prom our democrats hustle lowery to mayor … · 2014-03-03 · eight pages follow donohue's...
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EIGHT PAGES FOLLOW DONOHUE'S SPORTSCOMMENT IN'OR SO IT SEEMS'EVERY WEEK ON SPORT PAGE
\Vr | , No. 24WOODRRIIKJP,, N. il., FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, PRICE THREE CENTS
PROM OURFRONT
WINDOW
DEMOCRATS HUSTLESLATE INTO SHAPE
Helps Arrange Big Day
j ji, of Senator Barbour ai,.,..,l(l,lican Pretidential poi.l,,V ihritll * ilWftfMrtrWt"-'..,,, throughout the itate., li-««, .forceful and forth-
I.I I,,, hni few peeri in Coii-4
,. nnd i«, b> M »tandardi,plrli-ly capable of coping
problem! 10 perplexing (o,,rPient administration.
unfoi'tunnte thai EvPresiHoover shonld be re-assum-,, publican leadership. He's., ,|ii the party more harm
I—just as he' did before.
M.yor Greiner ii lure to And
„,, ,h th« $90,000 WPA. allot-i from ParWfradinf to a
....!, nreded ••nittrjr tewer Inof the Townahip that
TJiird Ward Leaders RoarTurk's Nomination;
Coyne Gets O.K.ByWilenti
AQUILA APPROVES OFFLETCHER^ SATTLER
Weaver Still A JPosjibilityFor Sheriff But
Harding HasThe Edge
Developments ift the aelec-m of a local and county
islate for the primary nextJ month came with startling
ast for-
, of local reiidenti il much,,. Important and io ^it ii j.<! the Mayor will be me- I(ul in hii renture. I
-...ugh we first had word that.tiii'ipality would only be re-
l to contribute about $(150• nil allotment of $17,000 1
••.i' stadium, n later ruling1
William II. J. Ely, State;linvtor, fixes our share tit
Wo wish Mr. Ely Would,i)i Ins mind. !
!>>'mncrati on the Town Com«rwr pat«*d up a good oppor- .
tv to grub a plum, Mondayi.t, when it wai discovered .I thr term of the Board of ,illli attorney, Parker E.••on, expired June 1 1th and
1 not been renewed. Threelii.nrali were preient at the
inn and only two Republic-which gave the former auty and placed them in po-
• :.i[» tu name a luccenor to! Neilion. Somehow they..--I'd the chance!
• •i I'd ..pti'tty much hy their. urbanization, several im-•i local RepuHllcans are•ruing tu retaliate by refus-•.. support William Wilson,.
They included:Nomination by acclamation
of John Turk of Sewaren asthe organization's candidate for
T h M WApproval
il h iAnthony
dpp y
Aquila, choice by two wards asparty candidate for Mayor, ofRobert L,' Snttlcr and HowardW. Fletcher as his runningmates from the First and Sec-oiiil Wards, respectively; '
Definite recognition by At-torney General David T. Wil-entz of John Coyne as party.leader in Woodbridge Town-ship;
C'nitinued possibility that W.(Continued *n page five)
Gasoline DealersSeek $500 Fee
'Protection*Heavy levy Asked For New
Stations fiat AnnualTaxCvtTo$2.SQ ..
ship
LOWERY TO MAYOR SUMMONS BAILEY HOME H.'J
TEACHER:'FIGHT' TO H A D WAR ON EPIDEMIC
County Authority Believes; .School Board Can Be
Attacked In Iselin•l- Shift
What To Do, WhdToAvMIn The Paralysis Scare
At the request of this newspaper, Or. S. W. Fox< (Town-ship Physician, has written the following to facilitate de-
. tection of earliest symptoms of infantile paralysis and toBOYLAN PROMOTION IS ac(Hia|nt residents of the municipality with some of tht-
Thomas Limol!
CLERK '.orient precautions which should be taken:ipli Plfalyiil it in acute communicable diieaie
PETERSON CHANCEFOR JOB FADES
Dozen Aspirants SeekingUnder-Sheriff Post
Htld By GannonHigh hopes held by friends
for'The "f "Peter E. Peterson; formerinstead, Health Officer, t h a t he
to back Victor Peder- would receive appointmentUaritan Township, who Under-Sheriff to succeed
i k the standpatters, accord• ", , . o *. n
the lak. B. M. Gannon, are
. i l l y0. P. choicenomination.
present Indications
Wter an inexcutablr l o n |:- iv, operation of the new po-I ' radio ijritem ii promiiad»i'/iin a few dayi. Aitl(n-'"enti for thii divjiion of the1 iree Will probably b« adopted' y the Town Committee togight,1 it ordinance amendment! will
tve to be eventually enacted' i take care of the propoied
- omntinnnl plan.
Sergeant (leorge K.
beginning to dim.Mr. PeterSon had \\
mous endorsement of all localfactional leaders for the place and
j it is understood that his candidacywas received well in New Bruns-wick. But shrewd politics doesn'tinuliidf the selection in the sched-ule and it is doubtful now whetherthe vacancy will be filled beforeelection.
There are ;i dozen aspirants furtin- office. If it was awarded now,the appointee could only serve un
Marshalled into a town-Retail Gas Station',Association," oper-
ators wil demand Mondaynight at the meeting of thetownship Committee thatthe proposed graduated scheduleof permit fees be scrapped and1 a$500 initial charge be exacted
ion wanting to build
E. T,. Berger was named spokes-man for the group at a'meetinglast Friday at Hiram's Farms,which he operates. Mr. Bergerpresided at the hastily-called' ses-sion attended,'hy 40 of the esti-mated 11)0 members of the tradein the township. He-said today
; a vigorous effort was under" wayto viiroll all operators in the newassociation, which will remain ac-
• tive even if, as he confidently pre-dicted, its flat $2.51) yearly feefor all stations is adopted by theCommittee.
The scale under considerationwould tax stations $7 each forevery TiSO-gflllon tank and $12 forevery l,0!>0-gallo,n tank. Depotsoperating a number of tanks ac-cordingly would be required topny extremely henvy levies.
Fire Impector Okay"The idea of.the fire, inspector
is okay with us," Mr. Berber saidtoday, "but we all regard the pro-posed tharges an 4istuu>tl)> un-reasonable—-and we believe thepresent owners of stations are en-titled to protection against in-creased competition as there arealready more than enough stationsIn the township And we havegood reason to Relieve we're goingto get just what we're asking for."
MARIE MILLER BIDSFOR STATE TITLE
Mt» Wright Mightange In
300 TOWNSHIP KIDSSEE MEDW1CK
HITTHREEWayne Cox, Limoli Escort
1,200 Youngsters ToThe Polo "Grounds
WATCH GIANTS WIN, 5-4
Joe 'Ducky-Wucky' Med-wick of Carteret did just fine n ° t e v e n th"<!re."
Legality of the Board ofEducation s administrativechanges in Iselin can be vig-
in the opin-
Sixtyp w eeny of all c a m occur under tile lixth year of age. . .Blonde chil-
S a y S ; dr»n ^ppear to Be e ipoial ly luiceptible. Early l igm and •ymptomimay^be limply! fever re i t l tuntt i . malaiie and gaitro-inteitinal *:•.•turbancei. Not. all caiei have headachei or general tendernen andonly tr«n»l | portioVi ihow itiffneu of the neck.
"Any inflammation of the note and throat ihould be promptlytreated by a phyiieian. Strong antiieptlei ihould not be uied tn-~- t Tr thrnat «i llmj iniiamln Ilia
ion of DrVMillara 1. Lowery,County Superintendent ofSchools.
"If I -were Mi»« Wright, Ishould contest the legality of thechange from A to Z."«the schoolauthority declared fast night, "asthis is a matter which can onlybe settled in a hearing before theState Commissioner—and perhaps
for 1,200 ecstatic young ad-mirers from Middlesex Coun-ty yesterday afternoon at thePolo Grounds.
It is," he added soberly, "avery serious situation."
Dr. Lowery referred to the de-cision of the Board to return MisaStella Wright, an instructor here
and throat waih i, „,, ,! , 0 B | y taormll „•*. 1 0 | u * i o n , h o u | ^ be uiodai a prophylaxli.
"The rulei to prevent infection are like thoie In the caie of»ny other contagioui diieaie; > • > >
"The''breadwinner or other worker in the family who mixeiwith the general public ihould be.kept away from the childrenof the finally;
"Travelling and viiitinf ihould be itrictly limited;"Children ihould not be taken into localities where the
diieaie ex i i t i .or , if already there, they ihould be forbidden toanociate with thoie who have recently had the diieaie or withany other children who are ill with any vague lymptdmi;
"Children ihould not frequent public conveyance! or publicplacei of amuiement iuch ai moviei, playgroundi or any otherplace whers children are together in cloie contact.
"The few mild caiei of infantile paralyiii that have appeared i
Continued tin panr five
Under the " generalship of j f° r « years, to a teaAittff position j <Wayne T. Cox; County Supervisor]!11 t h e Isenn school of which shoof Recreation Division Work, andThomas Limoli, his assistant, the1,200 youngsters, including 300from Woodbridge Township play-grounds, Were taken to see the-Giants defeat the Cardinals in avital 5-4 battle. And Medwick,idol of the Middlesex kids, hit illouble and two singles in four
Continued on page eight
is now teaching principal. Thebuilding of which she now haschafge would be supervised byPatrick Boylan, present teachingprincipal of theschool who would
other Iselinbecome non-
See Us As Your Employes And Help" SaysChief Walsh, Praising Hit-Run Captor
Co-Operation Of Jersey City Driver In Chasing, Trap-teaching head of both faculties.. m,
• A " Ab>Mrt"hMllthf^iw to i Pin« V e r 8 ' 1 ! o Hailed By Police Head As Courageousabolish a poBition," Dr. Lowery Example Of Aid Public Can Give Forcepointed out, "and I understand
W,
, "andthe Woodbndge Commissionersinsist they are not demoting MissWright, which of course theycould not legally do. But the de-cision . whether returning MissWright to mere class room teach-ing constitutes* a demotion- o«ionly be settled by the Commission.If I were she, I would contest the
[matter all the way through, forat least two reasons: Her opinion.I understand, was not asked andno public hearing was held—theBoard just did it—and, if I re-
GREINER SUGGESTSSEWER TO WPA
Transfer Of $90,000Award To Parks Will Be
Asked By MayorMavor Auirust F Gre iner l™" 1 ^ correctly, Miss Wright
idlhU ld|^^X^SXJSt lffi!
14-YEAR-OLD VICTIM^CONDITION SEEN 'GOOD'High praise for the courage and social spirit of the
Three Known Local C M M01 Infantile Paralysis
Gets Fast ActionFrom Greiner
EXTREME~CARE URGEDTO KILL DANGER FAST
Stricken Children TakenTo Perth Amboy
Hospital ForTreatment
Mayor August J\ Greineryesterday directed thatAXarxJacility at the disposalof the lown tyeinpluqi w to**-stkmp' out the possibility ofa local epidemic of infantile.paralynis and summoned HealthOfficer Harold Bailey hom* fromhia vacation to direct the fight.
"I do not want to unduly alarmalarm the citizens of the Town*ship," the Mayor <stated, "but t Mpossibility that confronts us i lnot going to find us napping. W«can enercise extraordinary pra-ca«tions now, though, instead ofwaiting until the disease spreadsand thereby gave our communi-ties from the ravages of this afflic-tion." . ^
Mr. Builcy arrivad back in tcrirnat 10:00 o'clock yesterday morn-ing and immediately conferredwith Mayor Greiner on the mat-ter. Mr. Bailey said that he d j inot believe the danger of an epPdemic was imminent but agreedwith the Mayor that three knownca«es of infantile paralysis in theTownship was cause for somealarm.
Brother, Siller 111All of the cases were reported
this week, two of them in on»family wmlng to the attention of •local authorities oh Tuesday andWednesday. Isolation was dir«et«cd immediately and the strickenchildren were removed to the
Continued on page fv
Sechrist Pupil Plays MissMaccio In Final On
Sunday• t l ' f t i V f
ing. rati'd far ami wide us one til the day after election when the . .,,.• hr.-i m the business, is now ] m . w slici-ilV would be installed. Uamed last Sunday out ot hev
• IITCII by nisiiU-rs for a i\iu-' ('nunty leaders figure there is no State .Municipal Courts• wtirn int-h ii «uUi_k--i:rt:._Muisj' in inqurrini; u lnt of _enmity j championship duel, gallant M
In \iew ut' hii I'Xi'i'lleiit ree- uriiiiiiil the futility merely" in or- ' "' 'tin- department. Sergeant .lev to give out a job for n couple
.' IICMTM'- -.niiui lTi'oghi-:iif month-. They iiavo virtuallydi'cidi'd nut tu H-O; milking vnv-iniiM of all the disappointed can-
Continued Ofi tiatje eight
and. iidmlnhUon | ^ ^ X ^ S X J S t f f i !Will seek to Obtain a,transiei'|tn instructing claaaes as an econ-by the WPA of approxi-|omy 'move. U that is so, she ismately $90,000, allotted tolprobably entitled to any restbr-the Township for park pur-!".^0^,,111*1 iOI>-te8chinK pnn-poSes for use toward th« con-j0 '1^' 'g,; Ander9on district cWk Michael Ontkocs, Mr. Van-
f ta I ^ b d . . ^ d , I
in-
Miller of Crampton Avenue will
.truction of a sanitary sewer. ., lh- b d . . ^ d y e R , e l , I a y
advisors feel that" with Io many t h a t t h p ? h a n ^ w a s P " ^ ^ »" ^vitally necessary improvements de-
[ manding immediate attention thattenn's ; \\ would be difficult to justify such
u tremendous expenditure on thepark ifysiw^ at this time... The
move to secureContinued on pane. Afjht
North Jersey motorist who chased and trapped a hit-and-run driver here this week was voiced today by Chief JamesA. Walsh, who declared that similar co-operation bycitUzens would not only drastically reduce such cowardlyflights, but would also aid police immeasurably in every
department of their work."If citizens would only regard
the police aa.erftploye3 whom theyare paying to make life safer andbetter for everyone, instead ofWatchtng us work as if we were ac-tors in a play" the chief asserted,"our efficiency would Increase sogreatly that the public would real-ize immediately how much we de-pend upon their co-operation. Wereally are working for them ineverything we do and aid such aathat given us on Sunday night |heartens evury man on the force,"
Punitive Parent,Punching Pair,
Put In Pen
II.vt Republican big-wiji dV-nmed to "Rag" legiilative
'Mlidatei on the lubject of the' lax, realizing that the l eu
1 .ibout the Hoffmnn brain*• il, the better? Former Gov.
• IT E. C. Stokei, p»rty wheel-M . luggcited this one and
proved to' be the fellow> > Governor Hoffmah'i
PLENTY ELECTRIFIED!SOURCE: A BLONDE
dr i l l e r billed HealthI;;11U>v hack from vacation
1 'k tu coinlmt any i»i*i-t an infantile paralysis I'jii-
Tlif Mayor has given or1 since
Without Locomotive,Stops At Station
Elect rilinition of the ltahway-si-1 Smith Anibov line'of the Pennsyl-
Itailroad, carefully Icsti'd.._ __. .. ... . Monday, liecame a practical
very farilitv" at thi' fact here yesterday afternoon. Thedispoxal lie employed to historic momi'iitany spread of the disease beenhi prompt ai'tiiui is ccr- unit train
I'ommi'iitU'd.
:M I'. M., whciii aain of no less th
"•<-• cai^i of infantile'UMI hav« been reported in'(bridge Towmhip and'li authoritiei are urjing> precaution! in handling alliufli and other communic-[>M-dia. The advice ihbuld• 'K-d to the letter.
seems to havemultiple-
than threerars, looking suspiciously like soimiiiy trulli'y cars, halted at theCfi'i'ii SUeet station to dischargeu lohd of vommuteis.
Onlv locals will use electric
make hor bid for the New Jerseytitle thus .Sunday at Mitlburn in
; tlio filial anainst Mary Maccio ofCliffwond, the defending queen.
| Miss Milli'i1, uupil of Harry Se-li'lirist, for two years has won thei Prudential Insurance Company's! tournament. She entered the last'round of the State play with ai sensational victory on Saturdaylover Helen Rubin of (iuttenberg,'who had hetfn seeded No. 3. Theunsei'drd Woodbridge entry's left-handed strokes carried he.r to 4-(i,H ii, I! I victory aftor nhe hadtwice lieeii at match point in thesecond set.
Miss Uiihin was within a pointuf victory at .")-!! anil again at (5-5.Even in the third set when MissMiller led at f.-l the Guttcnberggirl rallied brilliantly and climbedto !i-4 before Miss Miller finallywon her own service for game, setand match.
In that'match, as in her victorya week ugo yesterday over InezMendez, Essex County champion,
Township's share toward the fin-i juicing w,ould be in the neighbor-I hood of $4,000.
While this switch is being c o n - f uHnntemplateil, the WPA-Woodhridgerelationship has become a .little imore complicated through recentword from the State director, Wil-liam H. .1. Ely, that the Townshipmust contribute $4,072 to get Physiciansabout $18,000 for the municipal Hospital this
TRANSFUSION TODAYF6RSMEATHERS
ashkivsky, John GrabGet 30 Days
TWO WWEfCOMPLAlNI No matter what the pjre-sumably proud parent's posi-
••ttiTlllilll llasai'J- ul the' Health mcvtilig Mondayat (iovt'i'iio b
i'I to ban
gi'iior Holl'inaii ben all inoveint'ii'ij
tate Until ft cKtiftcuty »f'iwed t h t prospective JITS- be- non-i'arrU'is i i f i th"> rtse, The motion was not
'i. however, others on the"bviously feeling that tin-
• '• iiitiii was [iretty'buiV with!•>,' — uml explaining — lit-*
'ax.
thi- shore lint* beyond j who had been seeded second, MissSoutli -\mbov bus not yet buen I Miller's stvady. ability to re turnw j , . , , ( | * I IK'I1 opponents) drives carried the
With thf exception u f n distinct-nliiy. She practised with Mr. Se-lv at trm-tiw .VOUMK and1 blonde ; christ tlirouuhout the week, «on-l'-idv tin- arrivals yesterday seem- centriituiK mi playniR to the back-,.,l no whit elfCtrilieiM'be hlondo, hand. Last mtrht. her coach saidh.iwry*>r, would have bei-n note-!hf thought the local Kill had anwnrtliv in any kind of cnnvcyancc1
h g ca' even cliance to win.
Sadly tying Distant State Andw% .» n ) . • I f I I / l • \7 •
Street VictimDeath CrashuFair,"
Says Hospitalat Perthmorning were
d$ , p Hospta g
stadium. When the grant was ranging for a blood transfusion inContinued on page five
Colonia Candidate CallsFor Far Finer Factories
their fight to save the life of•Norbert- Smeathers, 32, of 154Fulton Street. Smeathers was
.gravely injured in the crash onCleveland Boulevard l»»t..Sa,tui>ilay morning which took the life
O/'tion may be on the issues offamily discipline, it still isn't
•i considered good form to beat'up both wife-and daughter|to maintain same, Jiulgu Vofttil
Amboy ru]e(] j n court this week.Better to impress the decision
upon Mr. Michael Ontkocs-^-thnI Garden Avenue gentleman who
ar-
so much uproarious fun fora mere $50 only a month ago—theRecorder recommended 30 daysof consecutive orderly thinking onthe problem. He stipulated tile
The regular Republicanand Democratic nominees forMayor of Woodbridge Town-ship will have some competi-tion this year.
Mr. William -Conlock ofPrinceton Avenue, Colonia,announces he already ,hasfiled a nominating petition forCommitteemaiwU-tiirpe onthe ticket of a new politicalgroup, "The IndustrialParty." Mr. Cordoek statesthat his "platform calls for"More Industries for Wood-"bridge."
He did not *tate at thistime, however, what methodshe would employ to enticethe new factorties.
of Philip Ferraro, 22, of 311 Ful- | s c e n ( ; fo l. ^e m e n t a l exercise, too;'ton Street, when Ferraro s ca r | t h e Workhouse,piled into a head-on collision with JJ,. Ontkocs it was who once de-one truck and then was flung into I fie(1 p o i j c e w h e n they tried to re-another truck-and-trailer. The! s t o l . e c a i m i o n Garden Avenue
!machine in which they rode was ; w i t h o u t a w a r l - a n t after he had
TOWN COMMITTEESCANS APPEAL
Caie Verdict For D o n e ;In Zoning Tangle To
Be Discussed
The Township Committeewill probably decide to-night whether,to prosecutean appeal in the Court ofErrors and Appeals—high-est tribunal in the ~
Clarence
demolished.The hospital said Smeather's
condition was only 'fair. '! In addition to a hit-and-runcase solved with the aid 'of
Continued on fage jive
just happened to be driving downRailway Avenue' when the hit-and-Tirnner clipped the-tooy.* - Iwttwuliof saying 'tut-tut' or somethinglike that ,he chased the driver allthe way to Iiuiranmn Heights,blocked him off the road and thentelephoned us. That was a jjallantthing to do and I wish everyonewho sees a coward try to runaway from an accident would dothe same thing."
The driver of the machine Sto-vekin trapped, Eugene Vurgillu,31 of 57 Spruce Street, Port Read-ing was picked up by PatrolmenLeidner and Walton. His driver'slicense was immediately revokedby Acting Recorder Brown, a lineof $25 imposed and'bail of $500demanded pending the result ofyoung. Zenobiu's injuries.
The! boy, ,1-4 years old, lives at524 Alice Place. He was hur-ried to Perth Amboy Hospital byOfficer Karmey Romano. His con-dition this morning was said to be"good."
itlie townahip during the week,three of them on Sunday.
