0 , ^ n t e r a w a i ; ,4 ft 1 J longest hit of the game, but ,

- ••* 1 2 1 fortunately. Kfisn was run df»*-.4 ; : 0 between second and third u . i :

3 1 2 1 to Ptretch his hit into a trij.l..2 0 0 0 Th« score*:

- - ° ° ° WRIIKTKK A. .%.Mb r !:

Z'i H I " 5 isorponi. It 5 0 vhm (7) Horb«k, ib 5 1 2

1—i x

ab r. h. e. Caprio. rf4 0 0 0

" . : .-: "'-" Kini?" cii! it.

tt _ ^ . . _ „ • _ 5 1 1

0 Vassill, M A I i0 Gregory, Ib 4 <i ti

Heroes'. • - - : • :< . : • - , ' - *

r> 2

W Ki.ii" i1: : ; *

gu « Klsh. c

2 2 1 ?*ap;>i, P0 u o Young, p0 (l H

1 o i

. . 4 « 10 0 n

J 1 1

3 0 « K : •

* • r

l e *GIVE OLD

TO HELP OUT NEEDY ,.NewYorkew Donate Worn

Ring* mod Gold Teeth.

Inning*:

1 0 FORDS RBOi1 * ab r. I

s 6 j Toil), Jb _ ._& 2 3Kopperwtttt, •• $ 1 1j

000 402 001— 7|Krisa, U —.M l i lb

-4 I 2^ , 4 1 1

.' tiits -Joel , Ya;>, j . l s P e | l . « - - -••* 0 1•usci. Three-base hits C e b w k l - rt - 3 ° "

Sacrifice h i ts—Jost .« R * y b o *' 3 b ~ 3 ° °Walked—Bv Murta?h | 1 > o k o 1 ' r f — - • • - - • » ° °

Otti

todovance, none, struck.•VTtirta.Eh, fi; by Hodo-

: J t o u i i l e p l y ^ Vap^o Jost

l-u^asiuk, Bodnar.

Simon, rf , _.... 0 0 0Sandotf, p _. j Q 1

Had D O B . HU "BU*Stories of ab»entmlDilHlness «•*>'

Jefferson Motors. Inc.REC0NDIT10JIED USED CARS

_ > . . . >\ •••••m- - v ; : i ; ' : •

^ - i .

.1 will roi-ii it for j.'ti— 1 boing related in the smokirfg ro.>:i'.itiiuu^h people have mi uw i °^ s n Atlantic liner,ese thinss, an Ingrained In- ! "I'm ™ > «hs«-nt minded myseirof thrift causes them never i. said * hitherto silent roan. "I ofvn

i»w itnuy any gold artiile." | U"1! wimes and telephony nnnitirr^cullecliou JO(. silver Is not j 'written In rajr notebook, but run:

1 Mwranm* »f tit* l«w mttritK - rcmemtwr vnat permns they r.-pr.'<>; silver iit the present tiu\>" ' w n t - B«w»tl3P I had t jren»-•••:.

>Irs. Walker hns found a mar | checking up. The name and :,'iji-ma various antique dealers, i dre*s of nne nun lMin"l«M me. *-• Ioften pive her very good) wrote to Iiim a*kln» If be ha.l ..^r

s for old silver articles, CKJM? j h w 1 ^ n f «'«• an«> " ' w ** su|.|i..~ !

m»Vi- ttka( Victorianisra is be- ' *° ''n wneihtnz for him.-•vived. All of the golj is melt- \ "He wrote tact (1 oinlial ! • • . - .lid the alloy removeil, except ID j Ri.dna I had already done U. \\:'. '

rare Instances, when an uh- I ^r<l tiustwnd."il articie brin?* more than Its ' T M » • & t / v r i P Cvalue from a dealer. 1 LfcuAL WUI ILL

Many people make a point o f ,iiu' their rontribntion* melted,"w i d . "Often it has names and

'•s or initials, and wjiile the own ' J 30 p. n. li»>nnm s»vini:<l-i u«t mind itivlh^it «u Imper If>* u*»-'"^ Municipal Huudinr y

.mlly to the eoi-ernoK-ut, they do mermj »i in# M*m..n«i Mum ;: like to think of it aa passing into KmMiug during the not inc »;•-•* :

wr hand*. l(f> n i > ( t iri j | IIH r ( i -jp | j > w N , ,.due «f the rk'U*st feiurct^j of In- ^w-ii r <ii. iur«, wim* « hnil- hus been from jnld wedding Ri*t>t rcs»rv*t! !,. r f ; c j ir.>its. Tli e uKtli-rn Wf'iuiii ha*, ia '" W M ,., i - \ j [ p n t I'l

»'<lili!iK riliR with a !>>-* [i!stlnu:n ' - ' * '* i"%'*!tu*'1 April.JSth w..i .'.:

COAL BIDS \UMI:UBID.S mil r«\, rftfiw-i-

1 lh<" T<.»-n,ihip (VHumiUf* of the T

•'_ «•*•*: - r - - i *V-^f.i=f^»--

LV

«r

- fSKttlAlttfW

41115 and 4-OOli

) •«• Cimce •/ tie f rfwini &$»

19C6O CHEVROUET COACH"'

1930 CHEVROLET qOLPE ) '... ,

1S31 CHEVROLET COUPE

1930 ESSEX SPORT COUPE

1S31 WILLYS SEOAN

ISM FORD TUDOR

1930 FORD CO4JTE

1930 FOftO TOWN SEDANl-Li: '; t . :. . . . .

JEFFERSON MOTORS, | N C . +

l«0 Ne« Bnw«Kk Ai

rEKTU AMBOV

CRESCENTPERTH AMBOY T H E A T R E Tel .4-0255

Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon., April 28, 29, 30, May t

TWO BIG FEATURES

The Manof the Hour!The Whole World Listens

FAKE MIND READERS

EXPOSED1w A a, *». •- N

WILLIAM

Tue«., Wed., Thura., May 2, 3, 4

Something Different — Something New

An All Polish Talking Production

"UNKNOWN HEROES"AN ALL STAR POLISH CAST

Page 5: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

'Tic-

WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 38, 1933

WOODBRIDGE LEADEREVERY FRIDAY

Main Ht Wooflbrldfe. N. J. Entered at the r w Office ttW.odbrldge. N. J.. a« Second Class Mall Matter

L. f. CAMPION, Publisher and Managi^ EditorRUTH WOLK. City Editor

JOHN B. DYKO8KI, Adv. ManagerHnhw-rlDUon 11.60 a Year, Payable In Advance

Phone Woodhridfe 8-1408Repubhcatlon of news and editorial matter In

r'iii!yBiuidwirun

I exprmalnB opliftffli on topics oftt'« f ° ' l c /«» . but no anonymoui letter*

from

FRIDAY, APRIL 28,1933

MINORITIES AND MAJORITIES

h do not think, however, that the minority party, in*?i\\ period such as the country is experiencing, Bhould

r failure on the part of the majority to improve con-with the hope that they will be placed in authority

i end of the present Administration's term If thatprevails, if we have another three years of depreso-

adverslty, we predict that neither the Republicansemocrats will be given a chance, or will want it, to

iat they can do to bring recovery out of chiaoa."note the editor of the Perth Amboy Evening News onesday in an editorial entitled "Why Worry". Al

the editorial in question dealt with national affairsmot help but feel that the above paragraph might

e applied to our Township problems,in Woodbridge we have two parties on" the Town-

Jommittee, the Democrats being in the majority. Con-here, as in practically every other municipality in

gnited States, are poor, and the party in power is doinglost to restore better times. Only thrdugh cooper-

[and helpful measures can we renew prosperity. Buttminority party, "should pray for failure on the part^majority to improve conditions", for iti own aelfluh

t it i t f th iti f thi T h i

Supplanted

OU, KISTEB-AOVEBTISEt

soi

JOHN E. BRECKENR1DGE

then entered Yule University,whence be was graduated withhonoTO tn Chemistry, class of 1896.Immediately after graduation

" \ kit)

inui

wfm

t

X

I

John Elliott Breckenridge, son of John Albert andHarriet (Kellogg) Breckenridge, was born at Palmer, Mas-sachusetts, May 4, 1878. He completed public schooleducation with graduation from

1 8 M t the fertiliser dlvliilon of the Am-erican Chemical Society.

In politics, Mr. Breckenrldge Isa Republican and was chairman ofthe (Townahip Committee for twoyears, 191N-19, He la an vlder ofthe Kirttl l'rt>sbyt«>rian Church, olWood bridge: a member of the In-dependent *>rrier of Forester* andYale Alumni AMOftfttion.

When (he local relief body wasorKimlzi'd Mayor William A. Ryanappointed Mr. HreckenridRP a» Mu-nicipal Director of Relief,, whichposition tu' n(IU holds,

Mr. llreck#nridge married, Ooto-tmr 2«. 1KKK. Amanda 0. Kdear,daughter of William and Amelia(Cray) K<lKiir. They ar«* the par-

H nr two children,. Marian HidK»r mid Harriet Amelia. The fum-ly home IH :il (irt^n »tnvcl, Woort-

hridge.

bushels last year, and a 589,000,000-bushel average forthe five years 1926-30. Prices are steady and improving.

WOOL—In western growing regions, the market isvery firm, with trading reasonably active. Prices are onthe upgrade.

MOTORS—Automobile executives are both surprisedand elated at reports of retail sales reaching them from}Manufacturing company, continu-

E. Breclcenridge

from Yale University, lie begani professional work with Llebig

pall parts of the, country.

working out of Adjnini.Jra-h Ch

} ing with that company as a chem-

itjurity to uuuruve cuiimuuuti , l o r m o w n K i i i i n _ , -i, , %-____ p i , n . , ; n „ _:„„ cmei cnemiai or me American

then it is tftne for the citizens of this Township, ™ J>~ i™ ! ? 5 ^ ^ U « ™ L ^ C » ' S?"™is the possibility of the elimination of the recapture clauseof the Transportation Act.

Along BroadwayBy JUDITH CHARLENE

brats and Republicans alike, to sit up and take notice,trials such as appear in the Township Mouthpiecelinority party,(for the minority party evidently hasled these editorial* by remaining silent) do not hurt\bers of the majority party. These editorials, with

Jyhoo that sounds like the old time Fourth of July., in which the orator talks for hours and says abso-nothing, hurt each and every citizen in the Town-

Jor they tend to destroy the credit of the Municipality.}Evident that the writer of those editorials.whoever he-

does not care about the welfare of the citizens of | J £ ^ g ™ PtA

hf YV a n d e r b m

[township. His only aim is to re-establish his party in|Theatre> h a v e h e e n Bigned by the,! Kox Films for pictures; MISB Trev-or, who plays the waitress fromNew Haven In the Russell conifiriy,will leave for Hollywood at theend of two weeka. Mr. Stephenswill leave June llrst.

Tallulah Bank head, as thebride who is left waiting at the al-(•ar, continues to draw the multi-tude in "FORSAKING ALLOTHERS", now current ,*t theTimes SftUar«. Mia* Baknead'sbuaky voice haa a most appealingquality and her ctlng is supreme.

Henry Duffy, ledlng producer onthe "West Coast, has arranged withLeslie J. Spiller and. Leo Bulgakovproduuero of "ONE SUNDAY AF-TERNOON" to present thia play atTne Alcazar Theatre In San Fran-CTBCO ani| the El Capltan Theatre

pfor his own sellish gains.

, time to throw verbal brickbats has come to an end.prejudices should be thrown aside and each and

r citizen, Republican or Democrat alike, should putloulder to the wheel in order to aid the pilot of the

to give us all a new deal.

ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTSings that affect the dinner pails, dividend checks

. tax bills of every individual. National and intern*iat problems inseparable frmn local welfare.

news concerning business is out-moment, goodng the bad.

To Hold Uftke Sale

The choir of Utility Episcopalhome of Miss Dlxon, 192 Main

at No. 2 Rector street, New YorkCity. That position Mr. Breckenridge held for a number of years.

He Is a member of the AmericanChemical Society, Association forthe advancement of Science, So-clety or Chemical Industry and

chureta"winTold"a"cake gale a t ' t h e i ™ f o r several years chairman ofBtreet, tomorrow afternoon at 2:30o'clock. Order will be taken overtht phone. Call Woodbridee 8-0887

Go«tk«'tJuhauo WoirnmiK roii (joethe wai

a direct descendant of Cliarlt-magne. This- la th« claim ,»f Pro-fessor Sehroeder, noted Germanhistorian, of the University of Tue-bingen, who baa carefully studiedthe list of ancestors of the famousGerman poet, the hundredth anni-versary of whose death was markedby memorial festivities throughoutentire Europe. According to Pro-fessor Schroeder, the wife of anancestor of Ooethe In the eleventhgeneration, Frau KuntxeJ Diets, wasthe Illegitimate daughter of Date*Henry III of Hesils. Following thistine, Professor Schroeder came tothe astounding discovery that Char*Temagne was one of the early an-cestor* of the famous Herman poet

THEWawflbridie

S T U D I Ooffers

you

•nofljmrrPhotography

FAMILY PORTRAITSWEDDING GROUPSANNIVERSARIESGRADUATIONS

Our Photography la done bjrexpert photographer who has•petit HO y«»H In profeaBton-»1 photography. . . , We la-vlt« yon to visit our studio,»nd convince yourself of UwArtistic work we do at reaa-

: unable prittwl

YOl K CHIIJ) 9

PORTRAITdone attractivelyand Hte-llke 39cEverything tn Photography

THE

WoodbridgeSTUDIO

74 Main St. Woodbridft

ANNOCNCB MARRIAtJR

MrB. Kaward M. Olhrlck. of 095St. Georges avenue, Woodbridge,announces the marriage of herdaughter, Catherine Ruth Olbrlck,loj>r. Louis S. Downs, of Carteret.

Art Barnett, renowned radioimpersonator, is the new master ofceremonies at the Paramount GrillBe 1B supported by HH1 Young, thejuvenile of "New Moon", "Hoaalie'and "The Desert Song". Thefeature dande team will be Ray-mond nd Tamea who tore recentlycompleted a successful season atCiro's In Paris.

orn, wheat, rj'e and sugar all recently reached newf for the year. Electric power output tends to be pro-nately better in comparison to earlier part of thiaThe American Railway Association forecasts thaisecond quarter of 1933, the reduction in freight

flings will be the smallest in thrde years. Steel out-I showing a moderate advance. Money rates continuele down rapidly. , 'remendous importance is attached to the forthcom-

iternational economic conferences between Presidentjjvelt, his advisors, and representatives of the princi->reign governments. World rehabilitation will na-

be the subject of conversation—and that entails an "^e

lously varied number of by-subjects. Tariffs, warders ot th,e original production arearmaments, gold standard, currency problems, in-|beinr-BoOgTit.to duplicate theirreflation—these are some of the topics which must

In ftoiiyfrnad.. Just as anon ax hecan find pajle leads for the p&rtBplayed^ tdle T»y Lloyd Nolan andFrancesca Urunlng.

Next on thhe roiitrum 'of theWee and l,e\'finthal cycle o( revviv-uln will be Ilelasco' last production"IT'S A WISE CHILD". This playHad

fftiBcussed and when the average citizten reflects howhe knows of any of them he can appreciate the dif-

r .es that will be faced by all concerned. At this writ-|Ramsay McDonald is here personally; that Mussoli-" 1 do likewise if possible; that France has sent Her-

pd that Hitler will send a representative. Only ma-wor not invited was Russia, as no diplomatic rela"xist between her and the United States.

Jne of the main barriers to recovery is that therethroughout the world today what might be called a

Miey blockade." Fifty of the fifty-two existing 'na-ta order to save their currencies from collapse, haveie the normal international flow of jnQHey, Tradjn countries has alt but come to anen'd. To restore

trade to the dominant econdhiic^position.ft once\ia a problem all countries face.

short time ago the Committee for the Nation, re :300 industrial leaders, made public its plan to

prices. The plan includes;

roles tn tne forthcoming product-Jon. " -

"HILDA CASH1DVby Wlliram jourdan

a new playRapp and

Send $1 for the next f>

mouth* of

Henry nd Sylvia Lieferant, waspresented on Wednesday eveningApril 2bit at the Martin BeckTheatre. The cast Includes StellaAdleT, who has the tiUe role, Syl-via field, Howard Phillips, Mar-garet Barker, Edward Emersonand David Morris.

HOUSE BEAUTIFUL

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"MAN MTES DOG", the newcomedy by IR)h LScfi TIer' an<! 5f-tbur liarU)A..ODeued T.u.eadax «lshtat tH6 EyiseTTni TbetttFB,' featuringL*o Uornieliy, abbry aBB tefl ijyVictor KTTHan, UayntonU Walburnand TJ^nnie Moore.

jg of bankB; currency expansion to protect deposit-which have not yet reopened; government

iteo of deposits of all banks which have been re-l and held sound; continued embargo on gold ex->nd suspension of specie payment; removal of re-Bns upon foreign exchange dealings which do not in-fold ; revaluation of gold, by raising its stipulated(im the present level of $20.67 per ounce to $86.17«e; creation of a Federal non-partisan board toi the United States' general price level of whole-

&mmodity pricee at 100, this being the average ofBvels from 1921 to 1980. The report was signed by art HarrTionlowing directing committee: Lessing J. Rosenwald, the cast,

T, Sears, Roebusk & Company; F. H.^exatter, pres*iirymen's League Cooperative Association, Inc.;

"LITTLE 0Lp BOY'.'VUU,JJur-Mer«dlth playing an Import-

ant comply iyi« oppiind Wuflto^,OT*hItiR a1'.' i e iMajftioiise. • Tueplay 7a based1 on the reform BchoolMr. jtferedim also appeared in"ALIG7; IN WONDERLAND", andrecefnryTn "The a-Penny Opera"as Crookefl Jack Klnger.

Margaret Howes, who Is produc-ing "NINE HPINB STRBETT', adrama by Jonn Colton ba»«d on aplay by Donald Hlackwell nd Wil-liam Miles, and SStarrlng LillianUlsh", will opes In New York ouThursday evenng, April 27th', Rob-

DOES YOUR BEARD

has been addedIs

to

^., chairman, General Baking Company; Vincentpresident, Bendix Aviation Company; J. H. Rand,

resident, Remington Rand, Inc.

IfOKJfilGN TRADE—Dwpit* declines of 29 percent.Ivolume and 88 percent, iw the wriue of 8hipraent» to1 countries, the United States was the world's leadyMs.iuia, drma.

"8ONU OF THE EA^LK", theChviea Eogers production, form-erly titled "Beer Baron", openedat Ole 'Paramount Theatre, begla-nlat Prtffily April 28th. Charles

Rtcbard Arlon, JeanMwy unun ana Louia

w v a the touUng n N t Iff

STAIL^TRADE—Pefinitery improved in most large, This has been due partly to Easter—seasonal—partly to what it *pp«r*nUy a new "spending at-on the part of a public witfc renewed confidence

WEAT—Winter whe».t production this year is fore-1884,000,000 bushels M compwrid vith ""

j n , Wrua Orofo'a te-niueicaJ ejcpoaitlont is

ntlon '*t

WORSETHAN THE AVERAGE?

We're looking for men who have trouble ahav- Then they daaomaed the <ioufale-edge Probaking. We want to reach you people whose faces bUlc and definitely caked then pfoblems. Whybum and smart from the razor. If your beard not profit hjr the *»r-fifnm ol other*f LeantIt cross-grained and stubborn we have the cure (or yowaetf what hosts ol men already know.(or it LiteraDy thousands of men had thedifficulty as yours. They ™iypM>v^ about

. qprirls of hair on the chin or neck — wtnied be-cause they neyer obtained ^^MI, easy abaw^

Begin now to get dean shares entirely free fromdiscomfort. Use the double-edge Probak tomor-K>«r momtng. We psomsse shaving ease youhave never know* bdfca— wt yonitmmfy b * &

attrscttug w(de atwntlon '*t theRADIO CITY MUSIC HALL UStuw««fc la tlt« first apMuapee »B a•ttgft Btwtuetion. "WORKINGHAN". George ArllW new itarrius

i tb« strtSA t M

PR#BAK BLADESFOR aiLHTTE RAZORS

Page 6: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

• • : • • - * " • ' • * • • > •

f \»- taKttat mr* w —

f -ma -flunw* -f *»«»»•• -f

E war' -.dow "3»e

PIM1X

ClassifiedBusiness Directorysodiv. Tt^^xi

BELL TELEPSOWE

Page 7: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

" - • • = • . - • " * • •

WOODBMDQE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 2B, 1933 PAGE SEVEN

BARRON RALLY PROVES TWOPOINTS SHORT FOR VICTORY

OVER PERTH AMBOY HIGHWoodbridge loses by 14-12 score at Wonderland park.

—Third inning rally by Amboy aids Crimson to win.

KARNAS, ZILAIJTAR AT BATtfter winning the first game of the season by trim-Metuchen, the Barrons traveled to Perth Amfloy and

were defeated by Tex Rosen's Perth Amboy High Schoolnine, 14-12 at Wonderland field. The game was marked'hy heavy hitting, in which the Kirkleaki outfit outhit theCrimson, 13-10.