Knock* Down Pole
na Horror Tale Ot "Chains"
oSre^tht » To StuThe PoliceBeyond amused appreciation of
her originality and professionalweak evidence
County Payrolls,Both Ptitks Here Whet Knife For Potts
!l Hauey, however, ob-'"• "•>! (he jupport of John Ber-• Firit Ward Democrat, to1 "ngeition that dogi, biting» : «tri»n., be immodlately dc--' ' >ed. t h e mat ter will new
I ' ( (erred to the Town Com-•" N'f. but iuch action cannotII i then l ine* the State law en-
; '' i ever> dof to one bitel'' ! too, the re ought to be
• puniahmgnt for thoie who1(1 mill plague doga intd de-
l h
""dbriilge will probably lead'•||l'htry, in one respect this
,•'••'» case ]}ir, Howard Fletcher•l'« Dolnocratie nomination
•'"•conjl Ward Committeeman.mg voted a Republican ticket,
1" b« last appeared at the polls,'•niididate will be precluded
HI viiting with his party at thei"7>a(hiug primary.
g th his(hiug primary.
Mi HI of * « • .
- H . W K.
When it comei to recognition by ^heir coun-ty organiialion. , good Woodbridge Republi-.con. and Democrat! «r»=ju»t forgotten men.
• * • •
They juit don't get on the county boardi.of i t rategy at all and for what reaton there itno ready .n .wer . Neither do they get onthe employment li . t i—which m » U i it juUdandy around election time—and their im-portuning landa in the wai te -b . ike t . of thehigh command ju . t l i te . »he lateit pro.pectu.from the gold brick manufacturer!. f .
So the local leader,! a re ju i t l i t t ing aroundwaiting to be aiked for »ome help for thecounty ticket! and—may heaven lave them -for the county campaign fund collector! Allthe emi i ta r ie . will be well fortified with morepromiiet than Governor Hoffman made to the. u p p o r l « i of hU . . I * ! 1 t«* bill but the good
p « r t y w w f e w H i ' " have heard i tore t like thatbefore. *
Aad io this year, they will be more «nlm-
preuive than ever and the local candidate!
bid fajr to be in there fighting for them.elvei
and to let the odti idert i truggle the be*t way
they can,
V . * * * •
Woodbridg* to date , ha» received practi-
cally nothing from the higher-up*. The Dem-
ocrati control tha. county and have lent a bai-keti of ipluriu io practically every other rrtMni-cipality in Middleiex, handing the lemonito the local organization. That it pretty lourfare over a very long period and the neglectedare apt to be juit ai »our on election day.
Governor Hoffman ii pulling a Larion actio far at the Towmhip faithful are concerned.They were all lure of jobi from "Harold" be-fore the polU closed l»»t November biil hedoein't even remember them much now, exceptwhen they write letteri. flrle ttill writei every-one who aiki for an aniwer but the groceryita.re won't ftake the executive repliei for atack of potatoet. The only difference between
' Larion and Hoffman i> that the former didn'twrite letterli.
Overture! have been made from NewBrumwick in an effort to get a local retidenton the'Freeholder ticket placed in the field bythe C. O. P. -There have been no taken, andprobably won't be. The idea il to try to copthe Woodbridge election and Ut the real of thecampaign go hang.
The Democrat* are in very nearly1 the uni tframe of mind. They have atked much andreceived very, very little.
» • • •
So, they aik, wb,y bother?
itelW a y i n o n e o i m e s e i n c w a s t u i [ - " i 5 :~~.;~~~,'."<H\ n i l p . . . i R o iabout the chin, k 4 and tonpe twno^MM^OW ^ t ^
• i and had four teeth loosened. Carspiloted by Michael Hudik, Lindenand George Milochik of Phoenix
ismashed at ,the Amboy lAVtmue-Coniinued on po<?« eight
Leila Draws Sketches
Details of the impendingproduction of "The Rubyiatof Omar Khayyam" will bediscusaed Tuesday niffbt bythe Woodbridge tittle Thea-tre. Executives of the or*ganization discussed Carl.Lella^' detailed preliminarystudies in pjl laftt w«ek andreached agreement On thefundamental scheme of theproduction. The poem willbe intoned by a.reader in cos-tume and particularly strik-ing quatrains'" dramatized intableaux vivants on a specialsecondary stage. Mr. Leila'scolor stuaiea were Ba^ed onsix interchangeable sfits.
Rehearsals will also beheld Tuesday qf the two one-act plays already in produc-tion. *A. schedule will be an-nounced tor the congtiiuctionof the pormaneflt stage'un-der the direction of JohnFlemii«. Lumlber has. uUready been secured for thatpurpose and th» purchase ofhardware authorized by thegroup's sponsoring commit-tee.
both Chief James A. Walsh andDetective Sergeant George E.Keating investigated the woman'sstory that she. had been bound,chained, gaggjjd and generallymistreated by two ruffians actingon the orders of a neighbok withwhom the self-*nnounced victimhas been feuding for years. Thatinvestigation resulted in" the hua-batra of trie "wronged"1 woman an-nouncing that not only would henot press a complaint against the"villain" named by hi* wife, buthat he,MulOrjii>ably move 'out
of the township; «Chief Walsh did Express indig-
nation that the wild narrative hadjeeji unhesitatingly believed andexploited in the daily press with-0U> consulting the department,which for years has rated thewoman not only as a drunkard,but also as mentally unbalanced.
Danigan Will Keep BoohsOpen For Late Registrants
.Tuesday is the deadline forregistration of voters for theSeptember primary, Town-ship Clerk B. J Dunigan an-nounced today. His office atthe Munkipul Building will beopen tonight, Monday andTuesday from 7:30 to 9:30P. M. The deadljne for filingcandidates' petitions is i mid-night ©n Thursday. Mr. Dim-igan Will be at his officeiutttilthat time. !
Police Locate 2 CarsStolen Outside Township
Two cars stolen outside thetownship were located by policethis' week. Patrolman ClosindoZuccaro found one, owned by FfedSnydei1 of New Brunswick, de-serted on Terry Street in Sewar?enat 3:16 A. M. yesterday morning.Two days before that, MotorcycleOtticer Meyer Larsen had pickedup three Newark Negroes who hadstolen * car for a (Jtivtt to Avenelto see a girl-friend. All three andthe car were turned over to New-ark police. "•
and garage at Amboy«'hue and Green Street.It is deemed by legal experts
that the higher court would su«-tain Justice Case in the matter, isview of the fact that it was heldthat Amboy Avenue was sti ictly abusiness thoroughfares and there-fore could not be &oned siijainstbusiness enterprises. JusticaCase held that the fact GreenStreet was solely residential was,
Continued on page eight
PETTY THIEVES PILFERGASOLINE, TIRES
Roster 6 / Victim* ExtendsThroughout The
ToiunshipSuddenly focussing on automo-
bile supplies anil accessories, pettythieves made no big hauls thisweek, but did succeed in pillagingenough citizens to make a respect-able roster of victims throughoutthe township.
Mrs. Harold P. Hayden of J80 'CHIT Road in Sewaren, reportedyesterday that a car jack and mii>ro/ had been stolen from h er ga-rage as had (.hree canvas j chaiwfrom a side porch. A tire was re-ported stolen by Mrs. Robert Han-(lerhan of GR. Ford Avenue; theMiikjesex Barrel Company ofConvery Boulevard announced theloss of 2 tires, a jack, fpur setsof auto tools, 8f) I gallons of gas, a,fountain pen, a pair of shoes anda complete set of cooperage tools.
Continued qn page einht
There must bethe matter with that job ofbeing counsel for tfye Boardof Health. , I
The.. Demtfdrats! had jachance to picick it
and didoff lafet
Monday night anil didn't botherand Mr. ^arker E. Nielson, Re-publican incumbent, forgot to doanything about being re-appoint-ed. Maybe the appointment isn'tgoing -begginij, but it certainlylooks like it.
The facts, roughly, are these: ,The Board held its regular
monthly session Monday. Com-miUeenmn Frederick A. Spenceris away on vacation, and Commit-teeman Ernest W. Nier was outof town. That left only MayorAugust P. Greiner. and Commit-teeman John Hassey to hold downthe Republican fort against thethree Democrats who were allthere and very much on time.
Cornmitteemarj, Frederick O.
Maybe No Democrat Really CravedThat Health Attorney's Wage!
i®
i
teii
brought ^ip the subject of the va-cancy. He was under the correctimpression that Mr. Nielson'sterm expired on June 11 and thathe was now serving as a "hold-over," The audience, which con-sisted of the janitor and a coupleof reporters gleamed playfully asthey awaited a.motion from theDemocrats that a good Joyal par-tisan replace Mr. Nielson. But itdidn't come and it didn't comje, SoMr. Nielsoji is still a "hold-over."
A resolution for his re-eppoint-ment was prepared by the counselfor introduction at the Ju^ie ftiaet-ing. > Mr. Spencer lyiis 'Acnnj;Chairman of the Board at thattime and when a quorum hadn'tappeared by 8:15 lie called thesession tp order and immediatelyadjourned it. So nothing could bedone then.
When the Board met for thtJujy business, the resolution alsowas ready for introduction.
But Mr. Nielson didn't have Itwith him.
Fo«rch, Ward Democrat, H« forgot, and hti it ho^f, *
PAt.K TWOFKIPA-V. AUGUST 16.
Mr., Mrs. KleinAre Dance Hostshu-nt
Mr
Mi-
nm.-r.E- : h f « • « « " "
Mr »T. ' I M r - >' •'• A ( i " m -
,j Mr« K I P H M r nnd M r s .
W.-iar.t. A>-i- NVJty. I>«-,tfA-:T M' » H Mrs Moii,WVi.vt. Mr n-..l Mr* BUM:
Jse/in Band Which Makes Debut At Carnival Thursday
WOODBRIDOE I N D E P E N D R N I
LEGAL NOTICES
..,, i-vmiaal , , , , , . .WliltAsriK nnd MAlti
•- • nlR.,- t i i - |
Iv
M, Ma
r f i n i n Uai"1 ' . ' : Mj "'• !
Forbe*. Mr. »nd Mrs.
OPENFOR INSPECTION
' Suftinj Saturday, Auft"' 1?D.IIT 12 Noon to 9 P. M.
\|.rWi
i'.'.ir.'
; n mMi
.' l i ' a ,
r \ . . • • • .Pruent
h l n , | ( , ,,fli i ' ' „ ' " ' ' • I humlr«-rt anilO I I I I I - " ' ' - l i n i . t i c s ( l i i l . f i )
Local Fontta EnlistIn Army For Three Years
£lizabflh'jChamber of Commerce
$14,000—1935
IMOBEL HOMETo Br (jivrn Awjy
56! Rivrrnde Drive.ELIZABETH, N. J.follow Th« Arrn«>
ADMISSION FREEOWN VOL'R HOME SHOW
ELIZABETH ARMORYOCT 14 TO 19 Inr
I.'-:
A>V
H"-.h
Mr; at r>r; H.u,i,Mr.«. Job;
Ft.,!,.- iir.i
c ' a r t f T - f t .
,-, i i t h l e
jh a v i n g been pr
! u » fltirif.hr1 hi*mmcrt
•yiars. Ahleriny attended St. Jos-;.-.)-,'. Academy. I.acknwanrm. N
\V ir.,-:I1L-<- Hiirh Sch<. '.. He I
, k.'-t'r.i*.::" tt-ai:1.- "1 'hr I'Athletic?.
ami
t h eay-
QUALITY MEATSFormerly
P. A. City Market1131 SMITH ST.AT DAVIDSON'S MARKET
PERTH AMBOYjP. A. 4-2504^
n f t . - n i . i c m o fS h r - l U f X < )(Tt<;r- In
llTPilYl''k., N. .1-w IIIK t i r n tpromis'ts he !•••!imII'T
M . - r l l i c i l . U i
ttir- TiAvnnlilp "f Wonil-- roiuity nf
enFltrly I"."!"n . ; l h
l l "cif Vnti-nllii' ' '
mli iK i l lf n t nl
m th f " " I nion ipMnrllii H"IT- eiinrl , .*
• with t i l ' <
,'ill n n d s f n i r t i l n r t i n
nvw 1^A L A N H. F J . l
r r i l K M L A f ,S o l i c i t
:• 1!. 23. 30.
NAI.KI ' I I A N C K H V O F NiKW . I I ' I11,-t Wren A l l l l l A N LVI IN ,
I d a l n i i n t a n d M A Y V. P l m wI'HA TILES ft. H U f l W N , I,,.,.b u n d . D e f e n d a n t s . V\. Va \...s a l i nr m<ii I H,IK<-'1 i irei i i la .B ,
. . h u m 17, IDJ.'I.U y v i r t u e of t h e n h o y e M M , . , ]
<> ine ilirtcMi'd m i d d r l l v c r . i l , |v e r n l , I e x p o s e to *mle nt p u h l l r \ i , n , |
•)i- W K I i N B H D A Y , T H K 2 S T U I. V iA D O P S T , A. 11, I:I:I.,
at t w o o 'c loek D n y l l K h t ,•;Tlmf i 111 Hie a f t e r n o o n ot1 n,,d a y , n l t h e S h e r i f f s (>fn,,, .C i t y 'if N e w l l m n i i w l i ' l c , \ i
A l l tho f o l l o w i n g t r a . l ,,,.of l a n d a n d p r e m i e r s h , , , , , .p a r t i f u l a r l y dennr l l i ed , sit '
™ Inn' n n d helnur In t in- T n i u wW n o d h r l d g e , In t h e f. 'otmty (,r
IUOOINNINU a t a n t n k e plun'i,the TJflUilH*rly Hide of < ; I V I In n d fur t h e n o r t h e a s t e r l y r u nthe lot hi-rShy c o n v e y e d ; H
W.'Hl -vlt l l tl,,. ||l a n d s of H i u v n n l I . . Vnli-ni in,
n i n e t y - o i l . i , . t
To I h e landsi ,.of U | m r l e s W. I iiijf, ,'alol iK IIM- h i n d s oi1 |-\,i
W. Uriimnii ini l m ghundred nnd f n r t v . | n u r
( H I ) .. to Perll i Atnlii.y •,.nort.liWedlnrly lilo IM.line of I 'crt l i AIIHMH0 feel six Inches i i; •',
ttlttesti-My corner uf i
t h e i i ' - e s o u t h e l j fh t y - n l n , . "',)t h i r t y Tnlnut .H n i s i n l n n ^ - S l l : l t
Mm' i i l n i ' t y - i ' l K h t f.'.-l'f o u r h u n d r e d ! It* nf a f o u l ,., t h e KoiilhC'fiYt'i'rly e u r i , . r ',,K o w l t i n d s h i n d , l l i H i i - i,.,if ive drRrcPS e n s t onr> h u n . i r .t y - f o t i r f r e t , five-tenth* ,,,(13-I.TJ') t o a s t n k i - p l n n i . , 1 in o M h - w e s t e r l y c o r n e r 1,1 ],,tb y ronvtynj -tin t i l e K o u l h , - i i \G r e e n s t r e e t , It h e l i i K al.q,, n , ,e a s t e r l y c o r n e r o f l a n d <;f n, ,of* H a r a h A W i a H o w l a n . i. w l t l i t h e m m t k e r l y l ln. . ,ifs t r e e t d o u t l i o lKfu>• -J l \ , . , | , L M , ,s i x t y - t w o f re t s i x lni ' ! . , . s ip l a c e o f IlICOIN'N'I.Vd
[The LEADING FOOD MARKET of PERTH AMBOY'Why shop at other markets where you MIGHT
I be treated right? When you buy your m-_U hereiyou ARE SURE of getting honest weight—plus qua.- <
fity and service—and look how much you're saving at j1 t h e s * p r i c e ' - AXEL ENGMARE, Mgr.
[•hctonrraphcd atiove is the St. Cecelia Church of Iselin Boys1 Band which will hare n•prominent part in tho "Country Fair to be*M.'nsciie,l In- the churchnext week. Krom left to right above are: Fist Row—Peter Guzzardo (director). Robj_CtcJ__p_Un, Kichant Uarnefl,Kr.ri Oliphant. URoy Harned, John Koch. Eugene Tomasso, Charles Aulicky and Joseph Batkin (director). Second ro«--Ka,sen Nicola.,VilMnm O'Neill, Edward Breen, Eugene Goaselin, Robert Aulicky, Jo Kept Cricchio, Charles Ohphant, James 0 Connor, Eihwird Kownlski.Third How—Charles Smith, Harold Snyder, Terence Reilly, Wilbert Freeman, Warren Aquila. Vincent kniffm, William Comiskev FourthKow—Rev. William J. Brennan, John Miele, Herman Hesse, Anthony Moscarelli, Francis Johnson, Albert Aquila, Donald Galbraith. BaclcUovr—.lack Kenny and Sylvester Batkin. ' ;
i N V " « w , P K i l l AMIl'ivlthe aliote d^r r lbea ,,r..,,,i.,.i - l ' i l l " l \ ; AN!> I - O A N A S S O O I A - i l o t o r t r a c t o f l a n d e o i u . . v , , |••' , V , e , . r i V , r i t l ' . n ( • n i i i j . l n l n i i n t . n a l ' l M w v , " r o w n a n d i - u
i T i l iM v-s 1 l . K A H V n i i d . n r o w n . li«r h u K h n m l . tn W i :
i n u i t K a t f ' d l i r n n i s i ' S d a t e d B o o k Hi of I w i l s , p » K e *>i! T h e n p p r o x l m n t e f i n m n i i '
i l ' i ' i f ' t h p i t l inve u l i i l w l W r i t j d e c r r i " t o h r ratlnfled h y M ; . !p i l e d n n d d e l i v e r e d , t w i l l | t h o n u m nf n c v r n t l m n n a n i i ; ) :
s i i ld at p u b l i c v e n d n e o n , h u n d r e d d o l l a r s ($" ,70 i i lin, •1 i \ Y T1II0 K O I ' l t T M U A Y W i t h t h e c o s t B o f t h i n «;'[ ,r M l l k i ; A. 1'.. N I N M T K K N T o g e t h e r w i t h a l l an , l nfi'|(f.~li T H I I i T Y - K1VK ! t h « r l g h t p , J i r l v l l e ^ e q , TIPJ , . •
nl t w o cj'i-loi'k. 1>ny l l ) th t S « . v l n K i P n d n p p u n » n n i n ' e » t l i . - r . .T i m e In Hit' n f t c r n n n j i n f I h e a a l d l o n f l r i K o r In a n y w i n e a i q.t.'iv lit ( h e S h e r i f f 1 * Ofl tee In H i e , A I . A N H. K l . \i'it\'' , ,f N e w H r u n s w l o k . N . .!. ' A D R I A N I . Y O N .
A l l t h e f . d l o w i r i K t r a t r I T n n r r e l J 3 2 . . 8 . S o l i c i t. i f _ i S H d n n d i i r e n i i n e s h e r e i n a f t e r ! W . I. 8 - 2 . 9, 16. 2 3 .
[lm „ „ , , , „ , , , „ m I I , Pjkstiribed situate ly-
I Tow,,»l,Ip.;rT;
yi h - p « t . .
(ant
I E . 7
f IlniTpll nvpnuo.thrpp lnii)ilr«l o
BONELESSSUGAR CUREDSMOKED
No Bonr, No F««All Solid Meal
C
IB
TENDERCHUCK
PotROASTGENUINESPRING RIB
LAMBCHOPS
lo Muttpn
STEWING or
ROASTING
LAMBFRESHWADE
ChoppedMEAT
MILK FEDBONELESS
R6NVEAL
Miss Frieda Mifler r Preparations For "Country Fair"Marries A, E. Klim * In Iselin Complete; dpens 21stDaughter ©f Mrs. Mary Dun- 5f. Cecelia's Roman Catholic Church Sponsors Monster
the Don Kaye Scythian Orchestra ^ ^ ^ r ^of Detroti and Maine on Than- L SklA H.rM, a v , ; X nnjday, August 22. He will sail on 0 * ] J » * <» ,.'„," ^the Aquitama and return on the | H a r r o ] 1 -
No Bonu, No W-ite
SWIFT'SGOLDENWEST
BONELESS
CornedBeef
Outdoor Carnival Under Direction Of Rev. W. J.Brennan, Pastor; Many Novelties Planned
CHURCH RECTORY PONDS TO GET THE PROCEEDSThe opening of the "ftelin County Fair" under theices of St. Cecelia's Church is to be Wednesday.The "Fair" promises to be one of the most interesting
b?ide*s eown was of blue and enjoyable affairs of its kind ever held in .this section. _ _ • • _ I * • . « f^m 1 . - _ T l j ' 1 1 . _ 1 J . . _ _ _ ^ - _ h _ _ ^ X _ _ l _ . _ . ^ ra r* • _ m_ A *». 1 1 _ . _ i
terian Church of-weddin* Saturday
illlr, fli.Ughter ofL i d A
Rev. Ear! H Dewuiny, pastor ofthe First Presbyterian Church of-ficiated at the weddi S dof Miss Frieda M i l l , i . gMrs Mary Dunphy, Linden Ave-nue and A. Edward Klim of Perth
The ceremony took place
itTh " e
Berentreria. On his return heity-«cv«rwill re-enter Tri-State University | j ^ ^ill Indiana for his sophomore year.
—Miss Mary Baum of NorthiHill Koad was the luncheon ami| dinner puest of Miss Sally Steuer-wald of East Orange on Monday.Mrs. Katherine Baum and
forty-one nndhiindrodlhs 141 . f 'hence 13) ellstcrwi th the first ,
' ' HUNDRED THIRTY IItwo ii'cloek, LJayliRl;'e. In the a f t e r n o o n nf
N
OLEO-MARGA-RINEMUCH CHEAPERTHAN LARD
Breastsof VEALFORSTUFFING .
brides gepe, trimmed with white and of the State. No detail has been omitted to assure all of
wore a white hat and white ac- t n o s e w ho attend a fine time. Beautiful decorations, at-tractive liffftting effects, games,music, dancinr?, refreshments, sideshow&, radio entertainers, andscores of other interesting- and en-
; essone She carried a bouquetjnf white roses and baby's breath.