Tim climax of the tilt eume Intlie ninth innlnK whe^l * nillysinned by tho Red and Hlack fellJiiHt Htiort of a victory AlthoughliiKKinj: 1)e~i77TTT at one time 11 to 1tin* Woodbrldge Knl^hta keptfighting; throughout ana rallied Intlie ronrth and ninth Rtanswn toSrliiK the HCore to 14-12.

TToodbrldkP fltarted off the gamehy scoring a tone run in their traitof IIH> first, but Amboy retaliatedliy Hcorlnt; three runa In their

Tin' second Inning went wore1(~HK Tor rmtTi Teams, fn the third,tlie "riniHon scored eight runswlifcTl firove Kczwezyk from theWound. A newcomer, Barntmibstlluled :md hfl pitchedball In the remaining Innings.

In the fourth, the Ugh ting Woodbridge lads, drove four runs acrossrile plate, of Yanlak, AmRoy'H martins moundsunan. Thefifth went HcorelesB, 'jut in the

WoodbrldRe drove in tworuns on Balog'B long double. Am-boy IlkewlBe chalked up two runiton a double by Beatty.

Errors in the seventh stanzaliavud the way Tor lone pointB forboth teams. Tho next Inning again

wilh no scoroB registered.

St. James' TakeOpening Battle

From CarterelThe n|!wly organized St. Jamcn'

baseball club opened HH neas<onSaturday afternoon at the Grovestreet Held by defeating the Cart-eret Cardinals, l l i-li . The fowlsfound the Cale,ret pitchers .fortwelve hits while Keating and K. i(lerlty allowed but nine.

The Htrons; cold wind whtch wasprevalent caused several errors andth'e pitchers allowed many bases onballs. Jimmy Zilal proved to bethe star on the field, stopping Hev-eral hltR without an error. At theplate Tom MUrtagh excelled mak7Ing three hits and: aa many runsout of five times at bat. Dunham,V. Cerity and Keating also collect-ed two hits apiece,

Tne box scores:HT. JAME8

abWood bridge faced the ninth

with u HIX run dellclt. Zllal, thellrsl man up, singled, Joat thennot on ban<> on an error. Wukoveta grounded out and Kurutza,pinch hitting for Jlosze, Hied out,Karnaa, the next man on deck,drove in two run^with a single.Hutteinun walked. Miller, pinchhUtlng tor Barmis, connected for abeautiful single driving In tworuns. The promising rally and theBurnt! ended as Virglllo Hied out.

TUB game proved interestingthroughout. Each team committ-ed Hcveral errors. Kanius andZllal starred at bat getting three

I l l t t l tovs VH. HT. MWtY'K

Tin1 VViimlhriiU'.i> Hls;h Schoolnliir will fure Us irndltioim!rlviiK 1 MnrvR, thh* afternoonnt llu1 drove street tllnmond. To1au> the UnrronB have the record of wtuniiiK onr unnsi' middrop.ilni; one.

KnKh-ftki has not decided anyet which one of Iho bnyn willstart on Ilio innuml, hut In alllikelihood II will be eitherS/.t'\vez\ k or Knniaf Kr'om allIndlcnliont) Woodbrldco dhouldcm r rife from Hit- name on thowin Hide.

Big Time RacersTo Open SeasonAt Reading TrackFrame, Winn, Sail and

Winnai stellar entries.ItKAOlNli. I'a., April 2N.

Eastern America's Hint session olspeed, thrills and chills will ln> of-fered HumrJy A,nil 110, when Han-UiiiBOii Speedways. i)it;-time raciJis:operators open with AAA auto rac-es at Heading fair grounds truck.

Featuring the sis-event pro-gram of 100 1:I|IH o( motor mad-ness will be such stellar entries astVed I'Yame, \<\Tl Indianapoliswinner and victor at Heading lastMay; Billy Winn, ^realest winner

Last year's Indianapolis winner is a favorite to win atjun

t Headline iast'Vju[yi"U'iiob>Haii'Read ing auto races, Sunday, April !?0, when custom AAAJle-uding eastern hai'f-niiioraces make their debut under Ralph Hankinson'.s promo-

W. A. A. CAPTAIN

tion.

Zilal, ab 3Walsh", 3b , ,0Murtagh, If 4DunmTTh, ss 4J. Murtagh, If 4RuBznak, rf 4K Gerlty, cr 4Kath, lb 1Campion, o ....'. 2Kjeatmg, p : ..aE. Gerlty, p 1

h101211200

aI

mts strikes and balls wereculled by "Gummy" Brownmlller!DI Perth Amboy. Thu scores:

jb

S. VlryHlo. 2b 5K. llaloK, cf, If 5J. Zilal, HB 5K. Jout, 3b 5J. Wllkovets, cf, It 5J. How, if 0J. Karnau, c i11. liiittt-ijiu.il. lb iJ. Scssweczyk, l> 0K. HxriiHH, |i ;lK. Miller, 1J. kumilza 1

31 13 12CARTERET

ab r hMltroka. ir _ 4 1 0Cagey, 2 b 2 i! 1Smolenskl, ss 2 3 1Szelag. c 1 3 0Tap, 3b 4 l 2Poll, rf 2 2 0Comba, l b 4 2 3LurkGBO*, If _ 4 0 1Kartmm,-p : 3 o 1Andres, p 1 0 1

29 12 9

NATION'S LEADING DRIVERSENTER WOODBRIDGE SPEEDWAY

RACES -- SUNDAY, MAY 7THAll old favorites to be on hand—Bob Sail to defend

Woodbridge title—Will drive Vance Special.

BROSHART AND THIESEN ENTERAll the old favorites, as well as the leading speed

kings of the West, will be on hand to compete in the open-ing AAA auto racing season at the Woodbridge Speed-

o! way, Woodbridge, on Sunday afternoon May 7, according°!to word received by Manager Harry Mendel. Bob Sail," t h e Pater&on Idol, who won first pla 'e in the Woodbridge

Speedway Championship last season, announces that hewill be on hand to defend his title

. And Sail will be well equipped

In 19 32; Freddy Winnai, Doc M<-Kenaie and Jimmy ratterson, 1'hl-iadelphians who rode in the In-dianapolis race and wore well Intlifi money in ,!2; the great NewYork veteran, Otto Burdjck; MiltMarion,'Don Moore, Eldridge Tad-lock, Harold Larzalere, WarrenCmillelle, Lloyd Broshart, VernOreiiduiT, Bill Denver, Park Culp,|tlitl .Slump, Harold Wright Formau

'I.awshe, Hill Drake. Tee Linn, Don'hurcli, Al and many others.

Galen will be open to the pub-lic at 10. a. in. (Daylight Time)

sho/tly thereafter the timestart. The races proper

will get under way at 3 pm. DL.S,time, There, will be three sprintevents of live miles, a Hemi-feature.race and u d|ttiuice final of fromft) to 50 laps. The program tinaHwill be tTie new sensation of HoeHuckman, youthful Ttwan, whowill crash through a board walll,while riding a ' motorcycle at. amile-a-miuute clip.

WOODBRIDGE OPENS SEASONBY TRIMMING METUCHEN

NINE BY SMALL MARGINFive run rally in sixth stanza wins game for Kirkleslri

crew—Final score 8-7.

WiHitlbrirtire Httfh Inaugurated its 15WJ baseball sea-son l;^! Friday, by trimminK Un» Metuchen Hitfh nine, 8-7;tt the (Ivovo street (U-ld. The fcnmo was marked by time-ly hitting itnd spots of flashy fielding, which/ resulted •m one double play for tho Barron outfit.

The I ray wns opened with Wuli-ovctH on the mound for "Wood-brldfjo and Ksirnun behind theplate. The mtter. an unknownit nan ui y he forte tne jsaroe. camethroiiKh with flytiiR colors underfire and HI'I-IIIS to be aluted to per-manently till tin- backstop |i,,H|-tlon,

Wukovt'tK was nicked for a fewliitH ami w«» removed In favor t>rHalou. berore the name wan halfOMT HiiloK was also touched forfume same* ano he wag benchedwhile ,-./i'»i7,u look ,)OBse8»ion oftin- i|iouml -iml llnlHbod tho KIIIIIV.Hlllltt IIIK l ) l | | Ollll h i t ,

•lorn Marred at bat, RHttiiK twobits out o| lour trips to the bnt,and hlllliiK In the plncheR. Zlluiplayed errorless ;ia!l al shortstopan<l nicked the Borough pltrher1 <if i ilouble.

In Hutieinati went the honor ol'Ketiinn the loosest hit of the day,a smuHhint; triple down the lettli'-lil foul line. Suinmy Vlrgltlu

jiiillled two num. stealing homefrom third, to score tne seconuOil*'.

I WoodhridM" made Its drat run^n the initial stanza -and ,every-jllniiK seemed to bo sailing alongj smoothly when a rally by the Me-

I M \

W. A, A. to OpenSeason SundayWith Montclair

Butch Neder predicts win-ning season for Brownies

, luchen ramp, a|de4 by GUuuleld's! double and Osbort/B double uudj Ostiorne s t;rr>Te netted Bix runs

tor the visltorB.Tlie Bu irons ttien jp.ored a r u i L

in the latter pffrt of the tninl'inn-ing, in,...iiig the score «-«. A,H... .lUiiiir" accounts? for another pointIn ~ie ri.Yn. TTlien tilings looked *darkest for t'ue Rirkleskl nine, theboys staged a rally which swe.ilive runa over the plate. Metuchenpusheu over one more hi the sev-BIJUI siansia maktnfc the filial scoreS-7. The acores:

Hutch Ncder'sopen tlieir Hensoiiiioon a I.will face

Ifi

the

Ilrownles willSunday nfter-

o'clock when theyMonteliiir Black

abK, \rirgTT70, rti 2K. llaluj,',p, cf 6

Ghntaat the Grove street Stadium J. Zilal, sa "Zl'.bCecil Neder expects to Btart JoeyToth as the hurlur and Dunhamus catcher.

I1'. JoHt, 3 b 4J. WukovVtjiB, cf, [) 3J. liosze, If, rt1 4

Denert and Ingram will form the| J. Kanvan, c 4bnUery for the Black Gianta whowill supply plenty of a for the

are reduced 30 i««rwnt. under lastyear's scale. Pleasure autoB will be"admitted and parked free. Lam

turned in two victories and willhave a slight wine on thu local

! boyp.

Bowling •Tot at

ilodnar,

.43 12 U 5

'KUTH AMI1OY

Htuity. *Augustine, L'uu

2ndJohnson, lb ».._ 5*»ehila, as, p ~.'STw-.irdy, If „ :.4Puccl, cf ....: 3Yavor, rf _ _... 4 1

Yaniut, u, C, as

Totals

h0020002311100

SCHWENZERS TAKE ALL THREEThere was no doubt as to the Schwenzers being in

Good form Tuesday night when, they swamped the Hatt-ners in alt three games at the Craftsmen's Club. Althoughthe Hflffners rolled an .exceptionally tine game the Sen" wen-zers went them one better.

for tilts season's rticea as be willbe driving the Vance .Special whichshattered many records last yearwith Joe Husso at the wheel. Hall

The scores:HAKF-NKKH

J. NejeiUW .; 190 235 185J. KornecW 177 200 213G. UrbantTTt „ 167 194 213M. Moran 183 172 182Perkins 217 207 190

934 1007 983

SCHWENZKItHAl Simonsen 227 182C. Sctiwenzer 220 245TunlBon - 122 212G. Messlck 217 204Hmelenkl 184 226

215149

234

970 1069 1006

FLEAS TALLY LARGE SCORE

..•34 14 10 9!

RUTGERS' * HMDER BRIMS

ARMY, CRESCEflXS

: NKW llltHNHWICK Army andthe Cre/:ent A. O. will face twoitntBeiH leaniH in the labl of u ae-rleH of bttH«ball tmd luoro*headeiH here tomorrow. The Scar-let nlue, which defeated Princetonand Middlebury but dropped thuopening Middle Three Tilt to Le-liinh, will take the fluid againstthe Cadets, und the lacrosse team

T 0!heU Sllrook'lyn ten In the nightcap.

Tbe Crescent game will almostbe an alumni contest for Rutgerswith Ecky TownBen^ and FrenchyJuljea, tttl-Amerieans wbile In col-lege, Eddie Gray, Jerry Tbrallsand Eddie Pereyra In theof the club team. .,

The Scarlet will be carried lu| the Middle Rtlanttc States chain

uiouHuip mile relay, the ClftBB D

Some fancy scores were chalked up on the ScoreboardWednesday night when the Fleas smoked out the Wood-Uridjce Fire Company, two games out of three at the OroenS-eet

t i£&rne,ThThe scores:

K'ElnhorfiE. OsborneAl, Schubert ..-H. Deter

1HS.....228

193

199

146,189188

210 Wn

F1UB CO,Grelner ,..'• 127

ing spring races, providing tb*1

uTust colorful sports assembly toevfcr gather here.

BRYAFSAULSPAUGHKILLED AT OAKLAND

"Ited'Dave Gerity will again beseen in action. This) year Nederwill start him on the keystone positlon. A large crowd of W. A. A,fan.s are expected at the openiiiK

as Coach Neder in well satis-wltli th« practise sensuous :ind

1 liryan SaulKpaunh. a favorite ati thu local track lasl year and whojw.is e\:iecte(l to be tlie star of thei ill Saturday afternoon at Oakland

lli;i:i opeiiiiiK next week, was kilt-r.il., wlu'ii his car |)Umi;ed throughtin> L;iiiinl rail at the tract; there.

Aivordiii!; to the report of the•ideut, Saulapaugli was travel-; at the rate of 1011 miles an

^ AVI210 Wm. Measlck 140213165

1037 882 954

S. OBborne "168R. L o r c h 8

170171215

776 909

J15G214203

945

V a

will carry Number J tills year :iwith tbiK fa.st Vauce Special;

;,teBDftuuUfc,nUs.lica aud Hut college sstm rrace of the Penn Relay carnivtttltla

(Hvlr StandingWon tost

Haffners

\\SchweniersKlre Co.CrartBfHenWoelpersAmerican

13

CRAFTSMEN WIN

The Second Warders went down in defeat before thecrafty Craftsmen who took two games at their own .alleysTuesday night. The F o r d o e s , however, displayed con-sistent bowling and gave the winners plenty of trouble.

i'lfie

snofttd luake'ttie boys Word1 Has ;ftso bfce'ii' 'received

from hlyud HroHhart, the Dunnellen buy who riniHued third in t(ie

championship, tlr^t he willbe at Woodbridge thin season

rates No. 8 thiB year ands anxious to show" that his vlctor-.es last Reason wpre not Just rac-ing luck. He is tuning up uia Jo":and hopes to have it ready for tinopening day's races.

The scores:. FOHDH HK(1S

Jacob

Thompson i...AndersonFlutes,Jenkins .-..., -

17 a181

_ 19416716 5

162190172177191

(HAVTSMKN171 Nayroi' 232

H, aimonsen 172Schwenzer 157198

160196186

NlerLe\l

.in

..192

195151138188159

20?17520718!)211

LEGION TAKES TWOThe Doughboys came out ^ top Wednesday nigh

The

A.W.

l 7 0

. , 156173

180

132164IB0.

115191

870 761,

Skay ...HansonKrohne

B. Blnhorn-184...160

846

it168

Wft136178

170

hour when his car out of con-rol, smashed into a Kuard rail,lounded back and turned over

several times. He was killed in-stantly.

UIHI year Saulspaugb won anumber of races at the locul ovalmid his sliill endeared him to theInns who watched hint manipulatehiM car around the track.

Huulspausjji was a resident ofItoi-lter

predicts a .meatTwo A's.

The probablelows:MonWnh-DtmerLMallnMiles i:

for. the

lineup is UH l»l-

W. Szewczyk, rf, u 4

Totals

i'atrltk,

MKTUCHKN

5

W . A . V.Tollil

. I'L OerllyJ. Keatlnii

Karablnchak, Sb oHatpin, 2b 4Benson, n. „..&Campbell, W. if 61'owers, ss aCtlarlleld, lb 4Oabourne, cf _ aCampbell, 1). cf 1i t bodes,' o ... 4Tilp. |> 2•Madison, ,i u

b1u120011

7 2

h102I•I1210000

Totals ; _. 3(jSummary: Two base hits, W.

Iiigraiu ....DlxonGross 21) I). Oerlty

Duiihanr C i l m l ) l j e l ! . liienlield, Zllal, mulJ t Th ri

DuiihaII) : Mullen J u a t - Three bane hit, G.

S t kYeude

..GhaltletBaxton B&Bryant Jb ....Dykes 1!' Bitrtisli

cf CJamiiion•J. Gei'lty

rf KeatingJordon

.Scott

Simpson

Inland,

ST. JAMES'TO MEETMEN'S CLUB

The St. James' Base'.mll clubthe win- w n o <Ief^\ted the Carteret Uardi-

Struck out, by Wukoveis, 3; bySzewczyk, 4; by Tilp 8, ^adjson, 1Double ulay, Zilal. Virgilio, andHuttein-an, Sacrifice, Virglllo. Hitby pitcher, Towers (by WukovwtB)Hits, off Wukovets & In 2 l~'i inn-ings; oft Balog D in 3 2-3 innlngH,o Sczowczyk 1 in 3 innings. Me-tucben, off Tilp, (i irt ti l-s innlngHoff Madison '1 in 2 2r3 iuulngB,

"Dutch" Brunniaugh of

be raced on the coast, in the rand was to have come e ^ t this' J"™t the YounK Men's

..nn.1 Hfi,idi.,irs.iftdiiv!lertl1 AmiW Saturdayweek to appear at Heading Sunday,

Hie

game, willclub of

aftefnoon.

thaL either

latent Offic« I» Ahead ' '"' of All 6thers on IncomeI'IIB patent ofilce Is self-support

ing, there being a Burp'us o£ receiptsovt;r expenditures In practicallyevery year of operation. A reportof the institute for government re-search states that the charges inndeby the patent office for Jta servicesand most of Its publications usual-ly aggregate wore than the entire

Another favorite who has sen t e x p e n s e of operation, so that thisword that he will ba on hand at b u r e a u hnfi b e c o m e o n e o f t h e r e v .Woodtridgo this season fa Al, e n u e . p r o d l I c l n g orsunlzntlons of the

the Ddyton crack ivho g o v e r n i n e n t T h e t l c c i u m l l u t e d s u r -

Miller at Woodbridge. Jimmy Pat- !*° *£* ™- ™™< l l I U 0 l " " f t l1 " v e r

.tenon .will aluo be at Woodbrid«ei»WWWa A recent act of confesswith a fast Miller. j states that the money required for

Auto1 racing sanctioned by the that oifice shall be appropriated byA. A. A. will be Btu&jud 011 thiujlaw out of Us revenues, except n«hard surface Woedbriuge Hp'eed-1 otherwise provided hy law. Theway every SSunday afternoon be- [ conitnlaeloner of gntents IM s^|hrtttnT "trt^l - M a r t . "WborrjTitl (rB~erTy*^6"Wesldetit. With'the

moundnot action,

W u 0 ( l b r l d f . ( t 1 0 1 o u 0 0 ] ( _ 8

Metuchen 006 000 107—7

ST. JUS. WIN7 TO A

to an Injured finger received- in

l

Tlie St. James' boyff who arecoached jy Joe Campion won an*' - '"•••••••lUig g a m e f ro ju ,

uf 3t: .Irfary'sy, Xlfif ^ortft oi? 7' t# 6.'

fletajiigaLiirs 0J1 tltej g i game"tlu'Carterel same ond In till like-lKishltiBer, Jimmy Hyun and V.lihood, Swaek Dunham win take.Mlnkler. Hernie Keatius iiltcbedhis place behind the plate. ! airtight bull aIU>Vtnr \»i[J- tivwhits

in seven InningB. U. Golden andHobble Leisen started for tbe van-TO

jThe WoodlnidKH Township pool | Coach Campion and bin aatsist-

tournament winner will be rttteld- ant, Hill Gerity, will have practiceed next Thursday nl^hl when Hoy'sesaione for the. beys every nfttsr'Lltta will meet Al Hovik at I'alm- noon uaxt week BO au to huve the 'erl's Ilillard Academy tothe

decidi- team in shape for Its game ,wlththe Campbell A. C., from Railway.

.Two games will be played to de- which will take place next Thura-cid,e wiiinors of drat and second day, May 3, -.it the Grove streetplaces". diamond

COII-

fcftfl TtA^oirfy Hard^Btirface; pmpnr-1 sent"of the senate. The annual re-ly b^nK^tl, speedway in this sec- [ p O r t Of the pateotottlcu Tor the yeartlott.ot Ciie country and will be thescene ot tuu oi ly A. A. A. sanct-|lonefl Sunday artefnonn 1 racesthis y«rr. Iw N«w jwney.

or aitilmission have beendrastically cut with tbu lulleldselling at 56 M t » . while ail seats

167 In the grand stand will ,• no for1T« If I.If). Thaw will bfi m re»erve,d14$ seats sq)d. Tne Qualifying nails.144 as usual, will start at on,e o'clock

every Sunday afternoon with theregular race events getting; under

June 80, 1032, sliuwed Unit anumber ol pincutA ij'4Sfl2.

had beeu (jrunted; It showed alsothat all of the flfl exaiHlnliiH dl-vHions were km thnn six monthsbehind, a great advance oyer formerconditions; Tlie demand for econ-omy makea It'^Stinkely that theforce oT about TOO exniulnera Willbe increased ID the near future.Statistic! for 10.10 showed WX'it-appllcatloiiB, W,rai pntentu granted,ll&OH pBudlng, 16,230

w.DATEApril 21April 2\April 28May 5May 9May 11May VIMay 1(5 ,May 20May 23June 3June 9 ^

H. S. Baseball ScheduleOPPONENT

Perth AmboySL Mary'sLakewoodIrvinjjtonSouth ItjvorMetuchenCarteretAsbury ParkJrvingtonSt. Mary'sCarteret

Where SCOREPlayedW.H.S.