Mrs. P. Harlon Brady, matron ofi honor, w(irp a yellow ..silk ensem-i tile, white hat and white accessor-
Her bouquet was of pink tea t e r t a i n i l l g amusements have been
P. Haclan Brady was the bride- 'arranged.ifroom's best man.
wedding trip throughand useful prizes. The "Fair" of-fers to both young and sold avariety o£ fun.
Theadmission-to the "Fair" isfree and thousands will avail
Afterthe I'oconoMrs. Klim\Avenue.
Mountains, Mr. andreside on Linden
In addition there will be givenaway several thousand valuable
—Joseph Sieckel, son of Mr.and Mrs. Adolph Sieckel, o£ ElmStreet, is convalescing after a1 re-cent illnesi.
-Mrs, Harry Kills and childrenof Fairview Aveque spent Tues-dav in New York.
Wexpress our
. ;ipi)reciiition to
CARD OF THANKSthe undersigned, wish to
sincere thanks andour Jriends and
relatives for'their kiniT expres-sion nf sympathy during our re-CCMU bereavement. We also wishtit thank the Rev, Vincent Lenyiami Undertaker August F.(ireiner.iSiirnedi MR. AND MR.S. FRANK
HACZ AN'D FAMILY.,
tthemselves of listening to theband concepts on the opening eve-ning, •-»••.••••-rtr
The proceeds of the affair wjllbe devoted to a fund fpr-thtT con-struction of a rectory. ^
—Edward Schuberg of High-1 field Road spent Tuesday at the1 shore fishing.
ARE Y O U A SAFE DRIVER?. , . ask yourself these questions
1. Which requires greater, cau-tion—a curve to the right or acurve to the left—and why ?
2. What is the safest way to han-dle your car on a highway
3.
brakes—when do you throwcut the clutch—when do youaccelerate ? 'In roundiog a curve at highspeed, is it safer to hold the
steering wheel steady or "jig-gle" it?
4. In passing another car en theroad; is it safer to make _short, quick swing around, ora longer, more gradual one—
.......and .why-?-5. On a slippery or icy road,
your rear wheejs suddenlystart skidding. What is theway to bring the car out of theskid?
6. When i. it safe to pass an-
cther car en a hill?Even .the most experienced driv-ers seldom know the CORRECTanswers to these questiens. Andthere are several additional safe-ty questions that every drivershould be able to answer. Get
Th«niW,"Mro'CET'TttE RIGHTANSWERS.- from the nearestHudson and Terraplane dealer.Ccme in today.* All models equipped with
all-year ventilation
s o n , ' T h e n p , , r o x l m « l . " . m o u n t n f H j n i T U I g e , a n d ! S . a t f . O T X £ v I
on, Monday.—A tournament, luncheon . !
dinner will be held at the Colonialb '
o.,1- Hun-lre.l .n.l TIHy noll.r..w l l h 1" c
with nil anill
costs'11*'1'; L l i o
d i n n e r wil l b e he ld a t t h e C o l o n i a l i n c i ' t i u r w i t h ni l anil s lnRulnrC o u n t r y C l u b o n S e p t e m b e r 11 b y ' t h e r lKhts, i i r iv i lpges , l i e rpdl tnmpntnthe T inn.. rinK nf <?tjiti>n TqlnnH !*ni1 npimrlcnanceB tlicrennlo bf-the Lions Club ot fttaten lstana. l o n K l n g o r l n n nywise nppprtiilninK.
AT.AN H. ELY, Sheriff.-Janet Spooner of West Hill n B P R r i r s
Road entertained Friday afternoon ,LEO GOLDBEROBR, R o U c l t o r
HHKHIFK'S SAI.KIN CHANCERY OF NEW .1ERSKY
in honor of-her fifth birthday. Thtjw. I. 8-9, 16, 23, 30.little guests were entertained withgames after which refreshmentswere served.
—Howard Fletcher of West Hill |Road attended the Anierican Le-'gion County Convention at Dun-ellen on Saturday as a deleg-atefrom Colonia Post No.(248, '
lli B f
—Between WILLIAM H. KELLY,CornmtBRtoner of BanklnK, etc..(JomDlninnnt, nnd FRANK I.OT-RAIIIO nnd ADELINE I OTrtA-RIO, his wife, Defendants. FI. I*nfor the sale of mortgaged premis-es dated June 10, 193KBy virtue of the above stnted
—Mrs William Brjme" of North Writ, to be directed and delivered, 1Hill Road has returned from a l ^ j " exP°.»e t 0 8ttl(1 I l t i>ubllc y e n d u e
few days spent at the home of her WEDNESDAY THE 28TII XiAY OF^'Sicinif"mother Mrs. Margaret Bryson, of ' AUGUST, A. n, NINETEEN known
H U N D R E D T H I R T Y - F I V E Muhi
westerly 200 ff-ct fr.im ;!•-formed hy (he lnter.«n'(!'northerly' l ine of Muii. •
with the wester ly l ine of Mm< h e i H e ( 1 ) j i h i n g 11,, i
erly line of Muln mritvt s.nni, <
50 ft-et to a s t a k e ; them'e i . iZ2 dejrrees 41 ininuleH :\" >,went 176.42 feet to a Ktiik. ii'M north 43 degrees (I inliiiil,4.8ti feet to u Htuke; theni •- I22 lU'KieeH 41 minuteH :;<> >-eaat W fett to a ntnkr tn tit- ni-rly line of Main streft , lln I'place of Beg inning .
BelliK Part « f -«hefonveyj-il hy Imvlilwi fe hy twu deedt<;NllB.v dateil April 27enrded in Hook 74I1
Middlesex I'nlinty 11.NliK.v
mini'- in(}i>l.)xini<
U I H - I "
id ,
IWfi'MIS: II.-ll « ' i f ,
1!>:'4, a n d r e . -. •:IHiK'' f>!") o f l>.--
ui ,r • a t two o'clock Daylight Saving Tlmo; TheUn- l n t h e afternoon of th« said (Uy, ntUiccTCr
S h f f Offi I th Cit f I h
Brooklyn,—William Godson of Old
—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McA'n-icoln Highway has returned front-th* Sheriff's Office, indrews and daughters, Gertrude'his summer home in Lonp Island.-New Brunswick, N- -j-i'nd Muriel, are leaving tonisht j Maine, and is bstck at his place of -^TeeA (i,sttt flic forty' all
husiness in WashinEton. D. C. tal Stock No. 3336 of—Minn- .Vioift D«n Bleykeiv of ^jii^iJut*wl
Dover Road is the truest of her
tht City of IN thSeven
COME FOR A "pAFETY RIDE" IN THE WORLD'S SAFEST CAR - - - AND LEARN ALL THE ANSWERS
ID (light $760«B_.11 prioci f-
Detroit for olowd model
for their farm in Maryland, where jthey will vtwstion for th« next tw» .weeks.
John J. Treinor, 3rd, four-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. JohnI. Trainor, formerly of West HillRoad died Friday at! the Has-nouck Heights Hospital after ashort illness. Services were heldMonday at the (ireiner Funeralhome and from St. Cecelia's Ro-nap J Catholic Church, Iselin.3urial was in St. Gertrude's Ceme-tery. He is survived by his pur-;nts and one sister), Mary JaneTrainor.
—Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Mit-chell of Dover Road, had as herSunday guests Air. aryi Mrs..George H'annan and daughter,Winifred, of Elizabeth. OnThursday they entertained Mrs,Virginia Stringer qf Newark atluncheon. '
—Mrs. Matilde Cither of DoverRoad was thqf luncheon and dinnerguest of her sister, Mrs LouiaWendel,. and her daughter Mar-garet Gieger, of Elizabeth onThursday.
,—Mrs. Nellie Bryne of _ NorthHill Road has been confined' to her j Merriefit'ld,home with illness the'past week. ! —Henry
—Carl Eella of North Hill Road ' " "attended a meeting1 of the theatregroup at the Parish House Tues-day evening and submittedsketches in miniature of the scenesto be used in the presentation ofthe Rubyiat of Omar Khayam,which will Uke place early-fin Sep-tember. • f
—Edward Peck returnetl from
the Citlzenh T"Klinn own-,If)irarlo end an. . . _ „ t n e s a i d P r u n l t L o l r a r l o e n d a n d ii i i iHirtinaiH1
i s t h e g u e s t o t h e r A l i p l ; n , i ^ t i - m - i n . h i 8 w i f e , o n w h i c h i"CKiiiK "r m a i . y w i M ea u n t , M r s , F r a r J < l i n d r e e n o f C o n - there i« d u e t o t h e m 1572.00 mid a s - " A I . A N t l .^ ( . t l e n t g l g n e d b y t h e m to t h e C i t i z e n s M A I I T I N * K K I I . K V ,i n . i i n . u i . P u H d i n g a n d Limn A s s o c i a t i o n a / * : l l n i > S
f l o y d M a n s e p o l l u t e ™ ! s e c u r i t y fur the »nld l o u n ^ ' I. fc-—Mr. and Mrs.and children of Chain-O-HillsRoad have left for Hadlcy. NewYork, where they will remain forthe month of August.
—Mr. Joseph McAndrew,s of
nmi.
lir.st s o l d u n d *o m u c h of c e r t a i n .niortKuirt-d p i - e i n l s . ^ u'ith Ihe t\p[Mir-l e n n n e e s , In 1 lie s n l d Hill of C o m -pluint In aai<l . ' i iusc p a r t i c u l a r l y s e t ,furi i i nnil d e s c r i b e d , Hint la to Bay:
All t h o s e c e r t i i l n l o t s , t r a r l s m-^ of liiinl itn.1 pr.-inlsex h e r e -r p n r t l c u l n i ' l v de.Hclihed, Hit -lyihK n n d heliiK In Ihe T o w n -
f nf Woodl ir l i l fre , In tl-.c f c u m i y">' Mld . l l e f fX u n d wti i te uf N e w J e r -Bty
llt^lliK k n o _ n n n d i l e s iKnutcd IIHlot-: N ' H , 1191 iind w'yl un n mnp .-n-lltl"il "I'roiH-rtv' nf \V. H. JlnMliicomi' i ' i s inK *-"•' I m l l d l n n h>ta k n o w nux II i i | iuh iwn. yl iu. ' iUtl In thu ' l 'nu i .
N e w .ler^i'r1." * ^ I I I V I - \I lomiN.ui t l . MIIi-'. nnd Ill.-il f.
Itli
IN
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t u l i e w i t l s t l . d l , y f . ,s u m o f l ' m i r T l i ' . p n ^ . i rl l i i n i l r r . l n n d S i x t y !•
I "V «Mth . i l l a n . l «
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(.'.' i l Ii
i t h i s N u v r i n h e r , I ! iu2 ,o r d i n t h e C l . - r k ' s
Elli The'W.proxliiiut,. «HOW d e c r e . . t o h e s i i t i s l l . d
t h e i r !.s. ' l » ' s u m o f K n i i r T i
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hy
1).
I nf I
el mid !
day and left for Camp Pine inNew Y.ork State for the remain-der of the mdnth,
-Mr. and Mrs. W. H. MeClur.}of North Hill Road are entertain-
Mrs. McClure's brother-in-law,.Ir. M, A. Weber, of Clinton, New['oik, and with their guest attend-id the Giants and Cardinals bust-all game on Wv<,l,i!es,duy.
* * _ _ t _ l . l \ . l I ^ - TV p ' \J *-
West Hill Road spent the week-end 'i',':Jf,',in Maryland.
—Mrs, Edwnrd Metzger of WesHill Roinl left Monday to attendthe fifner.d of her sister, Mrs.Anne Wattcndorf, who diecl Sun-d'iy evening at the Metzt'er homewhere sha was visiting. Intermentwas in ' Boston. Mrs, MetzgerVniect, Josephine Wattendorf, willreturn to her ho mo in ChicagiweeliJend.
—Mr. and Mrs. ISeBJamiiii'son, formerly of Avenel liremakinp; their home with ^ ,,
! daughter, Mrs. .Garry Den BU-y- M.T'V^-u.'i.'i C-iVl,*'ker, of Chain-O-Hills Road. sale. -
\ •.—Mrs. Mae Merriefield of West T"K<.ther with all and Unuukir th.-'Hill Road is spending "two weeks arhl"4|iiiin''rteimiii'es j ' ^ r ' ' ' " l " " " ' " <
i! l
the home of her s«n, George lutiKln_r or in «ny"iH.' i"p!'rt "in'tiB"in Brooklyn , „ „ „ AI.AM II. Kl.V, si. trlffL a v i n of W e s t Hi l l _?_" '? A- TiKi-A/NKY
Road returned from the summerhome of his parents at Spring Lakeand was the week-end guest of hisgrandmother in Elizabeth.
'—Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fletch-er and son, Billy, of West HillRimd were the dinner quests tinSunday of Mr. and Mrs. EdwardRyan of Orange.
—Mrs. Peter Mtrrphy of Orpingpiwas the dinnerof Mrs. H. W
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IN C H A N O I ' M t V o r NKW'.IKIiSKV W n ' " - - V - - " ' - ^ "' M"
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N I I K I I I K K ' N MAI.KN O I M V I
HUDSON TERRAPLANEJ. ARllllK AFPLEGATE
363 DIVISION STREET, Perth Amboy, N. J.Phone 4-2516
;il8 BUKNKTT STREET, New Brunswick,^!. J.Phone 1705
See Ihe N«w Hudwi CounUy" Club S.dan-124" Wh*el'b«t«—U3 or 124 H. P.—$880 f. o. b. Detroit5Vf> to 7 inches more body length than sedans costing $180 to $375 more.
— l ietwccn C LA I! A HAItTONHI'ILDING AN'U LOAN A.SSOCIA-TK)M, a corp. Omiulalriuiit. nnd.IOIIN YANOH'SKV and MAHYVAN(JW.SKV, his wife ,-t atn Deil indantu. HI.- I'1!!, f . ir' l lm «uiB of"'"r'^'Kfd I'l-.-mlsea dated Jun.-
TI., vlr t II f 11 \
on Fjj-iday Writ to me dirt, ted und ileiw're'lFletcher. , I will exiiimu to hale at public v«n-ule, of l)9yer Roa'i ^ ' g . ^ H I . w Tll^ 2IST
. . . . om a vacation spent AIMIL-KT. A. I I . ' . M N ' K , , , ^at Westport, Conn. IIUNDJIKD THIHTV-FIVK
—Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis'iJ!.1, t w ? u,)iM\ I'liyiiglit Savingof Fairview Avenue - . . . I . ^ . J . ! ! ? ' . . 1 ' . . " 1 ' . " " ' . ' ? " " ! t l l e
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In Wi iml l i r l i lK! , ' I ' . ""SOY C o i i n t y , N. , 1 , l i
. . . , •••••v, , . . t in- U . I V I I U M I m m e s t u d ' l~ . ' "ox , i . r,., 1 Y'ti J M I U ' I . •entertained day. at the. .Sheriffs orrlca In tliil1'1;1'"! Amhoy. N. .1.
a t l d i < ' " y ul •Vl't'w KruimwloU N. J I ''''"• i i l ' l ' ioxlmute uniouni •. , . . > ! All the fo l lowing t r a d or parcel!',','," 'tr" ' j ' '"'. Hiillnfled hy sunl jp
of luml and premlseu lierolnafterpiirtlculiirly desurllied, f||(iiate '
and IMIIIK in Tljiwnshln of
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Lewischildren of Vineland on Sunday!
—Mr. and Mrs. C. W, Knuuer.- , -,—u- | <>f Fiiirview Avemii' ut tended the ,1(- » <• ™«i « m
--- Volney I'eck of North Hill i funeral of Mr. Knauer's fathef a t . n . T r l < l ^«. l n " ' c t ' o u W o ( ™ld-itoa.1 Kill leave for a tour of KnK-! Valley Stream, Long Island, on A ^ . K . ^ r U i taS tScfi orand, Scotland and Ireland with i Monday. iparet|a of iun,i a m i premises h»re-
_, lliiafi.r ijurtleulnrly descrltied altli-
-hY;. l,5,;"vv,»::i'h^"iK ln t h e T o w n -of klihlle
IFUEL ANDHIGHEST QUALITY FOR EVERY
MAKE OF BURNER
i-x andge.-in th. CountyMate of New' Jer--
PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
PREMIER OIL & GASOLINE SUPPLYNew Brunswick Ave. COMPANY, RAH\yAY, N. J
Phone Rah. 7-1263 — Night Phone Rah. 7-0424-B
i»i-y. knoivn iwul deolnnateit un Lots|Ntunlii-ra T w o Hundred and g e v e n -
V-iiliie (27») and Two llunctred amiKlifhty 2801 on a Map or PlSn * f•oids l errucs , dated Kebruary 6
I Hniiiiiltil nouHiemterly lw KlnKi.eiMt-e'H Pout Ttoad, twentyTftv. andfour Li,IIm (25.4) feet; thence alsoHOiithumterly by King George's PostliOtll), t \Vctl t \t* (jiif Jit - {.281 * f«et ' iv ul•)i iv by i,*)! 1,81 on H_R(] jpluin Bfivt'ii-fy- l l irte (73) fret; northerly 'by Lot.'iS un Bald idun, forty-seven (47)J". : I'ljulerly by Fa|rfl.Ul Avonuo,t" iH-n ine (49) feet; containing, ac-fording to auld plan, two thousandnuveii hundred s U i y - s e v e n (2 787)»(|linre feel, more or less
Ihe ii|i|irnxliiiuta amqunt of theit'iTce lo be biitjHfled hy said sa le IKi h " , sum ; ;r T w o Thousand and
I'ldlurii (|2,08O.Oo), totf<itiierift>i of this naif.
lii'i- with all and alngular theMlvllegeti. lufredllamenta and
thereunto
mini . tifII II ml red
(13,17(1.001
Thretill).| .Sf\t-ul>
K'Hier with tof thlH- Dale,
Together w i t h all und MHlllt< rlghla, lirlvilfifrB In!nientM thi'i'eunlo lieloiiMiuv;iLnywl*e aiiportalnliiK
ALAN l l . Kl.V, HiA. J. ,4 ,1, H. WIOHT,131.011 HolU'itor.W, I. 8-16, 23, 30; 9-«.
News of All Woodbridjo•hip la _>• l^_«p«nd«nt,
maet wWeljr r«»4 p»pWo«-l.ri_r«
tht
with ihe
rtKhtx
In ui iywlae a|i|ierlulllln|f,'. . . i , . ALAN H. 10I.Y, Sheriff•'I'M Kit BliCKHOFK.
BITTING*blue coal'
(LOWEST PRICES FOR|THE FINEST QUALITY
SUPERIOR SERVICEPHONE 8-001?
FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1935 PAGE TH&IE,
S I L H O U E T T I N G : REV. H. t KLEIN J*a«*.
• NO DELAYS• NO RED TAPE
GUARANTEEDfor 1 2 months
ni^lnit alt road hatardt
/V 0 W/s the Urn to iwftch to world famous Q u a l i t y
KELLY-SPRINGFIELD/fatigue-proof TifCS *
JERSEY TIRE COMPANY, Inc.New Brunswick Ave. Phone P. A. 4-1775 -1776
There can be little doubtin the iilert mind of the
wiislup'n youngest clergy-man of his priestly vocation.The Rev. Howard FrederickKlein, rector of historic Trin-ity Kpi'inpal ('hurcVl in Wnnd-
(!• pruppr, consciously and(iiielnllv explored secular life insix fields before deciding that hisoriginal decision to study for the iministry) made in high school, at
an foul \Ji. yiyus trjjo, tafl beenHI' limn a boyish impulsiveness.Olliro liny in a Wall Streetu-;e, page on the Stuck Ex-anife, oiler in a boiler works,
filer iif si easting plant, checker illpiano factory and fraiflc-clippcr
on si i-oiiercte highway job—thesecertainly blend into an unusualbarkgi-niiiid • for the scholarly
uing Kpiscnpnlian priest withii' sensitive bunds and the train-I, rcsiijiant voice,
is strictly ii contemporary,li'p-gymaii who frunkly isn't.ilHe,)'("-'1e<) in thewin) studied psychiatry as
I iti bis'parish work sind who;. it a point to sec every Mao
| West nuivie. And it was a Unman11'atIndie ' priesl. an uncle, who
finally coiiviiicojl him that the•pii Until voeiitioti does not stripa man of-his humanity!
riiilrosid loromotiveji quite un-(iu itdriv
I nient,
I make:
'| Born In Jersey CityOn May 14, 1908
Father Klein's family back-ground, German three genera-lions iiRo, was half Lutheran andlmlf Catholic. His own father, adenier--m--en:tentii>lW
Te«t'i |"vi 'il in .Jersey City where the boywas born on' May M, l!>08, hewent to a Lutheran church. Whenhe wns ten in .1!HX—The Kleinsmoved to Craiifnrd. There, the ladwas confirmed in tlie Kpiscopalianfaith.
In Jersey ('ity, he had. attendeda private-school which taught it',morning clnRse's in German, itsafternoon sessions in English. In(•ranford, he of course switchedto the public schools, graduatingjit 17 in !".'{£ Tho F.°Y, , rD. Martin, rector of thechurc!
vi'iy much indeed. He still parksat curves nrar tracks so he canwatrh thrm go by and i he stillwnmlers about building himself n
'minuttui e railway, system.\ He iiUo mlithva detective stor-ies of tlie S. S. Van Dine school,spent his vocation re-rending Con-
; rin l>oyle, regularly floes throughitlic Headers Digest from cover tociner and reads daily either the
!Times or the Herald-.Tribunc inthat preference,Likri Amoi-AnciyOn Thp FUdio
Hi' rates ' small Fall squash,baked, as a dish without a peerbut "will eat anything except par-snips with enthusiasm"-1-* state-ment belied by hi»-spare figure
ml ascetic face. Amos and Andy,jccause of tho universality of itshumor, aiid flic r Saturday night'Hani Dance" on WJZ'are his ra-dio programs, detective and cos-tume movies his favorites: :
Although fie thinks "no motionpicture of nny kind can hurt anadult ' he has positive and precisely-stnted views on tho vicioustiesj
f children beinjf constantly givena screen faro of sex and societ;triangle stories as examples of ordinary life.* His handsome black welsh ter-rier "Rhumba" brazens outslightly murky ancestry with animmediate, if rather condescend-ing, familiarity.'......Erojiiihly because he was fright-ened in his childhood, Father
—he Roy Smonaen, David Tfcp-en, Jnmes (otter. A<lam Dejew-i. Joseph Kisli and Albert Kop-hn enjoyed the week-end atigh Bridge.-*-Miss SuKan Injflis enjoyed
hursday nt Anbury l'nrk with thelta ThetA Rho Girl*' Club.—Stanley Lojewski has return-
d home after a three weeks' visiti MoWk-r Ala. •- •—Members of the Sugar Bowl
lub are enjoying a vacation inonnccticut.
Mtreet, is spending a few days in
York.•Francis Casey., Adam Lojew-
iki, Stanley Lojewski, Arthuracobsen and Ted Treider enjoy-d a theatre party In Elisabeth
Sunday.CnaHes Bason, "Pep" Ches-
lak Joseph Wcittz, John Dynarsk,'B«d" Jacohsen, John Zclriich nndJoseph Pendnr were guests at a•hiwn party held at the home ofAlex Kopcha, Jr.
--Miss (,'lnra Arnesen of PerthAmboy enjoyed, a weeK's vnj-iitionat the the home of her aunt", Mrs.Heljtesen, on East Avemur.
—David Tappen and' MIJW RitaMartin enjoyed a motor trip to As-bury Park this week.
—Victor Cantnno ( returnedTuesday on the merchant marineshifrVvhich called at the SMI Oil''ompnny. Mr. Cantnno has beenWay since May 30. V
—Stephen, Turk spenr a week-end recently in Atlantic City.
Sons, Daughters Of libertyEnjoy An Outing To Beach
A. beach party wax enjoyed atLaurcircfc' Harbor lss.t m|tht by thePride of New Jersey Council ofthe Sun* and l>»u|rhters of Lib-erty, (lames and various contestswere included in the programwhich was in charge of StanleyBrookfleM.
Other rne"mbeT!v nf tlip cnminit-tep were Mn>, Jhhn A/ml. Mrs.Russell Thersjesen, Mrs. I.eonRamberR,, Edward Aiffcustine andLestet Sheetjc
The party left from the homeof Mr. and Mn. Charles Sicwel,Burnett Street, AvenePT™"
MAJESTICRADIO CORP.
MIDGET
Mri. Jumiion VitilorMrs. J. H. Jamison of Philadel
phia is visiting her ninth™-, MrsKjpllner, of PennRylvania AvenueMiss Doris Porch, ftlw of Philadelphia, is Mrp. Kellner's truest.
Kpiscopalian but while the family
of Hospitality >\ FORMALITY ii the. kynote of entertaining today and many
pi ipyl.ir hostesses serve buffet tne'als. You can toast sandwiches on the
(iiillette, two at a time. You can use it as a grill and cook delicious dishes
on it. <")ur Home Economics Department wif! give you recipes for these
dishes. They will also tell you of the many dif-
ferent kinds of waffles you can make with an
electric waffle maker. Just write or telephone,
(irillette and trify are priced at $ 4 , 1 0 cash.
Onrd aml'pltt^-extfft: -GwlleUe ewnes in diflct... . J
ent styles. Prices begin at $1 .19 if purchased
without the tray. Cord and plug extra. Electric
cotfee percolator illustrated sells for $3 .95 cash.
ELECTRICITY IS CHEAPER NOW
A-3S72
NOW OPENTHE ENTIRELY NEW
INN CApTEFLOOR SHOW!
Every Saturday NightORCHESTRA
WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY NIGHTS,
DINE AND DANCE!IN THE ATMOSPHERE OF OLD MEXICO %
there, had exerted a strong in- Kfeln is still terrified by spiders•mrFm^T7BT-Wm-Tjnt^-va»-Jtrrej1mt--by not much else.-rhr eim'timpression as a brilliant, kindly [think of any vestigial superstitionman made by his own uncle, auraduate . of Heidelbefg Univer-ity in Germany, which made thead realize how splendid a life
dedicated to the service of thehurch could be.
Still, a year in New York wouldalmost certainly test that decision.That year only convinced him helever could be happy in businessso the boy entered Hobart Col-lege m_ 19|£6.tiHe wan graduatedf«ur years later after majoringin English and sociology with mi-nors in German and biology and•.lie memory of four Summers ofgenuine labor to payOrdained De«conAt Craftford
Three years of intensive worksit General Theological Seminaryin New York followed. On May28, 1 )33, he was ordained a dea-con by Bishop Paul Matthews inTrinity Church at Oranford. TheRev. Roscoe T. Foust, now rector:it "West Point, preached the ser-mon.
Father Klein served for a yearas assistant at St. Luke's Churtfhin-Jioaelle. was-ordained a prieston June 3 of last year by BisViopMatthews with the Rev. WalterStoMre of New Brunswick preachiiit! the sGrtnrm and, two monthslater, on-August 15, was called toTrinity here in Woodbridge.*
Soon after accepting the callbe was married to Elizabeth Purvis Hoe of Cranfoid, whom he hadknown since he was a boy 0 yearsold.Donn Byrne Hold*
I High Rlace For Pro«eIn hi^h school, he had concern-
! ed himself with poems i\nd essaysI tin the school paper. Then he dis-covered Donn Byrne, the Irish
[ master of prose color. Byiftf wonthen and still holds a high place inhis heart. Butrivals arrived in cffl-k'Ke when he read the Germans—
• Goethe, Schiller, Heinri'ch Heinej and Leasing—and when he dis-i covered a particular, fondness forj Milton. Keats, Emerson, Tolstoi
inil the other great Rufeians andithe Anplo-Siixon sagas,i certainly|:i Catholic Bstr- - - v
In the seminary he "found "Icould never be interested in theOld Testament except ns a recordof the religious development of'lie Jewish lfice—and their earlyprimitive, almost barbaric concep-tion of God." But both, the NewTestament, read in the Greektexts, and dogmatic theology werefascinating, especially- the latter"as intellectually stimulating."
There was naturally a vastamount flf..wk...ttt ie^iWne, in-cluding study of voice under Wal-ter Robinson, retained by tlie sem-inary after his radio pupils, nota-bly Milton Cross, had begun win-niriK medals for diction right andleft.Still Wand To RunRailway Locomotire
Today, aside from the parishand priestly work which almostcompletely engrosses him, FatherKlein discovers his early passion
STEAMETTECROQUINGNOLEWAVE — $2.95
FREDERIC'S WAVES$3.50 - $ 5 . 0 0 -
EVEN1NG APPOINTMENTS
M A R G I E ' S477 RAHWAY AVE.
Wbdg. 8-1213
'French walnut finiiS.{beautiful ••<) efficientISPECIAI. LOWPRICE
PHILCO!PRICED FROM $20
|RCA and Cunningham^RADIO TUBES"
Your Choic*
\26278071
LRADIO and REPAIRS/[Call Elizabeth 2-8900/
RADIO TUBESTESTED FREE
JERSEY STATEELECTRIC CO. INC.BROAD ST. it Etii. AT*.
ELIZABETH
f which he hasn't stripped himelf, the last abandoned 'being thethree on a match" blight. He hasecently • acquired a good toolheat which he uses at.the slight-
est opportunity "not always con-itructively,"Troubled By Growth •Of Armaments '
No pacifist, he is neverthelessmost troubled "by the growingdistrust on the part -of tlie world'sgreat nations and their growingarmaments." because "it seems to
that history demonstrates'a"hWWtt'lv»c(juires an inor-
dinate supply of war materials itbegins, perhaps unconsciously, toook around for a place to use
them," He believes, however"every people should feel securein its defense against a possibleattack—if Japan, for examplereally needs a navy equal to oursand Great Britain's to feel secure,then Japan should have it.". 1'The only, solution,".M thinks,.!"is an international govipment.I am »orry the United States hasdone so much preaching on theneed for peace add Sttll insists onits policy of isolation. Membershipby this country in the Leagire ofNations and on the World Courtwould have strengthened . thoseagencies, I believe, so that dis-putes such as the Italo-Ethiopian
i tangle could have been settled by! international pressure."
Balancing this distrust is Fa-ther Klein's, belief that "peoplegenerally, through education—and I most certainly don't meanformal schooling—are beginningto develop a better sense of truevalues; they begin to see that agreat many 'ends' really wereonly means to an end and tl\gybegin to be able to co-operate onworthwhile projects. And thatability to co-operate, I think, real-y is the only good definition ofeducation."
Sales Tax Payments Acceptedfrom Licensed Retailers
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK is voluntarily acting as an- agent of the State Tax Commls*loner in providing, without
cost to the State or taxpayers, a convenient method for ourretailers, who-are subject to the sales tax, to file theirmonthly reports and pay th«ir taxes,
ERE ARE THE REGULATIONS UNDER WHICH THIS '
BANK WILL ACCEPT PAYMENTS;
1. payments accepted irom any licensed retailer from the1st to\the 15th of each month for'the preceding calendar
2v -•fttyTrtents-mttst-bfr aecemiMHmd by report formplicate and deposit -slip-properly filled out. -Form must ..hesigned and the original sworn to, (Original will be forward-ed with tax to Tax Commissioner. Duplicate stamp paid and ^returned to taxpayer. The deposit slip will be Our perman-ent record,) , •
This, service is available to anyone, whetheror not you are a customer of this bank
FIRST NATIONAL BANKMember Federal Reserve System - - Perth Amboy, New Jersey
it's your first car and your best girl, and youVe ta£en good '
"advice and stopped at the Esso sign . . and your car behaves like a V-16
and she says "My, I could ride with you forever!" (And you hope she will)..
Mr., Mrs. Stanley C. PotterEntertain At Manasqaan
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Potter,who are spending the Summer atManasquan wei'e hosts to a groupof local residents at a beach partyTuesday night. '
The party was in honor of thebirthday of Fred A Brietja and theguest list included: ' .
Mr. and Mrs. Asher Fitz Ran-dolph, Mr. and Mrs. Whitney C.Leeson, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Briegs,Mr. and Mrs. Irving J, Reimers,Rev. and Mrs. Earl H. Devanny,Mr. and Mrs. John M. Krefer,Mrs. Garret Brodhead and Mr.and Mrs. Potter.
REAR P.R.R. STATIONRAHWAY ^ 0
Presbyterian Group PlansOutdoor Service Sunday v
Jnme.s H. Reid will be in chargeif life open air vesper service to:>t> d t d b th S i r Christia
I Luc u^f^u uit . ^ u j . ^ . . . _ , , ,w~ —
e eondiK'ted by the Senior Chria-uii Kmli'avor Society of the First
riau Church in the Wood-bridBB 1'ark Sunday at 7 P. M.The jfuest speaker will be Van V.Roseboro, secretary4of the PerthAmboy Y. M. 0, A.
A special inimical service hasbeen urranged.
Anna Hart Guest oi, HonorOn Occasion Of Birthday
In honor of her birthday, Mis:!Anna Hart, Schoder Avwiue, wasfeted by a ifroup of friends Tues-day night. Games were played.
Those present included;'Mrs. H. A. Tappen, Mrs. J. E.
BreekeuridKe, Mrs. Harry Reyder,Mrs. Willism H. Ruwe, Mrs.George FullerUm, Mrs. Edith G.Pi nil. M'a. William ButUrs, MissesA. Shalfer, Elaine Logan, AnnaHait and Luura Cutter.
RADIOIe$SO • Sssolene • EssolubeThe oil of premium qual-ity sold at regular price.Effectively combineseconomy mill protection.
AIROTYPEThe r«ca|nUcd leaduramonf preuilum roolurfueU, wbplcd from 8fV«-ipt ft»4t aviation fuel.
furmaiico ihmi toy utherreguUr-priceCuntaliu a •olvtut oil.
£SS0 mARKETERSS T A N D A R D . O I L C O M P A N Y O F
FRIDAY. AlT.l'ST 16,WOODBRIDGE INDEPENDENT
PAGE FOUR
Jtotopnt&ttfed Eveo' Friday by
WOODBRIDGE PUBLISHING CO.IS - 20 Cveen 5«r*et Wefcdbridie
Trlepho»., W^oJbridf. H710Subscription $150 Per Year
HUGH WILLIAMSON KELLY. ,Editor and PuUJtoei. .,..,,,,.
CHARLES E. GREGORY .... Managing Editor
Entered as second-claw iraher March 13,1S19, at the PwVoffice »t Woodbridr*, -V J .under the Ac: of March.3, 1879. ••-•
mentioned h<
?r.m, and
Mr. H.
1 >undr.
fTnv
iitr.'.
r.- : .t--::ia'<•' in
»: Tvi:y fi'ro BaTtrntrr:
•y k>. rf,-»f»iy^r- h B9 -fE?pw n i n
;..r> :r. the la«t few wefk?• • . < i,!y one of the t n i
:,. a* may bej generally.
. '• .;-y with the sales' tax
BACK O* THE FLATS By PERCY CROSBY
~E<l(ft'. t'r.t- .Nf<-v-'..rK N e w s r e p o r t s , i > . ; . j ?
r w * t \ ' ' 1 ' nJrtffllHtihinp • . i f '
y fr
* i
Bayihg Gum-Drops. ^ . i e v ! T -'.vr.ship -is s t i l l a l
v - ; - ' v- t h a t - S I , 1 0 . 0 0 0 W P A
• t a r :"• t"sct ' h a t
Please!
ou' arUiir./ HP>*b;-r rr,;<Vk
nuc'- . horror !i:-- '•!" a'Jw
A d<:'"rrr,i!Ted, d i X
stitrK'd t h i - ' y e v to Lu
n-cklt'=>ne-s 'in• th i*
wrr-- Av.-
y
efff-rt
practica
Ur.d
nicipali
iike
hundred j.T;\;;i
lik.e p r f . ty ^"•.•
agreement •n
•?110,000'and
-ral requirement?, this v:,\i-have'-to dig up somethingr kvr-to be able tplhare the
Ordinarily it would •K>4:;i business to enter into aner— #6.000 would Krinir'.• it would in our case—if
* thorough-fare Tfl'.vtird 'his end, the 'police' madesome- progress'but it cannot, be entirelyachieved .so long as tho.y members of the o r obtaineddepartment aligned1 to patrol the avenue, from Mr. Nier's road fund. The latter isrl'tbe-little their job swi6ltv of it.
we had the ?6.')(IH. There are Wo possible
sources where such a sum could be derived
e from -p' loan,1 the other
i- because mere .mention of it throw? the Lord High Road Com-
THIS WEEKYEARS_AG0_
Ten Yeart Ago
y gIf the motorist who ran down and ser- rnissioner into practically a dead faint
iously injured a fourteen-year-old boy Sui.- They have raided his allotment too manyday had been driving at a safe and_feaFOji- time? already, he argues,able rate of speed, he would probably have g0 ^hat to do? An emergency appro-been able to stop in time to avoid the acci' priation is the only solution, evidently. Butdent. But he wasn't and the lad lies dan- the official family is not inclined to go bor-gerously hurt in .the hospital, rawing for the furtherance Of some proj-
Last year, a tiny tot was'killed. • ects of very questionable m<yit. For this at-Please! Can't we Mop it? ' titude it is to be commended. Committee
members take the position that the Town->Schoolboy Stuff ship needs certain improvements and in.P«tor Find* Mo.qtntoei
That seemed much like schoolboy stuff, needs them badly, much more so than it Moitly Freih-WiUr Bredthe way an anonymous member of the Mid- needs about $90,000 worth of grading in w f ^ e 2 v i ^dlesex County Grand Jury which is cur- its' park system. If the projects sanctioned ^"'couiHy6Mosquito Extermi-'rently engaged in an examination of the by the WPA were made to include some natiOn Commission, is actively en-,affa-irs of thf Eitifrgericy Relief Admini«- real necessitiesK there would be far morrot paireil in ridding the township oftration sounder! off on his premature opin- a disposition to find ways and means of mo's-quitoe?:ioiK regarding conditions within, the sys- raising the necessary $6,000. " "« '•P»'t» t h a t fi °"^ ^ a " |
' • -n-u ,u • v • i e e u J • n_ opened up a pond in back oitern.- • U ben- t h e r e isn t a loaf .-of -br«ad m t h * ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ m m t +r<itm H ,
This newspape r , for months , has house i t 's a li t t le silly to go ou t a n d bijry beintr built from Ce'ntral Park in-
SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy CHARLES E. GREGORY
^ c a t c h tabout once a week, as have pud-ERA. "When the rnatteT was taken up by
the Grand Jury it was the natural assump-, Jfa 5 o o n e r ffe Bettertjon that here was an agency which would" Township property owners will soon" J ' ' * *'judiciously consider ajrphases of the broad. s t a r t r e a p i n g t h e b y ] e f i t s o f t h e recently w.*« S-« l» Ford.problem of administering relief from 'a e n a c ted fire code . The Woodbridge Townshippurely objective standpoint. The whole , Well-ordered and well-run municipal- ^ " a |o w" A^Friu on'Srpurpose, however, will be destroyed if onej i t j eH j,ave»*«en the recipients of such berre-.before August 'U.ior. the layingperson who can hide his identity under the fits f o r v e a r s b u t Woodbridge has just got- ' n f ™, -d fFr t e id ' o i 'm"cloak of his official status is to jibber aim- t e n a r o u n d t o complyirig with the require- 116.40 was the lowest of five re-leSBly Of half-baked notions. m e n t s o f th f i B o a ) . d (jf F j r e U n d e n v r i t e r s . ceived on Monday night.
• to the extent.where a reduction in prem- Orer 90% Petitioniurns- will be allowed. For this farsighted s ' w a r e n Sidew1111"
the relief lists of all civic • " T V "'"'"' ' "' " '.'".•••--.. Committeeman Arthur Olsen Iui(. it.ii.-i uhi.-, oi dii U I R , s e r v i c e to local residents, the administra- h a s n a n ( ] e ( | j n a petition to the!
There are chisellers in the ERA, un-questionably, just the same as there arechisellers* onchurch and philanthropic organizations., U o n d c , s m e s many thanks.Faults in administration, man-made as itis, arc inevitablo. But the Grand Jury willhave only performed a very trivial part of ^ ;. ^ . ^ t h ( , n ( n y r a t e s w i
Township Committee for Hide- jT • „ • / • / . • i. i , walks and curbing aloni? Wootl-Inspectlon of lire equipment has been b r i j ( , e Avenue in Scwaren from
completed and as soon as the water pres- Woodbridge Creek to East Aye-1, , • Tiue on both sides. The petition ]be calcu- iKned b v ovei. <JO'; of the jits i unction if it intends, merely, to find iat,,d. The precautionary innovations have P'-operty owners alon,; the route.
... fan II... There is. a far .broader aspect to the ^ d t h i a x ' considerable Bu"n.i
bl d f i t l l i t ^ ^ B ] ,£JJjJproblem and a jrroup of intelligent monShould readily realize It.
t h ( jon,£JJjJ
A telephoneR l h
on Sun-Board
^ changes the bettor will - - , — „ , , ., ,, • - , . - . , .They should realize, too, that ill-timed r,..(J,.,.nm, i,, ^ t iafwt ' ' day from Ralph kelly of t)»c Lm-, ... , . , , .,, ,• , C\eijone be-satisliea. j e n Avenue informed the police
and ill-advised harangues will not be a . that a bullet had just been firedsuflicient answer. The Grand Jury is en-i • ' throutrh. »/,-wttdow in his home.
. . , , , , -i i, ' i Kantnev e T\i>mnnn .Sertroant JanifcS''W.alsh lnvestipRt-gaged in a man's work not child s play. ; neasoeys uemana ^ foum, t h a* a 32 va l ib re
' . * . We are full Of sympathy for the de- i^llet had pierced one of the front!mand.s of the Keasbey Protection Fire windows and fallen on the floor,• „ i i . r - - i . i n i i - i / - . „ . „ evidently being nearly spent when
i Company that Smith Street and Crows Mill ;t struck the glass.
U So, Why?This newspaper stated the case milrlh,
apparently, when it-^reported t+K*t theBoard of Education "stirred up a hornet'snest""in Iseliri through the practical de*"-'motion of Miss .Stella Wright from a prin-cipal to a grade teacher.