At Home , 8Away 12

At HomeAwayAway

At Home,Away

At Home'• Away

At Home'AwayAway

OT.AL...tv. 20

Opp.T

14

21

Page 8: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

PAGE EIGHT THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1933

JAe MAY DAYMYSTERYOctavas Roq Cohere

w. Nu.im.vic

SYNOPSIS-

Antrilni-uo 1'cyton. «cnlor at theUniversity of Mnrlnnd, renents Pnt-crson Thayer s nttentlcn* to IvyWoirii, Hi'viMiiccn-year-old coed, andthoro Is n mnrmy scene, tha tensionbolriK Inrrnnsert tiy MBit Vornon, an-other Mintloni. reproaching Ivy for"brrMlilnB n <laip" with him. Thayer• nrt Vornnn ihrenten each other.T,nrry W«lrh, Ivy'R brother, profes-nor rit the unlverBlty. U appealed toby 'l'nnjr to end hi* stater'* frlend-Bbl|) with Tlinycr. Welch and TonyJ'oyton nro In love. Welch does notBCO what he can do, Tony then tellshim Mic Is mnrrled to Thayer, but I*hl9 wire only In nnme. Larry de-terminus to nee Thnyer and end hisassociation with Ivy. Tony per-fiiindr'i him to wait until she hasappealed to her hunbnnd. She doesso, visiting him in^ hlg room at afraternity house.

CHAPTER III—Continued

"There's something funny. . . .And I think the more we Bay noth-ing (lie less we'll get mixed up IDa sciitidal."

There wns n sound of feet on theStairway Inside ttie fraternity house.The Imys looked toward the doorIn time to see Mai Vernou comeout.

ills milliner still puzzled them.The moonlike face wits sternly set,giving It a somewhat grotesque appennince of futile anger; he wasmoving with short, quick stridesacross the veranda.

ile wus wearing a different suitfrntn the OUR which had adornedhis figure a half hour since and heseemed even more engrossed withthoughts of no highly pleasant na-ture.

He descended to the' walk withoutso much ns a glance, at Farnumand Glenson. They noticed thatunder his iirrn he carried a sizablebnndla They saw him reach hiscar and pitch the bundle Into thetonncnii. Then, with more speedlimn tsrnco. Vwimn lumped hehlndthe wheel, kicked tliestnrter. clashedliis Ki'urs savagely and jerked Intothe road.

"Something's puzzling me," re-marked liuue slowly.-"What?"

"Which Is the most remarkablephenomenon : Tony Peyton's visitto I'at Thayer's room, or Mai Ver-lion's wild-eyed fury. I ask you,Phil-which?"

Glenson gave a prompt and explfrit nnswi>j.

''Both!" he said tersely.

"What?"lie hesitated. "I'm not at liberty

o any.""No. Certainly you aren't I'm

shnnied of you, Bud. You're notlaying rair. 1 guess If it's so Imlortant that I keep away from I'at'hiryer It's Important enough foron to tell me what you know.""I promised Tony—""Naturally, she'll make you prom-

se; because most likely whatevershe said Isn't so."

"That Isn't very nice, Sis.""And Is It nice for you to come

nocking Pat Thayer when younow I'm crazy about him? Is It?"He tried to be fatr. "I guess It

sounds pretty bad," he confessed."But you know I'm honest. Sis—andwhat I'm telling you Isn't guess-work. It isn't based on rumor,'hayer isn't any man for you. And

don't want you going with himny more. You must lay off him.""1 don't have to do what you say.guess If you weren't at this col-

lege I'd do what 1 want. And I'mnot goffig to fool you, Bud. Tilie with Pat as much as he wants

me to. and 1 guess that'll be a goodHtth> bit"

"Even If I ask you not to?""Even then. Now listen—"

CHAPTER IV

TVY WELCH emerged from the* woman's dormitory and confronted her brother. Larry, gazing ather with big-brotherly affection,found It difficult to reconcile himself to the idea that My affair ofthe heart In which Ivy was con-cerned was to be taken seriously.But her first words sounded thealarm.

"I know exactly why you've come.Larry. It's to tell me I've got toquit Pat Thayer. The answer Isthat I won't do IL"

The tolerant smile died on hislips, and he frowned slightly.

\"Because I love him. And I guess

I'm old enough to know my ownmind."

"Not-" about a man like TtraymSis.

She stamped her tiny f* € r * r * f o you,

hasn't she? She's been lifting youfull of poison. She's jealous, that's

Sheitepped close and put her hand on

fraternity house and turned In atPhi Tan Thetn.

"Pat Thayer In?" he asked."Yeh . . . upstairs."TIIPII, when he had entered tho

house, they looked at one anotherhewilderedly. The affair was toopuzzling for mere conversation. Oc-cnslonnlly one would shake hisbond, bnt speech was not necessary.Knrh knew that the other waathinking In circles.

• i l l say this much," commentedGlrnson after a five-minute silence:"I'at Thayer has sure gotten popu-lar with a mixed crowd."

"Ych . . ." agreed Rube. "Orunpopular!"

For live (minutes more nothinghappened. Then, at ten minutespust two o'clock, Larry Welch ap-pi-tired in the doorway.

Lie crossed the veranda withquick steps and descended to thewalk in a- single Jump. The twobuys stured after him, then directedtheir gaases toward each other.

"Happy lad," commented Oleason."He looked almost. scared.*

"Ain't It the truth? You reckon—""1 don't reckon anything. All 1

know Is I'd hate to have LarryWelch get as sore at me as he seemsto be at somebody right now. I never knew that bird could set realangry." ,

At fifteen minutes after twoo'clock . . . almost before the mel-low chimes of the quarter hour haddied out from the tower of OldMuln . . . something happened:something eerlely terrible, some-thing which Jarred the two studentsto their feet and caused cold sweutto break out on their foreheads.

From upstairs In the fraternityhouse there came a wild shriek; anInhuman howl. There was an Instain's pause and then the howl wasrepeated and there was a sound offeet running heavily down the stair-way, and on the summer air certainwords came to the startled ears ofthe two boys.

"Oh! G—<J oh. tny G—d!"

A human figure catapulted ontothe veranda; a disheveled, wild-eyed

his*sleeve. "I know you mean well, i figure which was making passionateBud, but you're all wet on this. Pat [ gestures and struggling futilely to

she be-"I'm not

Is a swell fellow, And he's crazyabout me—"

"Not that bird!""Stop!" Unconsciously,

came quite melodramatic,going to let even you talk about PatHint way."

"No-o? • I guess If I know he'srotten, . . . " \

Oh. That isn't fair, Larry. Itisn't You're being nasty about Patand you don't know anything. Well,

guess he's, told me all the badthings about himself that anyoneelse knows, and I love him. I'm go-ng to keep on going with him, and

I won't have you interfering, Ishall positively Btick with Pat. Now—are you going to leave us alone?"

"No," he said honestly, "I'm not""I warn you, Bud—you'd better."His eyes nnrrowed. "What do

you mean: I'd better?"

"I mean this," she said slowly."If you try to keep Pat Thayer andme apart, I'll marry him I"

^You'll what?""T'llimarry him.""But—but yon can't""Because you aay so?"He cursed himself. He wished be

hadn't told Tony that he'd beep hersecret

"You—you Just can't, that's all,"be said lamely.

"We'll see." She was aflame withIndignation: "I'm going to ask himmyself If he'll marry me I And don'tthink 1 don't mean that. Bud—be-cause I do!"

He stared at her for a minute.She was bis sister—and he knewthat she wna serious. ,He sensedthe futility of further argument andturned away abruptly. She JumpedIn front of him, her eyes blazing.

"Where are you going, Larry?"His face was more grim and for-

bidding than she had ever seen It"1 can't hammer any sense Into

your head, Ivy—BO I'm going to BeePat Thiiyer,"

"*'dn . . ."'you wouldn't dare IYou'll be starting something 1" Sheqgg- trembling • violently und herface was pale #lth anger. "I warnyou, Larry—you'll be starring some-

say something.

They recognized him Instantly:tyike Carmtclno, Janitor of the fra-ternity house. He grabbed Farnum'sarm. He tried to talk, but no wordscame; only the gibberish of terror.

Farnum grabbed Carmtclno by theShoulder and glared at him. ,

"What's the matter?" he askedhoarsely. "Wh-wbat's all the yell-Ing about?"

Carmlcino gestured wildly towardthe Interior of the house.

"Meester Thayer 1" he croaked—'.Meester Thayer!"

"What about him?"Carmlcino covered his eyes with

his hands."He is dead!" he groaned. "Some-

Man-Tailored Vies With Fur-TrimBy CHERIE NICHOLAS

gesture. "I cannot breathe, I «n-not move. 1 am acflrpil."

"Ton—you mean somebody renllygrubbed you?"

"No I" Mike's eyes rolled with ter-ror at the very thought "I mean1 feel 08 had like somebody doesthnt I am scared. I nm frightened.And I run downstairs."

Gleaaon looked up. "We'd bet-ter 'phone the police, Rube. If wedon't call the cops well get our-selves1 mixed up 10 this. And I guesswe'd belter 'rlhone the flenn, too."

• Glenson walked unsteadily Intothe fraternity house and called theMnrlnnd police stntlon. Then hetelephone*! to the dean and returnedto the porch. .

It wns a ghastly thing—madeeven more grisly by the perfectday; thri sensuous, flower-scentedbreezes of first summer; ttie enre-free. strolling groups of students;laughter nnd Jollity nnd cffelessyouth. And upstairs the hoift of flyoung mnn lying dead. Murdered.It wasn't believable. The twoyoung men were appalled l>y theirown knowledge of surrounding clr-ctimstnnces. There wns so ninchthey knew which might prove dimm-ing.

A smnll car Jerked to n liriIt tnfront of the fraternity house nndtwo men alighted. One of them wnstall and broad and wore ilie uni-form of the Marlnml police force.The other, wearing civilian clothes,was short and squat.