Seldom has there been such unanimityof opinion over tin; qualifications ofa pub-
with sidewalks of one1
kl"d ° r Five Yeart
- At least {tne fatal aeeident was caused, Wthe company argues, by the lack of. such j Boird'bi f r«d.an improvement and t . /avoid a repetition The • Woodbridge Lions Club
, . , ' . , • . , -. ,, v-rn l.- r, iwill rheet next week to launch aof this tragedy it urges the Township Com- b o a r d # trade or chamber of com-mittee to insist that WPA funds be made ""-'ice fpr Woodbridge. Associat-
ed with the Lfans are several„,*-• . * . v... H- • ' . . . . v * v. | ^ v* • ' | - i l l i J t n ii i L'll WI LI I l i l t uruii.i un. >'*- •«-' " '
lie- school employe as'there is regarding I a v a i ! a b l ? t o t o n s t ruct walks on the two o t h e r men, mosUy local merchantsMiss Wright. With a splendid educational iP r i™P a l ^ee t s in this section. and '.manufacturers. background she has had, in addition, manvJ Expenditure of a little of WoodbridgeV W o ( j d b r M i e M a n
years of experience in her profusion, and W P A allotment in this ditcyi.tion would:To Head Scout c.mp• i . , ,, , ,: certainlv be far more sensible than would1 Harold P. Hayden of Wood-is known to have the rornpk-te respoct and , l
( ' u y UL . ' l r m IL fL" J " , T bridge hus been appoint*.! Chair-saKues he t h e . carrJ'ing out ot the present sched- munrof. the. Qamp Committee of
confidence of her pi-oie^iona, , , , .„.,, .„i, f , , . , , rVy \ (, •e v e i y w h e i e . I h e - e \aiU&tn
by a numerically important. <m,up1101 l)(! e\peue.| ordinarily to
loMgues p.. ;..&.,(. ,i ule which calls for $90,000 worth of grad-.Ruritah Council of. the Boyvoucttsated •. ^ ' « Scouts, lillinc the vacancy caused
who i n « l n t w o l):"'k>s' K,easbey s clairh there-ib y t lu; ^ ^fore cannot'bo easily dismissed. ll f
I. Rus-sell of Pai'lih. Mr. Hny.U'n has
,, _ , . , n been an active mainber of the ex-much interest in the i)(-rs.,rin<.-l of the school' , n u l ,t!VC'l1 lP.out'n t h e Township s Com-'ccutive board s ince his ide.ltilica-System • , ni }tt«e is Stxlrl 011 it, it is doubtful if th,0 tion with Scouting two years iigo.
There are many strange reasons which ' Pushing ton dreamei:s could be 'awakened i O r d i n t n c e U\^,,Jare alleged to have figured in theswitch. |'","«. en()UKh t o r . e a l i z e t h e importance and To Build ,Nfw DockPersonal animosity is claimed as one and : m e r i t "f l h e P roJec t-the others'are equally unimpressive, but itcannot be that the Hoard accepted suchtrivial excuses on which to base so impor-tant a change. It must have had a btjtterreason than that Mis.s Wright, who has
years of faithful service,given so manywas personally
Friends, of
obnoxious to someone.Miss Wright's arc on the
An ordinance ta construct alock at thei southerly end of Berry
> ~r ' " ' * (street and to pave,the street from1 n't i n b iwC the dodk'tp'the eri'd of the present
UltCn I he rOltttCS pavement was introduced andPolitical consideration ijhould be for- P" s sei Monday by_ the Commit
jfotten'if the Township Committee decidesp y ytee. The passage of this measureis the assurance Army engineers
to fill the vacancy in the police department necdod to proceed with the dredg-, . , ,, • \ t A i , , i linsr of Woodbridge • Creek. The
created by the retirement of August Mat-!(ioh
uk a n d the stretch of pavaWntthews. " . leading to it will not costjmore
AND THEY S A I D . . .THE QUESTION: Of wh«t are you moit afraid?THE ANSWERS:LOUIS BELLANCA, L'l Mam Street. Woodbridge, a cob-
bler-. Of not having enough money. That's the only thing I'mafraid of. I think, It's the liitf thinp (vm-m* is afraid of. Ripttt
iiuw it's hard. If the people don't work, theydnn't have any money; If they don't haveany money, they don't fret their shoes fixed.If the don't get their shoes fixed, I don'tluiM. much work. When I don't have muchwni-k I don't have much money. So some-time.- I worry abput mone.y;, I'm not afraidM" anything else—not %ven of dying. Whytfi>n-y ahout that? You're better rift Trhenyuu're dead than when you're alive. Youdon't have to work then and you don't haveto 'worry. Especially J'6U don't have t r -
" worry about monej»._ Everyogje worriesabout money all the time t,hey,'re alive. So I think it's betterwhen you're dead.
MICHAEL GILRAIN, Bamford Avenue Woodbridge, a press-feeder: Guns. I jruess I'm afraid of firearms "of any description,I don't like to see.people handle them even in.fun. The mostdangerous thing anyone can do, 1 think, isto begin having 'fun' with"a jrifti and startpointing it at everyone. Nobody eyer knowsor bothers to look to see if the gun is load-ed, if the safety is on, if the hammer is nthalf or full cock. So every little while some-one gets killed that way. No, I've neverseen a shooting accident and 1 don't knowwhat started the way I feel about them.I never handle guns because I'm afraidanything can happen when you do. 1 duknow why I'm uncomfortable when dogsare around, though. My own dog ttirned on . ^ — — • ^ ~me when I was a kid—about eight years old. He didnt bite mevery badly, just scratched my lug, but I havoVt liked them eversince. I'm not too fond of dentists nr of lightning, eithiT, but asfor; thing;! like automobile accidents and so T)ii,'I "fijriire thatthere's no use being afraid of being hurt. Either you're going tobe in an accident or you're not and if you're reasonably cautiousin your driving. 1 don't see what else wou can do about it.
JOSEPH ALMASY, 41 CUure Avenue, Woodbridge, a'bar-ber's assistant: I'm most afraid of being in an automribile acci-dent. I've never been in one so far b'ut I saw a bad smash-up two
years ago on the Superhighway in whichtwo people were all cut up. And I guess thebiggest shock I've ever had was about 18months ago when I heard that my fatherhud .LttU ill. illl. accident-at Port Reading.A train hit his car and we were just told heWHS IH the hos(»»t*l, • W« didn't know-howbadly he'd been hurt and even when wefound out he had been lucky and had got-ten off with leg injuries, it was still a shock.The more you read about all these acci-dents,'the more you have .to dreajl 'em, Ithink. I lead the other xlu/that in the lust
18 months, there-were .more American men,'women mid childrenkilled and jnjured in automobile accident's than the A.E.F. suf-fered in the IH months it was in the World -War. I'm not muchafraid of other things although 1 dttn'.t. likd.tfii' idea of beingbitten by snakes, dogs or wasps and I wouldn't want to get intoliny kind of trouble.
FRANK JARDO.NE, 58 Claire Avenue, Woodbridge a truck-driver: Snakes of almost any kind—I've always been afraid ufthem although I've never been bitten. At camp near Green Bankin South Jersey, they were all mound us - 7
pine, arrakes oiifl water .snakes. Even if wedidn't see any rattlers, 1 still dreaded 'em.Ever since I've been a, kid, I've felt thatway although I don't remember ever .seeinga snake when I was littltf. What else am Iafraid of? Well—grade crossings, especial-ly when they're unguarded us .some are inthe towhship , here. Some mad dogs I've-seen tearing arounfr haven't been any toopleasant, either, although the ones 'I'veaeon have always been destroyed befoivthey got around fo biting anybody. I'm
Irs-
October In Provincetown •••^ jjot to indulging in one of my favorite diversions <i,.
Other day when the humidity brought on a listncssn,.
•hut doVoured.all ambition, an'd dreamed about Cape c . \
My slumbers were produced by watching ond|,
i)iU'iiP5 o r auTuiflOrjTiP!? W r o r r n ifrr m e T I H W j e r s e y s h n ] ,
suppose they hrid' nowhere else to jro. So they lined up
•miles in order to be able to spend a few minutes at the •:
1'iid of the clay amidst the,minified odors of hot-dogs, I,,,
popcorn and Pickering- goo of one kind or another. Ma\
too, they might get a chance to get into the water bet
coming home only to find that about fifteen million .I;,|,;
esc beetles got there first, and drowned.
It seem.*'pretty much Hke.a wtste of time to \uv
.•uicM.«irdiloiis hours and to g^t/so very little out of.it. '|
Coney Jsland atmosphere-.persists up to and including ,\
bury Park. Spring" Lake has its'advantages, if you're sn:;.
ciently in the'money to make <i Summer of it, but when y
get to Seii Girt you're just knee deep in peanut politirim
Jiving off the taxpayers either as tin-hat soldiers or as in
plain leaches. Manasquan and Point Pleasant have an \.
to produce sornethingto justifytheir existence and bey.,!-1,
that it's too far to travel anyway.
And so I get a yen for Cape Cod where fakers an- a
a minimum anti where they paint their houses a brigi.-
snowy white every two or three years whether they h,v,
the funds for anything else or not. Right now, of cour-i,
would be cluttered with the tourist t rade who would i,,••.
get to'know^the quiet, lovely little places where beav
so simple that it absorbs you without letting yon ;.".;.,.
quite what has happened.
That beauty-Ms so utterly- eng rowing. At -Runs. ••'.. .,
Luodzon seems just a little nearer and the moon on •.;,•
'only at the top of the eaves. God wa* just a little nii>>- •
;Cape Cod,
Provincetown, a quaint little village which just nm •
succumb to the flattery of the Bohemians or the squa!••••1 of the Portugese, comes'at the end of long miles, ol an w. -
|4ieHevffr>V hrt^TWfs fuBion of green and blue and p-! i
where the sun has played games with the sea and '!..
•)shore. ScaTceiya mile'"WTderxetween t h e bay and'thp.viu*-
ineas of the Atlantic, it settles snugly in the white dum•-.
| alone.
| There are men with long hair and women in hidc-mi-
! smocks tramping the crooked little streets right at tlis
I minute, probably, whispering to each other of social i >: •
hciousness and motifs and subtleties of the arts, alt •;
; which are entirely beyond them. They sort of take ('••,,•
! place over dur ingthe summer months and are collect!' 'i
and individually a pain in the neck but it's only a curi-
fad and before many years they will probably find a not" .
• pot to parade. -• , '
At first, the natives didn't quite know what to m.
of them and it isn't strange. But being New England-
they ju.st took all the plain and fancy jfuts'in their, sir
and very successfully ignored them and the influences U
l.utternpted to 'exert, Province town once again 'comes ••
• the ''.illness of its simplicity arouird the'first of-Octobi-i1
Then is the time to visit Provincfctown, Tin- v
ptream curves almost into the bay and the water is ,c:
I and warm, even through the first of November. The br
beach is a dazzling white, the tides having thoreuy:
cleansed it after a hard summer. It's so warm lying t).v
and peace is all around.I Anxl it seems HO far,-BO very-far avvay..F.vt'ii the li;:iI house which reaches out of the rock-chopped water p. '•off the tip seems to be"'in'another land so distant' and - •strange, even, that it has men and machine's and worri'--'and fears! All of these elements are so alien to 1'roviiHv.(own at such a time. It is only for silence and peace anddreams. . . •
' Even the ocean is easier. The w.aVi's are low' and near-ly noiseless. Time, then, stands still and the glittering• light
;ihat paths the sea merely changes "from gold to silver. T"'morrow is*only for other lands and for other seas ami t")'other people, so remote and so unimportant, so unnecc. sary and so unwaated.'j That is l'ri|ivincetow.n in Octpberl
According to the law and precedent,warpath, vowing she has been the victim, Joseph Casale of Port Reading is entitledof a sly plot which cannot stand the lightof day. Members of thje Hoard, at leastthorie whoare willing' to discuss the mat-ter, laugh oh* the allegation with the claimthat they acted for the best interests of thesystem. But they shouldn't be so shy'; Gen-eralities ure never very convincing, parti-cularly when the weight of the availableevidence fayors Miss Wright,
If it was for the best of the service,why? „ - * 4
A Big Year INew Jersey's summer will be n,otable
for two things: its Japftft*e b«etl B andthe prospective candidate*for VicftiPfreiii-dent it produced. • <
, To date, three Jersey men-have been
than $10,000
Three| Yeart Agoto the place and a canvas of j administra-tion leaders indicates that hej will get it.Although a Democrat, Air. Casale has aprigr claim to the appointment and if theaffairs pf' the Township are to have anydirection and order, he should be named.
Police Chief James 'Walsh requestedsome time ago that he be given-three addi-tional men. There is a difference of opinionwhether the Town c»j)(, afford that expense,but jt is Jen,er«l | conceded that the fillingof il'Wew yacartej/- would not be inconsistentwith the particular school of economiesjt
which vetoad fch* Chief B request.Wo hope*|her» will wt be a Ipt of poli
tical jousting over the appointment if, and
6,500 CWe R«lief 'In Township In Week
John E. Broil en ridgof Emergency Relie
if directorin yWoftd-j
Piof Enwgsncy Relief in TWoftd-jbridge T'ownBhip, said thifi- mom-ing that 1,507 families were caredfor last week. This is equivalentto 6,430 persona. Of the'$7,000that was spent during the week,$6,010, wag used for food. • Ap-proximately 25% of the town-ship's population iniow being aiil-e.l by the relief administration.
Curb Etpemei PleaOf T.{(MWitf.Crovp
till r - ' ' \ * • ' ' i i
shirt Tuxpayt-'is Association, u resijIuUunurifing the Board of Kducation tocurb expenses «s much HK possiblewas adoptad. The otticers jg pp ,
When, it comes. We have enough troubleH t'ie.ljottl.'!l1tl> udviie thkir'body
\what stejis it hikes tu elftit u uuv-iii/,
afraid of some airplanes, too, although I think the ships them-selves are safe enough. It's reckless flyers who create the danger.And there are plenty of diseases that like everyone else, I don'twant to |et—especially tuberculosis ' lid cancer. I wouldn't wantto go blind ei%rM,WJ)o,wp,wld'.'.,M,.. f
• LETTER TO THE EDITOR -Editor,
Afigust VI, 11)35
Woodbridge Independent.My dear sir:
Has anything been achieved onthe project mentioned in youreditorial page some time ago forbeautifying Woodbridge? T h eidea was treated in a special ar-ticle under the "Sweetness ui|dLight" heading. Thus far I haveseen no further comment by you;oil the progretu of the plan, a factwhich I ruttrtit «nc«! it .would ap?pear to me that the desirability ofyour plan would b« immediatelyapparent to the citizens of thetownship.
Aside from the general* revivi-fyhig influence a planned pro-trram of construction and' re-modeling would have upun thy
whole commercial and industriallife of the municipality, I thinkthi' mflst imnortarit angle in yoursuggestion was t h a t modernapartments be built here eithermunicipally' or privately financed.It is a fact that the gewuity of de-sirable apartments' jn Wood-bridge proper within convenientdistance of the railroad station 16hampering the. ^gYowth of thetown. '
At a'matter of fact, a genuineflow of young cuuplea towardHakway is already apparent andthe town may be further strippedof its wage-earners unless HtepBure taken, leaving the relief'clients' in an even larger propor-
But there is realism; too.Mostly, the natives are fis.herf^lk and so are the in.
migrants. Thoy KO quietly about their homely little ta 1with a complete lack of awareness of the crazy competi-tive spirit that makes the lives of their brothers along llcoast something "on which the rip is always preenri'"!
.For.the- greatest part, the newcomers are Portuj.'1'don't bother anyone much but who haven't tried v. i •
ard to lose themselves in the heritage which sets Pi>ncetown apart. They keep their own customs too rigi>'nd their homes just don't belong.on the Province.ti> '
landscape. They're that kind t>f homes, contrasted v;he freshness and t[le;anliness of the others.
They work for their livelihood, surely, and so th •must be realism. For the women .whose menfolk have B",>f
down to the sea in1 ships arjd'who didn't come back, OIH- "'two pleasant little industries have been developed wliu1
pay them for their efforts all that th«y need.One energetic young lady established a place whi"
ho.oked rugs" are mended. The hooked rug.business has nlways been good on Qape Cod, ao good in fact that the be'specimens were brought up long ago. There was no slunuin the market and so someone got the notion of repairingthe rugs which were battered and wokn. .Rags are collectedand dyed to the required shades and the frayed strandare replaced by these native women.
It's gentile,*thi8 sort of work and the wages it pay.are enough for their meagre wants. And so they are quit'content. " . ;
tion to thethey we tou
population than But who wouldn't be, to be able \p 'have October II!
Provincetown?
INDEPENDENT
metsMntertmn
,,,. awnrdert Mrs, P. F.i) c. Zischkau, Mrs.
.111(i Mrs. T. A. Vin-i.,,,1^0 pnrty sponsored,,,..,• Auxiliary of the
•;'.„„, n n # Wrtw Clubv; c Dchcr was hos-
.,,,l"|iy Mrs. A. W.
.,,,. ,|, Keimera will be,'i,,,' August 23 meeting.,,,,,.„(. Friday were:
M,'. 'At-W. Scheldt,.1 Adiinia, Mrs. Fred
Mis. A. K. Randolph,ht.-itikin, Mrs. I). H,
M;irilm •!• Urban , Mrs.. ,;nit, Mrs. l'Ved Turn-• .,'.rt T. Hogim, Mrs. H,
: m , | Mis . .1. B. Zim-
:it'li"rnooti bridpe will.>,! with Mrs, Irving
riPIfl,, Applegate Honored±ntrenth Birthday
, ,,( ,IIH- sixteenth birth-,|:iui,phter Vivian, Mr.
Mother, DaughterFRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1985 PAGE FIVft
r FOXConiimitd from page out ' •-- •are not luffrtient to UMU VT • P * * " " * " o r
Catei have been promptly reported to the Board of HealthMr«. Albert Anderson Andt*1"1 i l0 'a t i<>n ln<J quarantine hat been promptly and effectively been
Daughter Ruth Of Fords "••'>""«n«d.Honored At PlJrty i v "P"''«ly>iivit » complication »nd, without enact knowledge avail-
_ able, it it believed that a great majority of periom infected do nokA double birthday party, oh-i»«fer from paralytit at all. Paralyiit. when it doat occur it utuklly
Die birthday of Mis. Al- •ten t w o or three dayt after firtt lymptom. of illnett.ificrson ami of her dauith-1 ••-
St. Stephen's SceneOf Wanhjch Nuptials
Mr*. Allen EntertainsCraniord, Nashville Guests
, Mr?. M. E. 0. Allen of Tisdale^MWBanwhas «a W-gue»ta this Week
, , , _ . , . , , , . I.Mr. I M lfW"rV*1j. P. Luck, Mr.Hop«lawn Girl M«rne» Johrw*,,,! Mrs. John I.uck. MrslBernice
Prybylowski In Pret ty "Ceremony Sunday
Ron home, William Striot, I;'onl's"'<"l'*ctly f r o m o n e • f f e c t e < l h u m » n individual to another through invon Friday. Thp fciitureg'oi.^hi|™«.djj»te contact involving thi* Iramfer of the virut from the firtt in.celebration were curds, singing (ected perion to the natal pattagei of th*.econd A MtWiery of Pub-anil frames. | ) i c S ( ; h o o l t e p o r , , jnojjcale that a large number of children with polio-were Mrs. Uu"s* P r t e r U ^ M n | m ' e l l l U ' h ° W e d p l " h o l o | r i c C ° n d i l i < > 1 1 > ° n * " n ° > e " * *"'[ "'^Dennis T, Ityan, Mrs Lund' Mrs io ln* r <*l«e»«ed and hypertrophied tontilt and adenoidt or both, whereatArthur l.iml', Mrs. William Mun-|on!y « »«naH percentage of caiei in children with normal, healthyroe. Mi's. John tUwkir^lfcsJatf.l.MM.aiid tbroat were found to be affected with the diteate.Li"' "ailflenM';s« tMfford Smith,; "The few m i l d c a , e , of infantile P»r*ly4i that h'ave a«.a*red if\p ^ ^ Z ^ J Z , W-^b-^ "cently .re no, tufficient to c.u.e any u n e , ^ orMrs. Walter Rively, Miss .E l l en l
n l a r m - Ca.e. have been promptly reported to the Board ot neaitnThomson, Miss Mnrjoritf Hedges,>nd iiolation and quarantine hat been promptly and effectively beenMiss Dorothy Anderson, Mr. anil leitablithed." • •Mrs. Andrew Anderson, Miss Con-]
Miss Phyllis Wantueh, daugh-ter "f Mr. and Mrs. LawrenceWantuch. May Street. Hopelawn, j(1
4became the liride Sunday of Ste-phen Pryhylowslil, s()n of Mr., andMrs. John Prybylowski, NawBrunswick AvcnuA.'Xhft- ceremony
Thick and son, •fftbprt, flf Nash-ville. Term., and Mrs. N. S. Goi-tre of Oranfe^l.
The guests were cntertaine 1yesterday 8t a beach party nndlambake fit Lonif Branch, by Mrs.
Allen's children, John B. Allen andMrs. Edward Konton of RedBank; Mrs. John Yenmnns ofRurnaon, and thp Misses Bessie
it> Anderson, Mrs. K* Haberkorn.Alto Preient/ , . . . _ .•..
Mrs .Ne l s Moid, Mra. A. I ^ a y , i | ^ M u n i c ' P ' 1 B u l l d l I > * 'N o n l . M i s s MarV Novak,|•;—
Sjnce Dr. Fox left yelterday for a holiday, queatiom not referredto family phyiicia'ni ihould be directed to Health Officer Bailey at
was performed in St. Stephen'sChurch bv the pastor
The bride wfls gowned in whitesatin, fashioned on princes* lines,and wore » tulle veil. She carrieda bouquet iif calla lilies. Thp maidof honor. Miss Josephine Miller of"WftTltPh Avpntie wW It (Iress ofpale blue lace and n hat to match.She carried pink 'tea roses.
Joseph Sutch of New Bruns-wick Avenue was the bride-
best man. After the cere-d
and Rena Allen of town.
Mr. and "Mrs. Albert Anderson,,,Miss Lois Anderson, Miss Ruth!
William A|i|i1e|rhte of | Anderson, Donald Anderson, Al-\\i 'iiut' wore hosts a l a j b e r t 'Anderson; Jr. , Mr. and Mrs.iilay niifht. Dancing jKiirl Anderson, Raritari Manor ;
9,000 SHARE PROGRAMSOF RECREATION PLAN
of the evening.list included: Misse.-iVIIT, Sophia Handel,Lillian Linn and Vi-
itc. Messrs. Charlesm I.effler, Jr., Ed-n, Bernard KeatiiiKi
, Anthony Barcclo-blar, Mr.nnt} -Mr*,-s and Mr. and Mrs.
Boy Scout Troo0 '^Sessions In Sept.
. meetings of the local• |i»y Scouts will be re->,i Lubor Day.
, ,.i-k. the Panther Patrol': In the scouts at an OUt-
iintr near the Scout Cu-i,sts were sta/cil in In-! .l,'i|i:uiese wrestling andlimit was staged, between
Kyc" Wand of the U'olf.1 "Kichtint;" '-it?, of thewith the- latter winningal K. 0 . in the third
lust few weeks the1 was host at a wa-
|i:irty; the Si lver Kox Pu-i -Avimtnintr party in theI'nol and the \Vtilf
. ir imrty. •
Mrs. t\ Bergren, Mrs. Phyllis Ty- Snecialrell,. Edward Ryder, Perth Am-1 F
hoy; Mrs'. Munroc, James Munroe,Bound Brook.
OBITUARIES
Events Atfract1,177 In AVIeek,
Says LimoliMine thousand individuals par-
ticipated, in programs sponsored[by the Reer*at»n Division test
John J. Trainor, 111 I week, Thomas Limoli, townshipFuneral services were held Mon-i ( l i vec to r ' announced today. The
day at the CJreiner Funeral Homcl t o t a l o f ! ) '0 7 4 calculated on all theforJrJui J. TiRinor III four- i d<ft»«rtment'B activities infctodes
'old son of Mr. and Mrs. .Iorfn!mftnv duplications, but Limoli saidJ. Trainor, 330 Muin Street, |hfl regarded the report as demon-Ridgefield Park. The child died strntinir the worth of the workfrom a ruptured appendix in the s P e e i a l e v e n t s - including blockHasbrouck Heights Hospital. lll"lcl'R' track-fim*pi«daU..
FollowiriK services' in WV»od-:I)ot sh()WS an<1 b B n ( l concert-;,bridge, blessings were said in St counted for 1,177 attendances,Cecelia's Church, Iselin, hy the;11'111011 n s spectators or partici-Ilev. W. J. Brennan, | o n K a friend iP.antii. h e "?'«!• The total regmtra-of the family., In addition U, his parent^,ch'iTiI is survived"by a sister, MJ«,ne. , ' ,
.Kurial was in St. GertrudeCemetery.
Mrs. Catherine Blando
tiun for nil activities in the town-tne|shi|> iH 3407. During the weeknry';t,!>!)5 pni'tlclpattts under 16 &m
,1,48-1 over that a);e were reported.SpirtiitTiM •jiumbercrt 2,91«.
\V<imlhrid(tc PlayRvound, de-spite iui high registration, ratecwell down on the list. Its total of
ather Langan DelaysPlans For Big Bequest
Pending actual receipt ofthe $10,000 left him this weekby a man whose life he saved,25 years ago, the Rev. F. X.Langan of St. James' Churchhas made no plans for thedisposition of the bequest, hissister said yesterday, but it
..wRB.MHablyru5ipred_the pas-tor planned to iisera sizeabTeshare of the windfall for hiswork in the parish.
In l O l o T a t h e r Langan 'was fishing off Long Branchwhen he rescued GeorgeBlake, Sr., and his son froma burning boat. A corres-pondence and friendshipgrew from that with the an-nouncement by a Chicagolawyer of the bequest thisweelf as a result.
Koo b e t man. After the ceremony, a wedding reception washeld nt the bride's home withguests present from Woodbrirbjft1,Fords, New York, Perth Ampoy
il McAdoo, Pennsylvania,
Astrophycists To Hear'H. £, Fullmer Tonight
2 Donees, Conctrt listedThree ' public amusements are
scheduled for next week liy theRecreation Division, Tuesday ".block dnnce will be held nt theMonument in Fords, Thursday aband concert will In- given nt Se-waren neiir the wluwl aiitl Fridaya block dance w- listed for SchoolStreet in Woodhridgi*. All beginlit ft P M
Limoli Wants PianoPublic request for the donation
of 'a piano, no matter how old,to the Recreation Division w umade today by Thomas Limoli,township director of the move-ment. He nsked that the donortelephone him at S-120B, A truckwill he *ent for the piano.
Committee ChairmenNamed For (amiva lHugh W. Quigley To Be In
Charge Of ArrangementsFor St. James Fete
TRe following committee cKair-rmcn have, been named for the'carnival.to,be held by St. Jnmes' jcombined societies September 2fi,'27, 28, on the school grounds.
Hugh W. Quiutey, general*Chairmqn; Owen. S. Hunigan, softdrinks and refreshments; E. Coley,
anrf JosepK Doolan, hot dogl Holy Name booth, blan
TRADE-IN YOUROLD FUR COAT
ON ANEW1935-1936
. , , , PUIIKI; HUiy HOIIIC iium.ii, uinn-
The New Jersey Astrophysical kets; RoSftry booth, jrrocerieT!, Mrs.Society will hold it« regular E V a r d Coley, Jr., chairman;monthly meeting toniRht at 8 .p. S o d a l i t y b o 0 t n i ^Bn( ly an , i toys,Y.V a i t h % L
P e r t h A , m b o y m u Miss Ethel Campion, chairman;libraVy. The speaker will be Cathojic Daughters, novelty booth,Harmafi E. Fullmer of the Mid- . . » . ' . ._JISX_Vocatipnal School whojwilladdress the (?roup on the subject,"The Planets."
The Society each month holdsa meeting open to the public at'wflfcV time 'rfne'"6f "the members
a t h l D a g h t e , n e y b ,Mrs. Chris'Martin, chairman, Mrs.
It'll Steam Pipes Laid\Hi«h School Auditorium
r experienced during the, cars with lewkn in steamii-r the tilth school auili-I'lincretc floor will be
h (riot Clerk Roy K. An-• lieveil tixlay, as soon as1'iiinplete laying of » newmi'" from Jour r»diutor*.11 iicro-i.« the buck uf theII to the boiler. Minor
.iivi' been needed twiceihe last two years as CQr-devidupeii in the tl-yenr-
ie.s Inn the new scheme will'he pipes under iron coversIt' for inspection withoutrsciit necessity of rippingcuiR'l'i'tc flouring.jnh, Mr. Anderson said.
• be <>Si' tly estimated but:,nl I'd.-a more than $;SIH>.
ARMMARKET224-26 Smith St.
PERTH AMBOY
Mrs. Catherine Blandir, aged ",,'m attendances^folbwed reportsof Poplar Street, Koids, w ^ » / >;1»2 «t
r,For,dB-. l&* **art
tburied Monday afternoon in the IKe-»<l'nK. i»r,3 at Avenel, 824 atH l T i i ! " ^ 1 1 , 8 1 0 m .Iselin. and 681
"oodbridge.B | o e k Dance Dr.w. SOO
T h c w o s t widely-shared indi-ilual event of the week was a
dance on School Street in
Holy Trinity Cemetery.services were under the direction l'of A. F. Greiner.
Mrs. Blando is survived hy her .turetiimil, Joseph, and three soiis,:J''| ''Frank, Anthony and Stephen, all! ,'.."*"•of Fords, and by. threed -senirfffwenrhelrt t rnnrthe^"
^ tw h , c , r l 3 0 °
hume anil in the Holy Trinity Slo-I1"'1.vak Church, where a solemn highjmuss of requiem was celebrated.
In addition to the routine work,Limoli said -10 youngsters inAvtnel had been taught to swim
^ H h l b Fd!'"g
P"ol FredRoie R«ci ! y P yA victim of sleeping sickness. 11!ralls(1 ' t h a t 5 l ) f r e e n10* ie t i c k e . t R
i H H d !1"1'1 been given to children inpg 1 ' .
Miss Hose Hacz, 'aged Hi, died!1"1'1 been given to children inKridny at the Perth Amboy Gen-!"101''1* !t"cl l ^ a t tickets for freeeralliospital. She was the daugh-iWr of Mr. «»4 .Mr*. K
01'1* !t"cl ^ t
11"1 a n i 1 c a k e w e r e a l s o ( l l s t n -
:!»•• Kultoti StreetFuneral services were held j
Tuesday rnorninjj at nine o'clock]from thi' house am] nt !l:.'(ll fromthe Mt. 4- atrm'L Church. Burialwas in St. .lanii's''Ceiiietci'}1.'
Miss Kiu-z is survived hy her:pari-nt.s and two sistiis, Helen and|' lia. • '
' l ie added that the clflSMS In-lay modelling and soap aculptu.ru
coirthu'ted by Luip Cannilla wbrei-ii|)iilly paining popularity?
DEMOCRATSAndrew Janegi ' , j
A n d i v w .laiuigi,' f>? years old, ofiKiiiir ( lenr^e's Road, died lastT I I U M L I Y at the Perth Ambov(ii'iM'ial I l i»pitul . l ie is suryivi'dby his wift- W i a . \vlin.li\'es in Ku-l'.ope; two sislers, .Mrs. Andrewiiglolf, .uf Altnoiui, .I'll., Ulld JIl'S.
.Inlm Tol l , , of KHgtevill... Conn
l'uiu-ral services were held Ni \ -unlay a .enio.A, a ! «, cl<jj-k at fc.A r i h i . s r - u n e r a I ome. Kuv. An-thony halx. ol Perth Am .«yy oil.-i-iated. Interntent was in Rose-lull Cemetery, Linden. ,
(Continued from page 1)tiny' Weaver of Woodbridgemay get the county organism-tiorr's support for shcritf, al-'tliofigh K. Henlman Harding ofNew Brunswick has the edgeMr. Turk's selection by' the
party machine was a foregone con-•lusion ;iml ho yhviously and!iimpltit»ly dominatedxlic sfiaai^nlast nijrht held at the Maple TreeFarm. His luime was placed iniHimination by Peter Jandrisvits of.-Vvenel and was received withgreat bursts of enthusiasm.
Campbell Stampede*; Peter W. Cleis of Port Reading
1.126 EMPLOYABLES." tUGIBLElNWPA
ERA Bureau Finishes Task0i Certifying Clients
For Federal JobsEligibility of 1,126 employable
haads of families for jobs uniltrthe Works Progress, Administra-tion has been certificated, Miss C.C. Clausing of the Woodbridge-Carteret relief bureau announcedthia morning.
Tnis Total*"inHu9'es" nTI. employ-ables who received ERA assist-ance in May and the task of cer-tifying additions to relief rolls inJune is expected to be finished notlater than tomorrow, she said.
Completion of the job, onerousin view of the speed demandedand the detailed official papers re-quired under the WPA rules, ends
emergency relief administraon's connection with the nework-giving scheme, Miss Claus'-ig said. As soon as jobs underhe WPA are assigned, recipientsnil their families here will beopped from the rolls. The ulti-
late uini is to leave as beneficiar-s of direct relief only the'non-
delivers a popular talk on some as-pect of the heavens. These infor-mal talks are comprehensible tothose uninitiated in the study ofthe stars, as every effort is rAadeto present the complexity of thematerial in an easily understoodmatter.
Anyone 'interested in astronomyis invited to attend.
Vngel Sodality, grab bag; AltarBoys, fish pond.
The Rosary Society will nervesupper the last night. Mi's,
Anna Walsh is chairman and Mrs.oseph MaljCTi co-chairman.
There will be free dancingvery night.
I V\ I SAVE YOU MONEY
ON
MEATSRIB C
IAMBCHOPS
Mr,. Arma'S. W.ttendorf Iwill oppose Mr. Turk in the pri-Mrs Anna S. Wattemlorf ofmaiy. His name was placudbe-
Chicugo. (il) years old, died Sun-!fore the convention, composed ofday at the home of her sister, Mrs. |county committecnien and comEd'ward Mctiger, of West Hillimitteewomen from the entire ward
h r si by William ^ " m ! ) b c l l f ° l n l « r ' y ag , e t Hilli
Road, Coloniu. Besides her sis- by William ^ ! V . . y mter, she is survived by a daughter, !l>emoiTatiu member of the TownJosephine. . The body was shipped'ship Committee. • Mr. Umpbel.to-Boaton Moii.hw •ftwnuon. Fftn.'.haa .heen..ot odds with the oigan-eral services we'reday morning.
held Wednes-iination for some lime and hiSponsorship of Mr. Geishas bee
-, atlticipateil over u long period.Mr Aqui|a, at the present time
Board May Vote Tonight 1S r<x*n\vd as
On final Lhoice ut Loach though. the slate,
the logicalMayoralty.
St. James Altar SocietyPlans Card Party Aug. 30
The Altar Society of St. Jairtes'Church will hold a benefit publiccard party Friday evening. August30, at 8:30 o'clock.
Mrs. ' Andrew Ruskn, generalchairman, is being assisted by thefollowing committee: Mrs. JohnPOWBTS, Jr., Mrs. Joseph Mtiher,Mrs. Thomas Leal.y, Mrs. EdwardColey, Jr., Mrs. William Golden,Mrs. J, J. Dunne, Mrs. NathanPatten,"Mrs. Ffflrtk Mays, MVs:Hugo Geis, Mrs. Milo Jardot, MrsJoseph McLaughlin. Mrs, AllanSnyderj Mrs. Michael Trainer, Mrs,James Somers, Mrs. Denis RyanMrs. Walter Gray, Mrs. John Sul-livan, Mrs. Michael De Joy, Mrs.John Zilai, Mrs. Louis Baumlih,Mrs. Chris Mhrtin, Mrs. EdwardEinhom, Mrs^ Stephen Guerin,
afcCREATION
A liberal, allowance awaiU youher* for that old fur coat towardtUie purchme of a new one. Andthen thrre'i a bif «avinj awaitingyou, alio. Space doein't allow utto list all the value* . . . . you'll
-ha\XtA<t_£O!n«. in and tee the lelec-tion. Theie are furi you havedreamed of . . . . and now they arepriced la make the dream cometrue!
CHUCK TABOR CLICKSAT THE SPEEDWAY
Overflow Crowd Thrills ToFast Auto Race
Times Hire
, pM)'H. August Baumftnn, Mrs,Albertson, Mrs. Martin Kath andMrs. J. Barron Levi.
PUNCHERContinued from van' on*
flung both his car and his firstsmployable and permanent socialiscs; j rather haphazardly around his own
All ERA work has already been j 1 ) r o p e l . t v . H e p a i ( 1 $5f l f o r t h a ttopped. . !
CCC Boyi Off Tut.dayMiss Clausing added that th
An overflow crowd which jam-med the grandstands and packedthe infield watched Chuck Taborwin the feature 20-mile race atthe '"Speedway last night inlfl:44."4. Doc Mackenzie,-beard-ed brilliant, led until the Ifith lapand seemed well on the way to hisfourth consecutive triumph. Buthia clutch let go then and he wasout, just, as Bob Sail had been.eliminated..an. the. 8th lap byburnt bearing.
Johnny Duncan was second inthe feature, Eddie Staneck, third;Harry Angeloni, fourth; JohnnyUlesky, fifth, and Bill Mortis'sey,
ixth. All of the last three areell known Garden States'acesere who have graduated to theA class.
Sail Ride. In 276Sail's tlmeof 27.fl was the best
ualifying performance. Tabor'sriuniph moved him from tenth toeventh in the Kasteni chumpion-liips.
The heat winners were Mncken-le, Duncan, Angeloni and Verne)renduff. The first heat'was theiistest, Mackenzie licking Sail and'aborin 4::!1.2.
day's fun,1 but when his wife thisweek swore to an assault and bat-
list group of recruits for the CCC ; tery warrant after a prolongedukeii from relief rolls will leaveor ciinip on I uesday.h
j (ii. t.Us.sinn a|)Ol,t their| ' daughter's
yg ^ ^ ^ . n . the Re-0 go, she said, since other eliRi- icordcr riect<h?dft-firwwouldii t do1 from relief are either now in j much good.
h l d b th
or ciinip on I uesday. No more | . .han live young .mun are ujuectdl ! n l - h l t o ^
h id i th l i i i d ri
'amp or have already been the.Some possibility exists, she add-
Docile With Officer*Doth Mr. nnd Mrs. Ontkocs had
111hi:-
( D M . n d O t o c s hathat recruits will later be ac-: discussed their problem with thi
•lipteit from families not on re- j judge in chambers,., but the husief. | band allegedly drunk, liter on in
sisted on tlrastic pugilistic measures. He surprised Sevgeant BeParsons and Officer Tom Somerswho served the warrant by coming along docilely when so in
PWA(Continued from F a n 1)
first announced, the local sharewns fixed at little less than :ithousand dollars. The reason for
Ridgely AvenueTheodore Surick, aged 7,
Arbor Street, Sewaren, andsister, Rose Surick, aged (j.
Although all of the cases weresaid to be "mild." and the pa-tients doing "as well as couhtTbexpected," Mayor Greiner urgethat all parents follow closely theadvice of Dr. S. W. Fox, printsin the adjoining columns. Dr.Fox specifically requested that thefamily physician be notified im-mediately any strange symptomswere evident:-
"We \yill stamp out this threat-ened epidemic at its inception,"Mayor Greine'r asserted, "if ittakes every facility at our dis-
„ .-- -- . posal. We all?know the horrorscalled upon to expend far in ex-' ajlugedly flipped a loaded battle of this disfea.se and the ease.withccs* of original estimates nnd I of soda water at his wife's sistc;- | which it is communicated. It be-there- is no provision for these and his wife swore to a drunk andcosts in'the current budget: Al- > disorderly complaint. Patrolmanready, approximately $2/100 has] Allen McDonnell said when hebeen voted to-match the contrihii-j served the WW
structed.A similar ease—save that a sis
te'r-in-law played the role of tlthe boost has not been explained, daughter—resulted in a siniila
Raid. Muit Stop sentence of 30 days for JohBut that doesn't make it any | Grab, 43-year-old prppnetor of
easier for the local treasury. Al- ,road stand on St. George Avenuready the Committee has been 1 After a prolonged argument h
Lapin -Swagger Styles
Muskrat -Silver and Nfctufetl
Hudson Seal$139
ASK ABOUT OUR LAY-AWAY PLANYou may purchase any coat in thit lale for a small
down and convenient wfrekly or monthly payment*,
We lay-away the coat in itorage free of charge in the
meantime.
PARALYSISContinued from page one ,..
erth Amboy General Hospital.They are:
A. GREENHOUSEPERTH AMBOY
195 SMITH ST., cor. McClellan Tel. P. A. 4-1346
[ ( U ' " a ! r M ^ A l l " i l a l n i i y . ht'a{1 t f i r ^ ^ i l ! . ' !
Not Mutton
nder
SIRLOIN
STEAK
w i l l a l m o s t d e l i n i U ' l y b e m a d e ... ••-• ; , ' , . , , , ' , i m m e d i a t e p l a n s
K , ^ r n i a « « K l 7 w"is ll^t'Slato L iselln man for th,li,ved luday. Members of tlli';|il«{£ , , u n c q u i v o l . a l .
ff o f ' ^ & t r a ; ' ZVL^to thai he .approved, ofwill scaiieus
st ng ppcandidacies of Messrs. Sat-
S l h
CHUCKPOT
ROASTg
SPRING
UMB
ttle upnii a choice at ii the canbefore Monday, probably .tU'r and Fletcher. Mr. Sattler has
iniglit. ' ' ',-given no indication whether heTlic eligible quartet, it is be-] would consider being a candidate
i'Vi'd, are: Nick i'risco mid Jack anil the views of the organizationiddy uf Rutgers, Karl lluagliind-in ' i———
lilooinlield uiul ThoniiiIW.
T
thisilirection alsojire unknown.•BMU'i":A meeting will be heldncxt week,
however, ut which time the rn'st••• • will be definitely se-
C. D. A.(PLANS OUTING'cedes, N o . "li'.l, ( l l l l i -
1 it- Duug-htera of America, fillold a bus ride to Anbury nirkluu'sday evening, August 22.
| Ward mani letted.| In addition to Mr. Sattler, the
-inuniu of William Finn also hasbeen mentioned nroininently.
Gadek FreeholdeJ ChoiceMr, Coyne was deygnated last
n t , Grabi
v o t e d t o m a t c h t h e ion t r ih i i e e d , w a r u , r annaMnm a d e by the E R A for the ced to his sk fe f - i n - l aw that , ' h e
g Mr, Coyne a g{eservationa may be made by! ,,j^ht by John .1. Raljcrty, actingailing Woodbridgu 8-1172 before i l l s ehuirman of a meelliiig of_coun-Vugust 20. ly
b
Moviet-lnlselin Again!Uvnamed "The Embassy," th'i
iiotion picture theatre oi* OukTree Koad in Iselin will reopen on. riday, August 30, ut 6:45 o'clock,Albert Ktilin announced tpday. Hesaid the house will lie run ^on a
olicy ot coiitiiiu\)us showinguvei-y nig'ht of two features,comedy, cartoon and newsrcel ntuw prices.
LOCAL and LONG DISTANCE
MOVINGCLOSED PADDED VAN
... leaders, to represent Wood-, bridge on a five-man committee
I | which • will select the .^organiza-tion's county slate. The motionfor the appointment of this group
us made by Attorney Generaluvid T, WilenU, tteld njarahal of
tie Middlesex Democrats, and theelection of Mr, Coyne was r e r 'ardcil as direct recognition of hisibsition us Township leader.
Although Mr. Weaver is still ahrievnlty possibility, the best:ope secmii to givo Mr. Hardingif New Brunswick the edge. An-
.on Gadek of Perth Amboy -willundoubtedly receive the backingof the Wilentz machine for Free-holder and this would require the
for sheriff to go to a res-
Work Guaranteed —Price R»l9nib)n
WALTER SZELC658 We»t Side Ave.