Students strolling on the Row orlounging on the verandas of frater-nity houses, stored with sudden In-terest nt Psl Tau Thotn, There wasa genernl movement in the directionof the house. A young mnn fromLambda Beta Pi addressed the uni-formed policeman who stood on thelawn of Psl Tnn Thorn.

"Whot's wrong, officer?"The cop answered tersely.•:Murderl""Good G—d. . . . You don't

mean. . . . " *"I dont mean nothln', young fel-

ler. Somebody's been murdered Inyonder and nobody's to go in or gitout That's alL" p O M E S stepping along In the

The startled youiig :r.an told his ^ spring style shows tho strictlycompanion The news sped from lip tailored suit, dnrlngly mannish downto Up. Who was It? No, not Rube to the minutest detail, so much BOFnrnum- be had been seen on the'as to provoke a question mark shrugporch Then, somebody mentioned ! of the shoulders on the part of the

Silly Popular BeliefAbout Smock Wedding

A nmock wedding. In Coinnlnl ti

w a s so called from t h e fact Hint t|M.bride wore only a s i n g l e garment i.,order to comply with a populnr n-tlon that the bridegroom w a s relim,.,iof al l responsibi l i ty for the dehti ,,rthe bride If she c a m * tn him with n ,property. The belief W R * widely<. .rent a m o n g people of l i t t le lrnmi:,-Jo Eng land and N e w England RPV,T

general Inns Wro. T ^ $ custom H ,carried out womotlmss h.v hnvlnc ti...brlfle, unclothed, atanrY In n ci.wnfrom which she thrust only a hnn.ito take the hand of t h e hrltWni.m,during the ceremony, L P M Hi.in irrntnry niro, Franc i s Whartnn. ;r,Amprtean Ipgal author i ty , wrntr n,;

"thorr Is n popular hpllpf that n m r ,w h o mnrrlps a w o m a n In rtpfot n',solve?! himself f-.'om nil llnhllliy if i,tnkp* tior from t h e hnnria nt i>p r i e s t clothed only In her shift. \-Is n vnlgnr error." ^Mnrrlnge rccm!tn N e w England 200 y e a r s ago slmflint tho fact of the marriage wns >•<trrp<I tn the public honkH 'nompllnu

with a notation that t h e brldfcrohplng desirous of e scap ing llnliii;'for (lohtn nwod hy th«» brldp, onit-" 'her to bo. married clad only In .smock, or wound In a nhppt, vrliir1

hp provided. In conpral the i n : ,pfors to a marriage nrranRnmont Ihl<'h thp bridegroom nMiutiPi \, ,abi l i ty , for the d e b t s of tlio hr!.'.

t States now h a v e laws on iiinject.

Pat Thayer. Mnny persons men- j niore conservative. Some of thejtioned^Paf Tbayer' No one knew j new suits have gone so far as to bewhere the rumor started, but Thay- ; actually trousered, worn with man-er's name was on every lip. The tailored shirts, sporty ties, stiff

"No-o," he answered soberly,''she'B not Jealous."

"How do you know?""I know It""Hnrophl" Ivy spoke with the

superiority of womanly Intuition."I guess she's got the wool pulledover your eyes, too. I guess I couldsee that she was Jealous when shecaught us In the Bower. I mean Icouty tell by every single word shesaid."

"£he Isn't Jealous, Ivy. I feel con-fident of that"

"Yes; because you're crazy aboutnor—that's why. You take my ad-vice, Bud£ and layoff her^ She1*playing you off 'against Pat""l gue«rI understand this better than youd\."

"No. You've got to quit, Thayer."Her Upb pressed tightly together.

/'Since when did you start tellingroe what I must do?"

"It's for your own good," ."Ob, y«»—btHUjUjwn Jtfftlup wonv

au wants the man who's crazy aboutme; that's why.. And because she'sgot you footed. Honest, i neverwould have thought Tony Peyton*could be go small and mean.

"She Isn't that. Sis; believe me,. ] know what I'm talking about Bhetold me a good deal—"

"-About this, "About otbW things."

t- ».iu'reHe moved away. "jipu'rY darn

right 1 will," he said sharply.

She stood like a little statue as h /strode off down the patb which ledthrough the glen and so up the billopposite. He tried to think clearly:tried to rid himself of the prejudicewhich must necessarily arise be-cause Tony Peyton was the otherwoman in the case. One thing wasclear to him In that moment ofworry; he must see Tbayer Imme-diately. There must be a show-down. He couldn't handle Ivy, buthis teeth clenched as be reflectedupon the fact that be could mightywell handle rat Tbayer.

~Ac£uaT157~T»rry "exultation at tbe prospect thatThayer might not be easy to handle.Ivy had rouBed him more than heknew. Be was boiling internally,and he wanted a vent for bla over-wrought feeling*.

Rube iParopm andwera still lbunnina on tno. YOMJUIIof the Psl Tau Theta house. It wasRube who saw Larry first

"And now another," he drawled."Here com.es Larry Welch lookingIlk? AQmejnna, bad socket hint be-

"Somebody Have MurderedMeester Thayerl"

body have murdered MeesterThayer 1"

Over

policeman on the lawn allowed no-body to approach within hearingdistance of the group on the veran-da; the militant positive figure ofJohn Reagan, chief of the Marlandplalnelothes force; Mike Carmiclno,the Janitor, petrified with fear andtrembling violently; Rube Farmim,tall and limp and frightened; PhilGleason, reduced from his custom-ary alertness to the shriveled minia-ture of his usual positive self.

Reagan was questioning Farnum.Rube was struggling to be fair andhonest; to remember things andyet to avoid Injustice to anyone.He was absolutely and abysmallymiserable.

Then there emerged from theMain building a tall and dignifiedman before whom a path opened inthe thr<jng of students. WhitmanBoyd, dean of Marland, turned inbefore the tragic fraternity houseand. was promptly stopped by thepoliceman on duty.-

"No further for you," snapped theofficer.

Dean Boyd spoke quietly."Are you" In charge, Officer?""No. That'll h.e John Reagan yon-

der." And be gestured toward theveranda.

"Will you ask him it I mayspeak to him? I'm dean of the college and I'd like to find out whathas happened."

The policeman called out to Rea-gan. "This gujj Is tbe big boss,Chief. Can he come up?"

Reagan's keen eyes surveyed the

cuffs and swaggering fedora hats.

Bide a wee, ye who are skeptical,and give eye to another number offashion's program, for equally prom-inent on the horizon there rises agracefully silhouetted figure clad insoftly furred delicate gray or beige,made even more appeallngly femi-nine with the accompaniment 'of asheer little befrilled blouse or theflaunting of one of those amusinghuge butterfly bows of crisp or-gandie which are the rage just now.What wltfa the elusive pastel toneif these costumes so perfectly

blended with hazy, misty fox furthe ensemble melts Into the springtime scene as does the faintly tingedleafy verdure during the lovely May",me days.

Which to choose, the severely anddaringly man-tailored or tne b«-guillngly feminine, for the newspring outfit, aye, that's the questlon! Toss a penny If you will, foreither way leads triumphantly onto the very height of fashion.

If your Qlppant penny happens tohead toward the strictly tailoredyou will be tremendously InterestedIn the ultra chic suit which the ladyseated in the pictured group Iswearing. Here Is the masculine

the bowed head of theenmebiuc. shaken* sobbing

Janitor, the two fraternity brothersfaced each other. Their eyes weredistended' with- Horror as "theyjstruggled to comprehend the mes-sage which Mike Carmiclno brought

dei He Jerked his head aifirma-tively.

"Let him through."The dean mounted the veranda

steps, his arrival'-Sending a glow ofthanksgiving through the breasts of

a fcair, where he fent hfssquat, muscular body racked withdry sobs. Tbe boys were badlyshaken, but at least they tried tothink clearly, and Farnum's voice,when be questioned the janitor, wasalmost steady.

"You say Mr. Thayer Is dead?"Carmiclno shuddered."Sl-sl, siguore. Be Is quite com-

pletely murdered. Be Is on tbe floorof hees room. There la much blood.Be does not breathe. Bees heart Itdoes not beat I am Quite sure heIs dead."

spoke directly to Beagnn.

"My name Is Whitman Boyd," he

fashion at its best It is an afternnoti suit Unit copies the mule tuxedo even to a satin lapels and asatin strip down either side of theskirt. Tho blouse which Is styledlike a man's vest and the ascot tieare In white satin. For high-classswank this model stands at tho veryhead of the list The smart set arequite wild about It—this idea of thetuxedo suit

For less formal wear the double-breaBted suit sketched In the circlebelow Is ad excellent and thoroughly practical style, either in blackor navy. Note the very masculinehat which tops It. This model alsolooks good in tweed, and tweedswhether in cape costumes made upwith the popular taffeta checks o:In strictly man-made tailored fashIon are "all the go" for spring.

If your fancy leads to the morefeminine type, why not a foxtrimmed gray or beige woolen top-coat, such a« shown to the left Inthe picture? How flattering theyare, the suits and coats In dellcattones which are made ornate wltlmatching fur. You are offered yourchoice between caped types anthcjse which "say It" with novevoluminous sleeves, In either eveclhandsome borderlngs of luxuriantmatching fur complete these charm-ing ensembles. > The placement ifur on the cape is done with a vieof keeping It away from the face iimost Instances so that the -suit oicoat may be happily worn away In-to the summer. The cape sugges-tion sketched In the top oval givesthe tdea.

«. Ull . Wwtvn N n w W r Union.

HOW COLORS AREUSED IN STYLES

Dark colors are In favor for cos-tumes and bright accents of acces-sories—aw eat erg, blouses, belt, col-lars and cuffs, scarfs, pocketbooks,gloves, hats and handkerchiefs.

For evening, the pastel family ofcolors »re in exceptionally good re-pute. So""that you"-wllT tt«'up-to-date on the; names as well us the

nHft •!!**«•<otvsew fabric*no*. fitR*8 ftPtfld ^ wi'ti Inmind: Eel-gray, sunset-orange, sul)hur-yeUo^ Jtrusatem-cherry red,

PIQUE JACKETBy CHKttlE NICHOLAS

How to train BABY'S

BOWELSBabies, bottle-fed or breasl-f<:l,

With any tendency to be conatipatnl.would thrive if they receive*] <l;iilvhalf a lea.spoonf.ul of this old fumilvdoctor'a prescription for the buwi'ls.

That is one sure way to train tiuvbowels to healthy regularity. T >avoid the fretfutness, vomitiiif.crying, failure to gain, and other ill*of constipated babies.

Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin i.\Hood for any baby, f or this, gou h •' <'the word of a famous doctor. For?'•even years of practice taught hmjust what babies need to keep tin irlittle bowels active, regular; kfi-Dlittle bodies plump and hcallhy. I rDr. Caklwell specialized in the triMt-ment of women and little ones. !!.•attended over 3500 births withoutloss of one mother or baby.

D». W. B. C A L D W I U ' S

SYRIP PEPSINA Doctor's Family Laxative

pft)low the belt. If precedent meansanything he's comjng straight here."

Bat even Parnum did not take nlaown sarda seriously, and so bis jawdropped M Larry pawed his own

"Good Lord,find him?"

How did yon

"I see the door or Meeeter Thayer'B room Is dot entirely shut. 1look In and 1 see one foot and oneleg on the floor. 1 thveok that Isvery funny that Meester Thayershould lie on the floor and not move.Perhaps he Is drunk. So I think iwill put mm on the b*d and touttua door M nobo&r « W t o o * he i*drunk. I go m the room and then Isee tneu blood—and—and—and—"

"And whatr""I stand there for a minute. Two

rnlnutes. I do not understand thatMeester Thayer what Is so kind towe- have come to a sad ending.Then I see he U dead and some-tbUw grab ma right hare f ~B»touched Ua throat with a dramatic

"Murdered. Young feller namedThayer."

"Good G—d! Then It's true—Iheard the students gossiping."

"You've heard nothing else?""No. That's why I came. To find

out." - v

"Well—he's dead all right enough.Stabbed in the throat Taln't pleas-ant up In that room."

The dean shook his bead."What do you wish done, Mr, Rea-

gan?""Just exactly nothing," said the

"detective crisply. "Right now I'mgonna 'phone headquarters for acfluplfi .jnoie, huu£Sfl_iiull& to sst.lice the grounds. Nobody's to comeIn here and no one's to leave. Thesethree fellers ain't to move fromwhere they are."

"Yon mean." gasped Gleason,"that we're under arrest?"

John Reagan grinned broadly"Not yet you a^nt, 4

But doitt | e t Impatient.''<TO UK CONTINUED.)

eaf-green, deepwater.-h^e and thatntangible new shade of blue that Is

going to be very popular and which,at least for the moment, la calleduioonllght-hlue.

Many of these shades are oldfriends wedded to new title to giveyou a fresher Impression of them.

Greenland'* Nam«Greenlam was discovered by

Norsemen about 90(1 A. D. It Is atradition that the name Greenlandwas given to it by Brjc the Red In986, for the purpose, of attracting.Immigrants from Iceland by the at-twctlveuess of tbe name.

Fabrics With Cire FinishHave Brightest Pro«pects

Fabrics are stilrdull, so that theoccasional appearance of luitroutmaterials for spring wear attract'more attention than In other sea-sons. Just now it Is fabrics withetrt" flntBti which appear to Turnbright prospects for the Immediatefuture.

The clre Idea Is not altogethernew, of course, a w satins wareused in considerable quantity lastsummer for drem, trlmmlifgs todmtte jackets and rwppwtred to «rt>ulug govnn and format attwoooawear last fall

Studfo! B*luFrench women who are following

ttie edicts of Chanel, famous design,er, are wearing leather belts stud-ded with Imelt . They w e n orig-inally launched to wear witu l*c«•rening (owns, ~ '

* - . • *

CuticuraWorks Wonders in the

Care of Your HairMassage the scalp with theOlntmettt to remove the dan-dfuff. Then, shampoo with theS«ap to cleanse the hair and re-store its natural glow and vi^tr.

8f*pSc, OintmentZSutdSOc. Proprietun:Potter Drug & Chemical Carp.

M*ldea,MMft.

HANDWRITING ANALYSISibaoltKSI. Umubolil Acwiaui;*! BorlMi. ft•' 'rtiuriaj tut aorTlM In kllOW

.....jr. Will toll jou i l l tr»lL»f.]ritKleentimlUfortnu " "

1'nif.V. O.

, Kxprrt Orapfeltuuuil llrixik. V •'

etattiittVhaf f'rftt nhaf f'rftt n»>i« tot•totlti huLkt, ttleifraph ur IN r !by ittKl&trriMl mull Innuu-i

A. BOSKNTHAL. M I>nk> Atr.. !KIII. N. J. Fhuiw BherwiMx! t-lftofl.

Waffle pique In t glowing peachtone make* the little jacket. U c yblouse made up of peach taffetacording. Wool crepa skirt In darkbrown. The smart, up-to-datewwAttb* to not fiitijilato tola•on If It falls to Include a Uttltpique Jacket The evening jacketmads of organdie, with crisp, bouffant silhouette, due to Its largesleeves and. perhaps, a hnge bow,la also ona of fashion's latestwWnu. Which got* to show theImportant* <* mttm M ator.

Colorful J*w,ol«"Colored brooches and clips oi

CftbMhoa rubles, emeraW andsapphires set tn the form of abouquet of flowers or a conven-UomtUMd basket of fruit artipring faahloo favorlt*

HAl.KMMKN. AGENTS. Our tl, Nrw |i.iBti nl 10 trlpli-tuttiil rumr I-

*lth k F r n Nsw Htyl* Guld I'lul' . 'ctte Hiuar. filK dalljr c u b vrullia. '

maueut repeat huelnesA.LIHKBTY PBOIMTCTB CO.

U Wwt 4SnU W..8alte JSU.Ntw lurk <

AltK VOI7 A FOKfiOTTKN HKl'UdHOLUBUf Obwleta add furKotteu 'or itocka ii*y no Interest or tilvll.1 1 r

eta b« turned intu canh. HuwT Will"HBCUKITY SALVAGING 111

Box W Heiwk, N.

ON THE B0ARDWA1*.ATLAMTICCITy,N.J

iVudtr tint Al*wi<"""'

new tow rate 1

50 pu"

Hoi u d CoU S « Wai*iio Ml "•"'

Cowoit O«*«tf«

IHAjrOU B. lATZ, Hmu&i P<"«"

Page 9: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

Xo A DiFFHteMT jRPSTAURAMT? /

M H* Ht HA /

HE FEATHERHEADSTHE WCSI&IOSE

?f£[nbt, mt>vtt AMUL as, 1933 PAGE NINI

[NNEY OF THE FORCEOI'D UXKi

SRC A SOOB6fHB.OM<3OP.

COMf OH — CRACK.A S MU.t- — Wr4V ARC

Y O U ' B * Too RSMfcvt*.

foR. IA01BS

RICJMT— I PO SEBMTO K»Br> I * MYSUBJUL— l'*T LKCBL —WHAT X>6 1b <J CALL

Laughing (?) Matter

>*lST

AN INSULT

HKAVY TRIPLE iLEATHER. XUp

PURABLR —

TritY "WAR*

1(4 1fcn.nl«- Vou!!PciSifWHV rMBVL1AST A LlrtflMB-

III

n

W*\<

What's This?--a Holdup?

How ABOuT

A FK>cei

Along the Concrete

ANPTHEHITRAIKEL>

Our Pe^ Peeye

OLP

'EM AIL AWW ASL 3 t >

M. W. K. B.)

6o'EM

S'l

"l)nn'i, weep, Willie, youie couldn'tsip It.""I know, but I hadn't touched

wter for ten ytorV, »n' den ter>e kicked off'n a train Inter ft creek.Rnohool Dl« la too much, too

uch 1"

NEW VERSION

Use of Milk IncreasesAverage Soan of Life

Whim Onrcf W.ishlneton wa« Iti-•ninirntpil nn I'rMlilrnt of thp UnitedPfntM, the nvr.rncc teHRlh of Ufa winonly thirty IITP ywrB. In t^t B « t

1ncrpn*p<1 to forty thrw yeflrs; t l »span had boon InrrrniMxi to flfty-on«by inin, nnd thr Imby Imm thtnywr,BtPnrdlnii tn rornrtis of Ihp UnltMlRtntpji bmvnn of pfnmu. m»,T be e i -(M»pM tn Ilvf nhout flfiyplBhtyotre.

W I I I I P nvmr »1lfT*T«Mit thlnirn hntecontrlbiitnl to Irt^etlicninc Hip nvvr*«(re npnti of llf»», nnn fuctor whU-hh«s done much, fucnnllna In j . H.Frnndson, honil of tbp iTi<i>nrtnii>nt ofdairy InrtiiHlry nt llu> MinRtnte rollpjro, lm» boon flipline of milk, bnsort on HIPknowioflpp nt \tn vnlno In thp dipt.

Mllh has btt>n rnHwl th<> "porfcrtfood," for It contain* more nearlythan nny other RlnRlo food the pro-tt>!nn, cnrhohychT.ten, fntd, mlnorniw•nd Tltnnilnn neoenrary tn supportlife nnd mninlnln (rood hcnHti. I t Inpartlmlnrly rich In caldnm andphosphorus, the mlnernls which (iremost linportnnt In the drvoloptnent -of sound tppth and utronK honea.MUk contnins nil of the known vita-mins to n Erralor or less Mtpnt, Pro-fessor KrandRpn SII.VS. and In one ofthe host sources of vitamins A nnd B.

"Please, «Jr, me gran'mother—""H'm, ye«, I know that old itory,e'B dead and—""No, air. Me grao'mother wants

me to git off an' take her to de ballgame."

NOT THAT KIND

V

She—I waut you to understandI'm not the kind of a girl you think

nin.He—Gosh I And I thought you

vere awfully sweet.

SMATTER POP- Down On The Firing Line

•MeOT=F

•AT

^-

«

r

By C M. PAYNE

O Tin Bdl Sjndmn. 1nt.)

)BBY THATCHER-The First CallerOUESS I'LL. CO UP ArtO S E E-THATCHEB IM HIS HEW HOUSB

AMQ SEE IF HE U K e S UVIK1

QUT THBR6"'HBfe PRETTy LUCK/THB BEST DUO SWIMMIM'MOLB

I t RIGHT. II

WELL, WIPE VOORFEET OH TUB AAATOOOO THEM AMD

I'MULV6SES

BUTt-ER

JUST CETTIHC

ING UP WITH THE JONESES"

S HYPNOTIC, AND MOWTHAT

IN MV «rmnoPftOVB IT 1'

8PUM0HI'

By GEORGE STORM• F VOU OOMT KKOW THE ] VO ASK VOO OH N O ' M . . . . W A

V/OAAAM H6XT DOOR I v ^ MO(?eJ SAlO I USGO TO™ W K

f i l l g A ^ y S J OOUCMMUTSr^OEL-.-CATE STdER— SUES AL.WA.YSV R u T ^ £ y ^ a ( j T W H £ > 1 t WAS

Otrr, *>MG> MlCHT'MAKfe

_. VAROAU0•NOT PI^K BROli FLOWERS

GtMCECHIUD t HAD MV

TON-S1LS OtJT'fcHI_. . MOTUIM' LIKIBTHAT MAKES ME

SICK —

The King Was Crowned

NOW, FOR PXAMPLB, I WIU. RIN6RJR MV MAJD-WH6N 6H6 APPSAR9

FIX HER WrrtH K PieRCINS GLANCB,MAKB A FEW PASSES, AND

COMMAND H|5R TO PO 8OMBTHWJ6-I SHALL BS WATCMlMft-WWW

TMB NEXT BOOM —

IAM1HIOf

IT'S CORONATIONDAY-cone,

WHAT DOBS Mi_ . MBAN-tVC COT* • • HvPNome

POWBRf

a- zj-

ji f have~

RHEUMATISMdvihti.