PERTH AMBAY, N. J.Pkpo* P. A. 4-3238
stadium, but where it will conicfrom is1 pretty much of n prob-lem, The livst withdrawals have,been charged against the roadfund—or what is left of it—butthis source cannot be tapped in-let'initety. Too many taxpayersare demanding oil for the-, roadsto permit that.
Operation of, the Federal pro-gram in Woodbridge has neverbeen anything but confusion andmore confusion. The stadium pro-ject has reached a point now'where it cannot be possibly drop-ped or curtailed and apparentlyall the town can do is to over-expend sonic budget item andcome uu with the *)4,000. Theonly other alternative is to refuseit, loose the WPA ijrant and leavethe stadium in midtair.
Mayor Greiner will discuss withother members of the Committeetonight his plan to get the WPA.funds for a sewerage system inthose portions of the Town notthus served. The property-own-ers benefitting under the schemecould then be assessed to pay theelatively unimportant Township'share of the cost and th'e ^um couldie included in the next budget.
bth the argumentS was released.
would finishand her when
Anohter 30-dSy term for drunk-enness was meted out to EgnotWanashkivsky, 51, of RemscnAvenue, AveneL
—Miss Pauline Tlcberlvin ofCii'i'un Street is visiting relativesin New York City for two weeks.
hooves every resident of, theTownship- to foJlow strictly theadvice of health authorities andtheir family physician, to the endhev a l y p y a n o dthat the health if all our peoplebe safeguarded."
PROFESSOR ALLEN VISITORProfessor Rena Allen Is spend
ing the montli of August at herhome in Tisdale Place. Miss Allen,has beon Dean of Women at thUniversity of Delaware aunimurschool. k
support for sheriff to go to a resident of another section of thecounty.
CAR BURNSWoodbridge Fire Company No
Onu .was called this week to ex-tinguish flames which badly dam-aged a car. owned by Spencer V.Kurd uf Newark on Amboy Avenun near the Cutter cluybunkaThe cause'of the blaze was no1
deti!i;wined.
New Woodbridge PharmacyWill Open Doors Tomort-ow
Completely equipped, the newand modern Woodbridge Pharma-cy at the Rahway Avenue andGreen Street site formerly operat-ed by Edward Hardiman, willopen tomorrow. Free ice crea,m,candy and cigars will be givenaway by the new management,which promises quick and com-petent service not only in tillingprescriptions but in all branchesof the modem • drug-Btere busi-
~-Dr. and Mrs. Samuel-W. Foxof Fords are leaving today tospend ten day* »t the soasbore.
TRADE-IN YOUR OLD STOVE FOR A NEW ONEWe carry a complete line of GLEN WOOD ?oal
and'gas range combinations and other nationallyknown makes. :
FREE! THEATRETICKETS FREE
TO THE
S T R A N DPERTH AMBOY
WILL BE THE 10 LUCKY PEOPLETHIS, WEEK?
Read carefully the question! below. Then find thp alisweri
in the ditplay ads appearing in this inue of the INDEPENDENT.
By reading every ad carefully you'll tlnd the amwer to every
question. After you find the correct anjwers phone them im-
mediately to the INDEPENDENT office. [
TO THE FIRST TEN PEOPLE PHONING THE CORRECT
ANSWERS, THE INDEPENDENT WILL MAIL ONE TICKET
TO THE STRAND THEATRE GOOD FOR ONE SHOWING OF
FRUIT JARS, 1 qt doi. 79c2-qt. «1J»
Copper Clothes BOILER, large:. '. *2.S9
Z,Burner OIL STOVES $3.503-Burner, on leg« $7.50
Round DISH PAN. H qt. IvoryEnamel
f ank Heater., Pot Stove., heatfrom 30 to 40 gal. boiler $4.29With brick lining $S-29
PortableCurtain
HOWERS with$3.49
SHOWER HEAD :- 39c
Summer Gra.. RUGS 3n68x10, $2.69. . All Colon
59c
Galvaniied
meih .
Screen WIRE, 14iq. ft. 3'
Bronie Screen WIRE, 16 mathiq. ft. 8
49c
TEA KETTLES, 6 qt. ,79c
LbrettaYOUNG
{'Charles.BQiYER
"SHANGHAI"WITH
BAKING PANS, Ivory Enamel,14 in » 29ci 16 in 39c
4 Qt. SAUCE POTS, Ivory orWhit. Enamel : 49c
3-pc. Refrigerator PAN SETS,White Enamel , let $1.39
3-pc. PUDDING SET ,.. 69c
Slightly Hied Con.ole "GASRANGES; white or gray Ena-mel , , $9.00
STATE HARDWARE, PAINT385 State St.' P. A. 4-1542
STOVE CO.PERTHAMBOY
WARNER OLAND I'AUSON SK1PWORTH
THE QUESTIONS:
What ttore ii offering free candy, ice cream and cigan for th*irGrand Opening tomorrow? ) >
Where can you buy • HucUpn Sealikin Coat for $139?
Where it the Inn Calieute located?
Smoked H»rat tell (or 27c par pound at what market?
What popular car islli for $589?
Stewing Lamb can be bought for Us p«jr pound i t what market?
Where can you buy a radio for $5?
What it Shirley Templa'i
US
iii
ivl
rKRII«A\. AIUU5T 16. W *
__—-—- . — MAE WEST GOES TO"Accept Modern Ideas! Urges TOWN AT THE
M o t h e r o f " C u r l e y T o p " S t a r l e t CRESCENT
At The Cttsctni STRAND STAR
lion Opens On Wednesday In Perth Amboy
Fl iubr th B«rffi>er, *t*r ofE»caf>r Mt N*Ter" coming
to the Strand TT»*«tr*, it n'tiuit m f re i t *ctre«—»he'» arrefct ,#lpiwom»B. For »l.r
*»o!d Leon Qaartfrrmaih*. whohad announced hit determi-nation ftf T#r lo enter pic-tur.». (he idel fff pUyiitf hi*on (final *t*fe role in theMargaret Kennedy play inthe film renion, which u re-IriLif-d throufh United Art-Utt. Quartermaine i$ teen atSit- I Tor McLean. He M * I
hare permided him-
4 Joe E. Brown PlaysDizzy Baseballer
Alibi Ike' Begins Its RanAt The Strand
Tonight" . > : ?•• V . - ' - '•••:- \ \ ; v r < "
- • • . \ ••••. ] • • : • - > • . . . . . h
~ « ; i t ' - i -* «»•" W— !.;i-*-UJiiU
•. : • • • -,< h : . ;•. : i " f : ' a n < - i s
I?" }" "' r i ^ ^ ' w l ^ ' ^ SHIRLEY TEMPLE U revealed as jhe really is in her»unny picture LuHy Top. Americas darling sing*
a><r o fev, ('•rr.traiiti*'' T and dancps in this happy, tuneful treat.
••» • '<!•> wifJcnT
r: ar.fi warm arTe •l l .CavanaeL. i
tr^-hir.an, as the r.:-?. But Cavn-
hi' feeling?"«. Aires,
hor?e« to:••- racef a5 an - .
• i.ruinues her carri".vithout tffett. ThtD
: :h»t she miisi,!'.vt, a*rj witti
i--'.nf«, marrien an irr.--• •••! y.runjf socialite. Mnr<
iv.-.-.:(-y. in fnler to ?et inM
M»e W E I I I I thr s i r ' w ' 1 °
<•» *nd doc*' Coin' To Tcvn" uhicK open!at Lb« Cr*tWrr_ntxt Wedncl-
Uncanny Mystery KeyTo'Mark Of The Vampire'
T'r.oar.r.y my?'.ery. v.-ei: •] 'iuft-.ri<- : ' vampire? fijf'JriM.' :'i Mr>0'i-V!:•:ritr thrill*, diri a -tritr.irt ro-
- a:.cv toi'.1 aeain.it a nackpirjr.'il : -:::i*ter shaHow« are she hi?h-..i.-ht-- of "Mark '•: the Vanipiv..-."''!e:-'i-'ioi'i',vyn-Mayer'- V.V.v oe-•"".:•• •e-ttrror drama ominir to
Thi- -\:iiy wa- «"ri;u-r. i'yn"'- F;.i r I.ardner wlfic JT"';
,:•:(.-'.v • asehal! [>lay<-r? bt-ttey
WOODBRIDGE I N D E P E N D E N r
'SCANDALS OF 193?HITS NEW PEAK
AT CRESCENT.George White's Spectacu-
lar Film Loaded WithAce Actors
b Beri^nrr ft* irfn"Eicap* Me Nfver openingthe Strand Theatre ntxt Tueday f o r * tkrrr ci«y
havt .<.kr.'.e.'j .5r'.r?, rr,j- , .,„,i r . . •"•:• ' • ;• S * . : r ! i r y a ' ' i h ^ r V * ' J ' ' " ' . ! ' • •'•' ' ; ' " •''•"•' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' " ' '
T-.A Planned Diet
a U ' v . I t - ,k
C t r s f j ; f ' . - r V
ilifa:-.- H t ' scwi . ' . ' , : . sr.'iJuly ;...ar.r.(.-'i
if- i r !.n<: can.- of ••'j ' l :e 'i KIM (ftr.'.'.'.'i] ' | i ;
afri-i a «tri<-- '>.' '-"•''
f.';flV(; ' • 1 ' J S « 1 . V
.an I, 1 have foil•-v.-i-.t h i - stiff :ir,!.- •>. 'i.<- l'-!'."i Ai. ' l heli tvir :.•i (:>-i. I -ay It Ua* H - q u i r c i •:•
: "(.'.mi- i- :.'ii e x p e n s i v e .•!••: y • , ' i i ! . fiiid tro(>'l•n r - w h o '.vi)! t h f t oi.. i . i j - t i ' i - a n d p l a n d i t t -
In tht- l a i j ^ t r Citie.- t h e n -•» y o u m a y go t o if you> '<) spare the- few extra
'Village Tale' BasedOn Utah Town
Phil Strong's Story, FilmedBy RKO, Deals With
Public Opinion"Viilain; Ta le . " . KKO-Ku' l i ' i ' ' - '
prfj'l j ' - ' ior . ijf Phil Stroni; ' ' - re-
cen t l i t e racy cfT'.i!, pn-,-i-rit.~ a
trijsr ••"(•tioii of average finirnui]-ity life in Aineiii'a that i n'-h in 'theme.
The ft'ji-y ' leak with ;i !y|.icalsmall village in I.'tah ari'l with th'1 .people who live there, from triesuccevful farmer to the worth •less Vjunifer ir. the country store.I t sho»'- how the lives of peoplea r t interwoven in Huch a cornmun- \'iity. ' i '
Th>> '-entral theme of the story ;deal.-, v.'ith public opinion, that»[iin«ji(ii>i, l.6»rUej!t. soulitv.,, huthypei-ei.sitive mass that i- ..both |the j'Jiljfe an'l the, jury of society. '
It is a sanctimonious brute. Itha.s laiire eai> ami little intelli-gence. It '.-a;, be bru'.al ar.'1 r.'.li- ,'lesji. It take- in all that ••. .eai • ',arid, be in jf ur.erjuippefi with sor'.--:inn mischintry, absorbs it all. !
From a li-tless beini.', it can be i|teased into a playful kitten-like .object, aroused to sullen rtfti.t- Imerit. 0' pro'i'ii-'i I.'.'JJ an t-i.ifi.'.eof 'ie-t; jC'.ior; Or the other banif t l! i- 'xi:::, :t can a.--1
J'r.e t r
lovinu t<!r.<ierr:»7.- of 6 w i a ' i ui
'[<•••
ii: "Kscape Me Never." are.'i. <jf Sepp Allgeier who-jioii-njle for tTie LriTIiaiiti-n|ihy in the memorable
lleli of I'itz Pal-j."
mention this jiiiper V-
DCLEfLLFor the firit time in her
ttarring 61m career, MaeWeit failed to write in a partfor Libbj- Taylor, her coloredmaid, in Paramount'i "Goin'to Town," coming to theCrescent Wednesday.
Libby Taylor hat servedas the blonde star's maid bothon the «cr««p end offt dll tjnther past thre«sjpicture». Bat,in "Goin' To Town," MaeWest crashes into society andike -ikought iKat L . Fxencb.maid would, fit the back-ground better.
"It's a good idea," com-mented Libby, somewhatdolefully, when her mistresstold her. "Give some othergirl a chance."
rectt'l Wy To'i Bro-.vnin?. fre-of "Dracula" und -irriilur
ef.-. it dgjiis «ith ail ani^zinjrier <:s^t, and ii detective- pit-a?air.f» an untar.ny vampire
•'••'r.nir^ comedy of basehai'. nr. i' '. Tries'.
"Alibi Ike" is a bip league ballj.'.ayer. ft crack pitcher ami a hat :
•er whose 'a?WttW."vTOMrwy"i'rf>ir.ost twirler?, run? around the.-liiii mark. He never makes a playon the field or off it. wtithout alibi-,
K-er. when he falls desperatelyin love with the sister of tht'eap-•hi|. '- '*ii'e. rw- iilibik.aljujuit. Sh*hi.ppen- to hear him making ex-( :st-s for yivjnsr her an emrape-n'.fR1. tine, uml turns him downco'ii. which cau.'eT" a1 series r.fevent- as thnl'.inir z< '.hey are lu-( i ; t r o j « .
this"
. . * - ' S ? ; ' i : r i ^ ^ c r f i " )
\ - <•< !> a ' - r n a = t i - r - h /
.. W H ' o , w h o h a s - j i r r
' • :-ica! hit* <,n Hr.,;,. ;,u-i\ a richer, n.dr,
• • ' . ' • • ' . • m < > f h i - ;
. . .-. Whi f f - 1 i:-:,-•• •.'.!:,(£ riew s ' ;r ,d: , i
:r • . / '•ritcriainivx-fti •V, ' ''.Ay t o t h e I'1 •
tin-."-
•• -. it r i ch sXascti t
..-;i ;i ;v>-;i:'h of star-. ;r •
T1 , ' pn * l i re h o l d s a - • ' • i ; : , ;'• .!• i.-ii i!d a l o n e sus ' ;> ; \ ,< •• :!h i t - i ' • r n a n t ; ' ' i - i u m :;••urn »n!ail-t"wn Ameruat:;
••;• • • • ^ • • • - ] ? " n " r a i l s " i , f P . . .
i, New Dog DiscoveryFeatured In Crescent Film
One of the nvst remarkable'•i"IFf *0 »l>* Cjir o:; tht st^een finfethe days of Strc'r.t:heartj nn<i Rin-Tin-Tin. wil'. be »een in actionwhen "Fiehtinsr Fury," [.resentedby S. S. Krollbert, is shown at tV:
-tr**«»nt Th*atre i^nishL . ,•Karati is the r.ame of this ilojt
hero, who is featured with JohnKiTiir. the b>ne Ranker, and Cac-•'.'.-. the White Ptallicn. m an ex-: i t ; :v and aitp>nful story ...f theborder c '.intt-y.
S i n p . ;:h"< : u;-c through the plot.
"Th" (Minirp "Srandal- ' •matrnct- a handful "f ••,-.••.TPtT. <tar? whose n:-.p< •blazed fri'iti the mar.|m-(•-hai tan 's jnouil playhn,-,
• trihutllilf t» 1 n f * * » * t y ;(••Kaye!' .liuiu-s Pgnn , N. :Jyda Koberti. Oiff En« •line .Judge. Kleanor I1
1 ma Dunn. Benny FC»or«e Whitt. . J»"bp" " 'produced, and directedproduction.
The picttire has severtravatfan/iis, and six •hits, by four uf Broa^ix,;
Jot- f Brown in "Alibi Ike" attht Strand
TWOFEATURES
ALWAYS CRESCENTCONTINUOUS
SHOWSDAILY
CONTINUOUS TEL. P. A. 4-1593
ON THE STAGE
HAPPY LEWISSAT.
9 P. M.
BATHINGAnd BEAUTY
CONTEST
PREVUEFRI. 8:30
FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY ,
KAZAN ~ THE WONDER DOCiCACTUS — THE WHITE STALLMt)NJOHN KING — THE LONE RANGER
in "FIGHTING FURY"- ALSO—
MONDAY - TUESDAY IWEDNESDAY
•rougnt loo»m»rby lh« 11*1 *ochlought-vlilimsof w t f l ' " lylllao» l«nguttl
EXTRA^FEATURE
GEORGE WHITES1935
"SCANDALS"with
ALICE FAYEJAMES DUNNNED SPARKS
LYDA ROBERTICLIFF EDWARDS
GEORQE WHITE
-^ALSO—A Detective Bittlei UtMtenI lorrorsiosolvt Weird Crime!
LIONEL
B&RRYMORE
ith W G M Call
ELIZABETH ALLANBELA L U G O S IJEAN HERSHOLT
Telephone4-0108
PERtH AMBOVMAJESTIC Continuous
PERTHAMBOY
PREVUE TONIGHT AT 8 3 0SEE TWO PICTURES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE-NO ADVANCE IN ADMISSION
"AnimolCrackerslnMySoup''
and "When I Grow Up"
/curce.A tap dance atop a^piano...,.a rope-skipping novelty . . .a Shirley Temple version tff
f- for it's her happiest picture)
ShirleyTEMPLE
JOEE.BROWN
In H1n>; Lardn*r't
Alibi IkeWirntr Brot,' Ptnnintwlnninfpanic ol bittball ind blond**,
«ith RUTH DONNELLYOLIVIA DE HAVILLAND
IN
Curly TopA FOX PICTURE with
WED. - THUR. - FR1. (PRE^UE TUE. 8:30) ,
F R E ECHINATo TbfljtL
EVERY
THUR.NITE
> i
JOHN BOLESROCHELLE HUDSONJANE DARWELLProduced by Winfield Sheehan
Dir»cf»d 6/ Irving Cummingj
WILLIAIVI POWELL•IN
"ESCAPADE"
AMATEUR NIGHTEVERY
WEDNESDAY EVENING
COMING JAMES CAGNEY
Saturday PAT O'BRIEN in
AUG. 24 "THE IRISH IN US"
NOTE: LAST COMPLETE PER,
FORMANCE ON SATURDAY
NIGHT STARTS AT 9:30 P. M-
, • >
• GREATER MOVIE SEASON •SUCH SUPER ATTRACTIONS COMING TO YOUR FAVORITE THEATRE,
THE MAJESTIC, PERTH AMBOYCUrk Guble, Loretta Young in "The O r t W l t h e Wild"; CUrk Gable, Wallace Beery, Jaan Harlow in
MChinaSea^'j Dick Powell Ann Dvorak in "Thank* A MUlion"; Waltace Beery in "M«»Mg« »o Ga«»a"iJoe E. Brown in "BrigMlifhU"; Fred A*Uire, Ginfer Rogert in "Top Hat"; Joe fenner b " C U t " d
"AnnapoJit Farewell."
INDEPENPEKt FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1935PAGttffiVSN
Quits As Le onsC A N ' T T A K E I T ' TOWNSHIP TITLES Braves Get Long-Awaited Crack HOME FROM TOUR,L L U AREATSTAKE At Avenel SquadOn Sunday FORDS PUYS
'THEYVETERAN'S VERDICT;
WON 2 5 , LOST 5,.,isi(in bubbling for weeks within the American, ,ack young baseball tp.um foamed this morning
.^iiKiuncnment by Anton'Cap'Dametsch that he hasj | , j s post as manager. "There's too much of a cli-
tin1 playors to .suit me,;1 said the TBteran secondd b l h l f th bil l i
TOMORROW Hungarian Brigade Judge Pefna'i Athittit Atowners By Decisive
RAKI1 AN 0MAURICE*. X. DONOHUE
Clash In Track Meet SetFor Fords Park Sunday is distinctly a vital day for the Woodbricljtc
The up-and-coming young Hungarian brigadepark At 3;
hat!) while tho air is still definitely loadedlintelv loaded with large ^
tin p y ,;, who acted as balance wheel for the brilliant
;ciuon the club until he became jnanager4ast Springw
\r Mnnk Weaick.^.,t last Saturday a unellen,-where the Art Color
victory brought the situation to a head1,stated. It was the fifth losfwall of them by onft
• - • • — — — — iiravfis. me up-ana-coming >UUUK iimnaiiiin migmic _ 'ha t . ) wniie mo air JS su'i ueuuuci) mnuvu T -o -rAIIMTV TBCTC IN VVVK m e e t s Avenel at Soco Park in a major t*.«t of the Braves' u n i V TRINITY BEATEN <jtHrtttiti«r-uf what soertw to he the: bt-t mekabye opium.IUUN11 l t a l a IN WfctK a b i i i t y t 0 fuifiji their program of vaulting to a peak pos i - ' n v / l j I _ . _ . " u still, you have no idea how tasty and novel a feeling it w
t;^v. ;"n tr.ii-nuViin hnaaVinll plrclpi within a ciinclp season. : >• i. i . ... t.... „<•»..,. , «.. i...!,;„ n nro.tirai>tiri> ni irv on that bisr. bad Scarleta b i i i t y t 0 fulfill ther p g g p ption in. township baseball circles within a single season.