Get some genuine tablets of BaywAspirin, and take them freely untilyou are entirely free from pain.

The tablets of Bayer manufactureennnot hurt you. They do not depressthe heert. And they have been proventwice as effective as salicylales inrelief of rheumatic pain at any stage.

Don't go through another seasonof suffering from rheumatism, orany neuritic pain. And never sufferneedlessly f rpm neuralgia, neuritis, o»other conditions which Bayer Aspirinwill relieve so surely and so swiftly.

THE WHYS OF TENNIS

Watch the EjeiA suppressed resolve will betray

Itself In the oyes,—Kllot.

'Why do they call it a tenniscourt? Is It becuuee there's BO muchcourting goes on therts?"

"I suppose so, and also hecausethere Is BO much 'love' In It"

GRAND AND GLORIOU£

found ANSWERTO UGLY PIMPLES

T?VEN when she . ._•L1 that unsightly, blem*iahcd bltin was hufUifyfher popularity the coul3find nnthine that helped—until a friend hinted"constipation" and ad-vised NR Tablcla (N»-turc ' s Henicdy). Theytoned nnd strcnuthenea

the tniirc climinative tract—rid her system of potaoo-

oua w"stia tliotoiifthly, natu-r.illy. Soon tkiu blotctKH van-

ished, pale cheeku glowed again.Try this aafc, dependable, a l l -

Vegetable laxative and correctivetonight . Non-habi t forming.At all druggistaTi< I

PARKER'SHAIR BALSAM

pi luirbnpuUCtttorutd

n d Fd80c >uJ U«K c:h«n, Wkl,

"Well, old man, how does it feelto be married to an heiress?"

"Just like working tn a lub-trea*ury."

TOUCHING

CUE:

( s ^ •^rvr"That melodrama by the lobster

troupe seemed to affect the whalesvery much."

"Yw, It doesn't take much tooak* • wh*le blubber."

N SHAMPOO - lil«ul fur U H inconnection with Parker's llairltulBuinMiikcathohair Buf t uml HulFy. 60 rtntU by mail or at druir-giaU. JJiauui Cheinicul VVorkj, I'utchuKUQ. N.X.

"jUST WEST </tfWAY

NEW YORK1000 ROOMS

EACH WITH BATH AND SHOWERanaiailng lea Water. . . Radio . . .U i f * G O M U . . . F « I I Ungth Mlirort

OTHER UNUSUAL FEATURESSUN-*AY HEALTH IAMPS

faof SoJarin. . . AJr-Cgoltd KtitaanuM

iooMi$950tu(mfrom L ' '»m

M THE HEAJrr OP TIMES SQUAW

Page 10: Police Seek Hit- B NUS1 1SEL1N MERCHANT COMMITS · 2014-03-03 · Cast to include over 80 Township residents—Sgt. Jack Egan, Vincent Weaver and Jack Keating to have leading roles—Large

PAC£TEJI fc OOOWtlDGE L£ADOL ATKB.

lUTGDtSOJTOCHEAD I ~IOTART TOPNOTCHERS

••-on:

fiwr

, f..i,«n '".'in'

i>i<*ni"

*» t

««»•* u \b» VIIKK 1»* Slur *'•:14tfcUi"t «.-*• Ul>ti*"- ". i •••!•.-• ia | * Tj't:' t * 'ii-'-ir* .i«r -ui.f-'t,Jrwn. '. "L\ f t i*ar». f u • \>' ' \<*.fi|jfi£.-*n HV' - jnu l u* ini!i»-,*'-i>i.t«ff» "r«<«i"TwC !>*vnj»* t>' ti'.»rv-«

fcJT W i t u.-m.r:

"ii r: -

«n.!-:.i

m--i »•*"! **« l r v ; r . . - ' - f> : i . i . i i ur- iv** !'• -• • • * "*'ri"I.nt— SEt » r n f * <•* •'•' t - " * •l ; f - - t!» •"*»- W ••1-n'l*.-*! * ' : ' - t

,...- „ « „• - , ; . rr.--i.-t - m

. . . ^ J . J , , . ! , . " - ' 1 : - ' i'* '»<*

— H , B I " ! : i !:!» - ^ T ' ^

- • ' . " ' - , P U . ^ I ' M ' l ' I ' ^ '•"•

• . - i i - T . « » | s » : • - • • '

. . . . i : i »;.-i u m - . - - i < l ^ r S

WATCHTHE tL":

•v.«:

MUNICIPALSERVICE STATION

_ v ; : ,.,.-. j : <•> +

} i * ; ; t i : • «t-i"ii.?-» '

l.T>[. It*' I '""!'!'•. f ' ' - - »'

TW

r 2rm«t *T*

t v.f* -l

'•in*, tail Ui» tiiu^ nine r«tiir»ft

t fla-

»ua ii.ii. iict^nt WJ

rtibei

. •neat" C « • ' • .

fiott runt: JM.:I'"!

?imi;irniit

4*g«rjier:

du i a tin

t i Tttt £ -la.: t i * £«K*n pot t i t Ji.tw» H•."'.•witii -*fcB. -»nuit amts '-fa* AII :n" v t-+ t i*?*?-ri /u-'i>;" .*;*ui fa: -uirt Cn-fit-- taif l ? » r Ores

i< fiir* i

-w r» ^>iv«m[- t amni£ n * *n

Wh(r wii* i |3»uC mtrj F«w*

f :<runt Hian«r ' n * tut*M Tel tnK l«tm» ;-o«ejit

iir KU» rf n*"Uie- flej * young n u etiu*

II

W A L T E R ' S INNBeer • • frmnu. and

forT&bk» for Udies"GRAND OPENING SATURDAY NIGHT"Smfpen Scnva Free — DIMK£ «ad D d

747 RAMWAY A\*E_. W

Yo«Tea nuy wear many ouaaoaia* ' \

. Yea may have a aij aeart \Bat yon don't need a spade

TO LOCATE—

MORRIS DEUTSCHGREEN STREET 1SEUK

BUDS HUT REST;OU HeUtUmt 8m ~ Drnfk

Dtcins and Dancxaf

SLPtR HIGH*-AY So. 25

oc» WoMftn<ife 8-1504 AVEJvXL, M. J

Get a g—i glaa 0I Drmgkt Beer

MANGER'S REST;Lve. a*dP**rFermi

LEGAL NOTICE

J6OT1C-E ^ BMMMXT C i v t

A tat Cvmc; <: nmm. taw JjBni M^niOBf J U ; *

JtoMr.uL JLUUO)«L HuikUi^tinAfE. Jtr» Jc-prj. !i» -^» ut-i-kli yf 1 jiwij' ic%r«K.«C tt, a t u mSu •_!« um«tfa« ;L t u u w ^ j i •

AlOtOT aTKIFCX HC»-E.r

nujot attm

Letters U theismLEGAL MOTKE

THE

7i* I

tjttijam

e. N. J. .M

Tt WLoo it Htmr coHcn: 'u to cenifT ttat ti»» Firt-

« Ma... St 1 of, \ . J-, do btTt-jj «U.'.e

aOt'..i

iSTREET

JJfcAC KtM» la« SU3 •>> Ol C

T o t 1* 1* *ruEij c»«iiur*

LEGAL WOTJCTtuiatnivr MTflLi.

) :-+ V-4

t a l

1»:M:. 'J

M O L H A R ' SMri. M. Moiaer. Pr*p.

Special

DRAUGHT BEER

S-fcDINING TeL Wood. 8-21€9 DANCING

Areoei, N.

SHOW A URCHESTKA KVERV EVENING,Shiiswg.—"Tfifc Jianhatui. Skyscfapers-"

Taleat—Wo C«*er Cfcarge—Good M m

PATSBOTTLE AMD DRAUGHT BEER

READING

G. RUSSOKiemger'$B*tU mi

WOOPMUDGE AVE. PORT READING

CEO. GE1S AND SONPORT READING, N. J

DINNERS SERVED DAILY"Knegert Or«M«b Bter"

CATERING TO BOX LUNCHESCLAM BAKES AND T*L

CROW'S NESTtVML. Ykf,* 1 t

\ Sin Pr?nr, Jr., w> h e a r dut N'ano, ST., got up a; 2Ufcoogiit « was 20 minutes to seven.

to ^

t: u

t a i

He

MIKE OLIVERMtty it

fcajsiairs Sammy has trumped, Ftuhp to rc-s^iUiioks he's fish^_- ^_-Way ba^k In ^he old d*:

* i t>; Township Committee held its sessions at PUie's T% -ntus TneY always managed to hold tive meetings in u

.T,ornmg so that they could adjourn to bavie liuici.Tivern—Wonder if the Township paid for thos* lur.—Might be a good line for a certain publisher tv :up—He Ukesscandals. ,See where R*xisoni> ^.371. Did she let you down Rex? See »i.-

»^,« L o i r- Anyway, they were so proud'of their Sai^7M reK&r i ;*r. i' >at th&t they had their pictures taken at the

tx. CTJ* u tt: i*n ti-» S«t. Jack. "Do you now why Oftcer B 4 _ ->* iike the Brooklyn Bridge?" Snooper, "No, W:

Jack, "Because so many schooner* pass 1

OAK TREE RD.

and Dinner*TaUea for Lube*

TeL MET.

' l*r*« sett !*»»»."teR to astar* M& cousin spied him 01S (he Cuibert foid. tm. wz* wu Bti» ua4«r Tieir; Joan did quite a dance at the show in Ford*.

msat£jktj la

H*

KLUB KALITA

TELEPHOME WOW.«—170SUPERHIGHWAY AVEWEL

HOTEL ISEL1NGREEJI ST^ IS£UH, N. J.

Martin Galbmith, Propna«rBOTTLE AMD DRAUGHT *£Ef

PHOME MET.«—071»

& A Tti*fitK Of tfafl**

took

t» • t*-

a fr-jct rau, *L«c4 bea aatri

day*.

it waia » U

-T«« «tll he tA|jf ta kara." ttd hw 0 4 dttkM j»« •»

«• w«re ta«tWe I* get a • *

itgroul; K

drirtat a at«n&

SEND IT TO USTHERE'S JUST ONE KIND OF WORK

DONE HERE

TWft QUALJTT WtT CUAMWC