^^JtXAi U l dT o mo r r o wtrack and field, ijotLi__ ^ ^,^,._, „ „ „•from al! of the township's ifToVeial'h"fast''.Sunda^r'"""hadplaygrounds- wiH converge bo«n '"stipulated by Judi?e -Waryon Fords Park for the events WillyunrPerna when the Braves
k h l > n u , ,lt | , i s t . after a to pre-practice. sf>rythat «
yon that big
Rut fAndrew Lengyel earned tht:,.,,, ' „ tour'of the'neifth- Scourge (I KIHWS-that means tWe Rutgers football team,I H I T I I l A i m i i f T w i w borhood, Fords Field .Club if any) without being forced solemn I y 4 * - ^ . * a U » ^
TwnifflnrRsrairKo^^^decide
championships and the tiTownship
ALL ARGUMENTSJyjveld J>ut of name.
choice except'eon-thc Soldiers have suffered in SO starts this year.maimjjer was blamed for the reverse,by the play-,,id and, althougjn nothing was. said directly to! R(")!!t!v«lt Park next week.1
h, 'Fats' Mesaros, substitute catcher, appeared on j individual winners in the coun- —fo"ke-"- in. t r i rn, thewith « message that four of the team would notjty meet will U Riven- handsome tiM^ iviin on
mill their vacatipjl-Oftmp at LaureltotT;"-rrear Point; j medals, Tom'Limoli said today, came up with anotherv
i Sun da., ..„ — . .and bitterest rival: ltSrit4ii.4V+W#f-?«.
;ihe panic R|iritnn Township oii'w j . - o r quite ;\ spell now, ftutgwrflhas regularly eome upwhich hacked down the Wood- $nt<) the middo of August nursing intact its December feel- •
Bravesd
thl
BuddiesClimblntoDriver'.>-T
Seat In Sam GioeV ^Competition
th0^7ttendance is
^ R e n ?h?rjT.C\eiJa* ° eXPark + • ^ " " - 1 " " " " " — JM ffiTK ^ ^ u l e . especially-MrtW
•• , u n c e m e n t t n all inr M r C i f ( > r g e L i t t i e ^ p ^ i ^ v c r a l j a ^ bags of assorted
t h « t V s b o y S c a r r y p w t o i n frlh^^
tg
Quartether than break up fre tjjfljri?
hameeta'cfi"a
nil I'd be glad to leave a bunch that just can't ' take', quartet of vacntioners who delivered the ultima-,.,. | m said, Fr*n4t imt, P»rGy \Vttksyets, George.ml Mike Bodnar.,. manager revealed he has had difficulty wiUkJBo4-4j string catcher, for weeks. An. ar.gaBtf.nt as to,l,veloped with the catcher after Raritan Township
,.„ it.s one-run victory. Dametsch frankly intendedi ji new backatopper but was dissuaded by the rest
v lull, who also persuaded Bodnar to return to the• • . •
(iunlay, trailing Dunelen by 2-1, Dametsch decided,for single runs. He accordingly ordered three sac-
W'" ^ hTme^oS" rally !TtW\eventh •climbYng1'to'what''he"e8trr 1 plenty of dynamite decile their, portunity ff>r the „ oDDOiition
B»rto« H»l»i BT«WI .half as impressed by4 that j thony's ttw shelled theTobv Bartos.i the distinguished evidence of the citizens' I Holy Trinity's 14-(?ame _ _. „ .Toby Jsarws,,_ ,_ , . U _ J _ , •••r*toi4^ l tr lnrMb1«nm>rTT^
hour assigned to registration ofentries. Boys will compete int h m a«e »tfp«—HH<J t ? , ttVTpitcned theIS and lfi and over. The fcirls' u mph over Hop*'awni l)U.t
b k 2 d l' t h l t ot by Parli
Twilight League thisweek as he Was by the practically
own feet and wound up several milesquite cover up the undoubtedar, that again tfir atmosphereilities and that the situation,
IS and lfi oe r . he fcirls u mph over H o p * i . K week as he as by the p r a c t ybrackets are: 10-12, 13-16, H a n d yel's athletes got by Parlin with-> unheard of fact that his com- "P™5
„ „ „ ' out the aid of mound reinforce- pttitibn weathered four consecu- ! rallyjver,
Team Fintli LUtcdscheduled -are finals
out the aid of mound reinforce- pttitibnment*. Kocsi worked that garae^tive contests with nary an argu*and, with Steve Zick, became one
in of the two twirling possibilities forment!
survive in week off. Theyb
initelyh p i
^lSffi., .. , .. . . . , , another week off. They fiad i initely relaxed .after its first halfthe voHey ball competition; Iselm, >tendfe(J t o g0 filing, but eventual-1 championship Victory and"wtlT bePort Reading, Avenel and Se- , dropped that idea, too. . t t t t i t th f l lwaren in baseball and Hopelawn
None of the maneuvers succeeded and he says theit's* of hm play»r» impressed*-him then with theiif trying to work with them. But the Dunellen third hry
m was playing .deep with one out so the manager sn.i••ighth, ordered Mike Mitroka to bunt at him. , | iCitroka was thrown out at first and almost immediate- j *'r;,U(l he felt too ill to continue playing, although Mike ^ •'•took his position in . p;1,'
WAYSIDE BENEDICTS \ s.FLAIL BACHELORS, U-6\^
and Woodbridfce in soft ball.The schedule:
The line-up:Bravm A. t'.
p p ycontent to coast into the full-sea-
That, , , ,, . .with two men on base-ready .to go,As for the *amea themselves, ^ ^ ^ J o e M f I 0 w e n t
wandering off into some
- o k .at Sayreville was 2-0, de- reeked with
Colombia And Princeton!.... ^ ^ SCHEDULE still offers promise and isn't even
cars for the sole purpose o mak-; d e f l o l u t ( t h e h o m e .bodies as it might seem at firstmg a circus catch of Strenk s lonij\ • - • j ..* n.,..* „«!„
inr Vn!!,.vIM.ryjfn.tiiif
•-. p
H;i | | T « i m H - K « i i . .l<-ulltl«VH, A v n ' i I ' l ^ y - K«n »i.
S ( (
; 3
•iitns- -I.uf-lln VH Murtiigli, IIrouniU, 3 3 " 1' Hartos. P •'• 'wnri 'n" Piny- -HnltoBl,- U .
li.in .'11"na,T.-nniH—Wi.u.l- I'"' lick, Ti
m a » ' ^ e buddies are currently in"ii u ' 1 V 0 i the, lead, half a pame in front of
1 the Athletics, whom they out-1]! pointed this week in a 9-8 skir-0 j mish distinguished by heavy flr-' j ing in the fourth frame, when the1 i fcw» «IB1>9 sh«re<i 11- -ran*o 1 Field Club, Zuttot Full
The othSr two tnatches of the
3 :l (i
u 3 \i 1l l « 'il l ') l1 .1 1 91 1 1. 03 Z 'I 0-
ftref o u r
M
,,dowbrook» Cancelled, ,'lub was scheduled to
• •!.,. Mi-adowbrooks the $ecomj Senion Shatters, tI' M.I
; r . n i n . | J-3n ['< o u n l T H i r <
1..1- V. i l l cy Hull T M• ; I ^ I . V - A \ i - n ^ l \>i | : ; i
?, :i" I', M i ' . i r t - - r . - t vtl- l i l I I1 M.! U r H.iMi-h.iii T»am"i i—
'u ' - i l l i r i i lH- T'>'.vn.«lii|i n,I t r i i n i u .i k. Vi. P t r i ji
T.-it.iis 33 n n -•
J—W|nn-H n p e l a w n .4. A. Cll
ah. r. Ii. P'I.3
I'uliH k . « •S i m u n , <i, P-l i , , za , l b . .•
l 3
" week had both those opponents(.winning, the Buddies" tramping
i over the Field Club by 9-5 and they? A's deposing of the Zullo, 11-5.
A f th i d i i d l l
of these onlyd n v e "B«U« D«"lF^nlhJob Colgate" is a first-stringer. But neither Columbia nor
Bots Bauer p"e ITp* three ,do«-' Princeton is t.oo far away, Lafayette can be reached ifMes ana three singles to the hit-1 the situation-by November 2 warr*nts8uch a junket, N. Y.hungry Trinity macemen, but;U. still operates in Manhattan (or is it the Bronx?) andsteadfastly refused to allow n n y ; ^ w a n t s t0 g 0 SCOoting up to MasaachuStetts to see Bos-bunching thereof with the result,. i ! n i v p _ : t v n n v W n V . ?he pitched a beautiful shutout.[ton Lnnenty an>way.'Wlodamyk was less lucky in hi?' The schedule, to repeat, offers at least a portion ofattempt to block off the Fords!high class football. With last year's record, it is:threat. He was shaken down for!nine safeties and these, coupled" ' ", pwith the ilaniaKP done by two in- "' i.field errors, allowed. Anthony'* log-men to ring the register in both;" '1
d i h " '
Halt\T»amn—H
' <if trippersad to leave for camp!iaTr1y,i)irmetsch Cfi«~ -p;vefi"'after they st-TTTorl
"They thought it (,jt after three disastrous feipenini;rmlt (.'Very time they'imiinifs thf unmarried brigade df
•'>„' deposed pilot said, > Wayside Social CHilf never,• • . . i f » i , n ' f o u n d out how to score I enough
•hey didnt iKe the ^ ^ ^ ^ jn intra_playing_thu two ben- ^ m t t c h ^ ^ ^ h r a w ,
V M Ki»r;'i:tnI F- M,
>)r-i:T>-n
Tut.il
yIf- •
fyhunts, Benny Barbato of the A's
III.V) Schrilulrj< • W i ' S l i - h c s l i r Ttiili
:. Milri i ' l l i l I ' I ' U P H I '
i ; Ci ' luni i i lnin I ' r ln r i ' i i in
A w 11 v
A way
AwayA w n V
11II
IIIu>
*1'.V.HiI ' .
M.
i n n:M111
r.M.KlU'
35^ 111 -' have-won all five oHheir starts.•j s :i ; - | The line-ups:
every year during ths decade in *"which Anthony has been pilotniK 'A
Huston Tiitv.U l f i l V f l l PN. V, I' .
Opp.
2700gT
14
Wnn S- l."!"i 9: Tied .1.C l l
[The Leopards,l t t
youa T a d d S F o r d , ha. a number 14 enUrely too tough and nasty-^o they're breaking up the
Middle Three by scheduling no game in 1936. And whoreplaces them on the New Brunswick menu? Only Yale,
,,ney a t al l ." t o l h , e x t r a K a m e i f the n - e
" t S l ' h T ' t J season i - r g i n piled up by the Married,-e of the • ^ » » o n ' . | T e j l m i n H e opener is any real in-it too late in t n i ' ; dilation of the two clubs' eompar-to go With any :Htive ability.
luh. Meanwhi le , t he At.that, things wouldnt have
match with ther c
: :m'sreis—at City Stadiumlay—is sttll on. Jos'., inBi tht, j r e l ( | e r
'vets, Cerek and Bod-.ii-i' to make a flying trip•'ir the name, then go
'II Laurelton,• Dunellen line-ups!
\ r t I nli ir i - I•«<«.-fc-U. ) . i ' . - * «.,
I I .' I " II
been so tou(jh for the bachelors ifthey could havt? Kutten by the sec-ond session safely. In that inn-
14. 7"i yil iin.ili.l l :3 ' i ' - l ; K M — Hoys, agp l n - l i .
»"ft I.nil throw. Hiiyn, {iRi. T3-I"i. • H ' V' ' ' rniti;....
l l i rnw. filrl«. i:i-l(i . V o l l e y l i»HMt-g l ln»kl . »9si>rvi'. ! S. / . u k , -li • • •
l - l :m I'. M . — H i i y a , » K e l o - u . (ii>liU-n. L-f . .s t a m l l i i K hr i ' iu l l u m p , B » y « . tigv 13- S i - m t l : •- • • • •Hi. n l i " ! p u t - l l n i s , u(ff 17 un i l n\»-r . Kur .^1 . P • • 'urn y i l . i l i t sh . i l i i r l n . ;IK<- l o - l : ' . i ' M * S t i i n i i ' h . 1»s k l | i | i | ) i K - Ui l ' l i . iitti- 1 3 - 1 6 . mu ' l luill Vl l i r n w . ( f i l l . - . ;IKI- 17 a m i nvi- r . | n n 'yil i l imh. ' , I
l : 3 i i . j - l ' . M . - - f l o y » - «Ki- l d - 1 2 , 2 M ••>yil. i v i u v . Diiyn. U K * i : i - l « , 4 1 " yil,
Iliiyn, ;i(fi. 17 a n i l nvt-r, 11
MI. al 2I 4-1 il
Hr ln-k . II./.i«-k. rl
P " " . r ( •
I uvi-r,
17 an IIVIT. IIIKII Junip.I'. M, — H o ' i s . uBi' I" a
:h j u m p . I t l r l . i .
l e i y i n i n a i i n , . - ; V ( ] ; • • ; , ; . - • • • - „ - „ , - , • „ - . • . . , :
. . . . . r b r e t h r e n p i l ed u p , n .my . m n . s , i,Kl. 13-IS. Tit y.l, r..lliy 'all s e v e n <if t h e s c o r e s w h i c h e v e n - | <ilrln. - • - -. •.tvwlly decided the mutch. The rea-son isn't too difficult to find,either—eight large, juicy and fa-tally-timed errors by the losers.
I'inter and l'tilko for the Mur-rii'd tribe, and Krankie Koka of
nrllu A,
Armstri ' i iB.
, , K j p; u p , r u n n l r i K l i rmii l j u m p .
7 i v , , , i: I . J : ; IU
,vi-p M%»ll tlin.w.M,--i!nvB, attf 17
yd.T'liiv. ( i l r ls , ;IKI- 17" yil. ri-l.iy .
n.l I•"»•<••i l n i 1 K u c ' s
<\ i a inil. r. h.
3 1 -•I 1 1
a »• I c:i;i II 1 7
. :i ti ii I i
•i II I' l
•j I ' i v
•ir. 3 6 i iC. t 3 »nb. r. li. pu-
•» 1 0 ' II'. "l 0 1 -. 4 II 1 1
;i n il 14
.34 V \- TotalsITI- by innlufcs:
lAtnletlcH . . : . . ' . . 3nn sun n—s ', B u i l i t s .iiiii r.iu x — » .I Thrt-r-l i i ixc l i l t s — R n n i n . H v l n k l i - .! Hlrl . Ki i / .mprsk . TWO-IHIKV l i l t*—I B a r n n . B i i r b a l o . Rlr l . CulfTri-dn.
h, of comrnitmentF which may delayi | the BchedulinR of the Lepon. Ser-
ies are still to be completedagainst Sayreville and against theNew Brunswick Lyceums. The
5 latter feud is all even, each clubhaving won one..
< Z u l l n A. I . IT,IKollar. ,1li 4 -1PlllZZH, If H il I
' V l i s l i l k , If 1 ,i i! A. Sue. rf 1
T, S'ne, .•!' .'!
;;
1
K h l i - d i - i . I I I )all r li
II iruinii. i- :. 1 :lII S'fuki, lb :i II in f l a k . :iii s n IIj V. M'li. :'b i :i :i1 H'prtle. p 4. :' 1
1 Mil, If I :• :i
that's all!Marietta is in because of that rowing rivalry, West-
i cheater because the Teachers figure to be a perfect tougrh-Lind-eaay opener, Boston because it's the second year of a
b ^ A ri£A\****»«* contractrdC^tz lor the same reason.Art Color, Newark Blue Sox, Red|a three-game contract which expires this Fall. OtherwiseBank and Munville. lied »snk i it's no secret that Colgate would have nothing whatsoeverlost in a return match, as have -0 c]0 wjtn their little playmates from the-Raritan, since*most of the better resort S(1Uads A a K . boys, too, have decided that Rutgers is too
^ rough. I mean that seriously-Colgate was well smashed2 ffi t a and discovered last
M. S'llc.A. H'lo. Hi ;i l :' S'nne.
! Sliwy, p :l II 1 A'prlllR. rf 4 il 1iVpnlu , ill ;l il ilWM'ilwk, ss I I .'
U 0l l ~ I) •
, Tutiils . . 2S' Srnrt- by 1 li] Ziilln A. I*
Alhlclli-
7 T"l.lls 11 16
101 HI J
'I ] IHi .mi - r u n — W a s l l i ' k . A. .Hail . ,11
. V i ' l i n n n . l l . T h r c i ' - b a s f hli , li.-i--luni i . 'I '^vii-liiiM- l i l t s — I J t C l a l i i l l l i ,
coax two safe hits nut of the op- IpoMntr pitcher. All the other [HthleU's, with tho exception of jGray and Yuhas, contributed a jImigle apieye to their respective j
•causes. ISoka was reached for 11)' eight
Fords WolverinesConvery Stars
S i n n - liyIlravt-M . . • •l ' i i r l l n . . . .
Tvvi . - t i l is i - . . . .p l ; i y - - . l r K H l l 8 k i t » /A
•Au-urk .Hit — H" •-'I i a l l « - - H H Kiw
li l t—S- •k. lii 'iiliU-(o S iu tn i i l i -
II,-111 < l u b I SIall r h
I'nyiiiii. :iii :i I
Illlilillr• n b
I 1r h
Ku.-sl ». Han'3 ; iifT Kas i - r 1.
I . V K I " U I ' >1, !••
1 Ki- l lv .
I'alkii. If Il : i . k v , . f ISip.m, rf 4
I | r , - .I s k a v
II
I. 4:iii i
r R l . Wednesday morninic at Wash- • ~T^r-jington Park at 10 o'clock the ' e - ' c / V Df/JU
M sinkir Men nil | organized Fords Wolverines will JIA-AUII
'. K., .", S"f i ; t a ^ ^ i e ? S ^ 1 i , , , WRECK riCHT GAMEi 1 ! up disposed of the Hijpelawn-West . „ Mi i Amboy Rees last week by a com- lOU/Ig JW€n',[ ! fortabljf 111-4 marpiii. Koper andr i ' ParsliM!, whir split the. victors'
1 ditching assignment, gave up a
: K U B S ' O , i) ;t
I-:.' K 'u - r . .• ;!. M l n i l i r l . I I . J
; l i ' i i i l i u . i l l :tI l . - tn in l l , If 3i K n l l c r . l i ' L1
I-:. K ' ln - , v'f :i
I l l i u l y k . MS III H I I - I . Hi :: II
a K ' r e h l i . i'f S' -(i 1 'ntr l i -k, If II, II i ,"i ' i>il;i. p :i i-.l l i v . l u s . rf i ii ( ' a n i l . :iii :i IIH K'l't-i-k, i l l ii l
I mean that s e r i o u s l y C o l g eup in that 25-2 affair two years ago and discovered lastN l d t i l l Mr Arthur
D r ^ ' a n d ^Mexo, Gloff Ac« up in that 25-2 affair two years ago d
Beside snaring that vital fly iNovember that the Rutgers lads,.particularly Mr. ArthurMew also clubbed out two of ^i*! 3runi still were going at the business of the game a mite
e a m s h i t s . T h e a p p o r e n t l y u n - | , . r.,,n,,a],,hid b l 0° strenuously.. Anyway, with Colgate, Columbia Princeton and N.U if R t b istake does
teams hits. The a p p o ystoppablc veteran at third base.M B Glff l t d vvid
Surprise, Surprise/
n
4 l
- ..' Y l l l"' s ' " * ".!_ _"'i total" of only four safe hits "and
Oldfirners At Avenel By
10-2Edge
. . i l l r, -1 Ti i la lHby i n n i n g s :
l b
..i7 0 I
nli ;I::I> •< --n
lnltii. r u n- I l l i pn l i l i l .
- ( . . I . II |l.,i
M.n-"k.i i'1-
"/.. I
M 11 - .K .i. .ill.).- i . l . u
T i " t , i l * I - >:! 1"S v i . r r IA1 thli lliliil
M . i n i f . l M . I .S l i m l . - M.-li
Kri-,,V!i I l i i i l w l1 i : i . s 1. H Sk i •• -'
T . i l . i l n
l n l i:1
runs in the fourth in-
In
Skir T l u v . - I . .
\Vi ik i
.1 fill.ilH, .1. K' I ' l i - i l l i . l"i
H . i i i i - r u n• 1,1 .1. I ' i n l 'I'.nli.i S i m . k i.„ l i nk . i i , Ii«."Ii : . , l i i . . l i i i iu . - i
struck -out 1H of the enemy bat-lurs. K()i'?.ii\v:ilii, their opponent, t>lX ,
'allowed 14 base-knocks, but sue- ning compiled by the \oung Men s; ceetled in faiming nine of the Wol- Athletic Club wrecked what hadverities. Demko and Jliller b o t h ! been an interesting ball game with
rt7fNew*BrnuX the Old /Timers at Avenel thiswick Avenue, is booking games week Up to the deluge, Bren-
, for tho winning squad. n B n had been pitching very well
FIELD CLVB GOESTOTHECIEAHERS
Mr!'Ben Glotf, also tagged Wind-1 . H.nyway, WHII <-.uiBo«,c. v - " « . < . " - . - - •arczyk twice. The six Holy Tiin-j Y. U., if Rutgers by some mistake does have a top-notcherity base knocks were distributedj'rfris Pall, the world will have an adequate opportunity to
.onit «s m«ny playm. ' i rind out all about it. .Ine win at •Snyrcvillc bucked i t ,u* ~ * « * ]
up.everyaue, associated with .the!Pord-i loam as in a/lditipn to th:it jrun of 14 consecutive triumphs I „ , . , , , ithe Holy Trinity list of wins in ! BUT THE SQUAD LIST—ah, there's the lovely sur-cluded games with the Newark'prise! Somewhere,else on this page, Soup Campbell hasDodgers, the Cuban All stars »»d;.u.u4|v written out for you a soleum and a careful analysisSod S t team"*' ' °* th™ )f t h e e u r r e n t s i t u i ' t i ( ) i l- Mr. Campbell, besides being one
.If Pords finally wunds into the "f most obliging individuals yet unearthed, is Mr. Earlkind of consistent wimiinK per- Reed Silver's very best assistant press agent. He presentsforma-nce which Anthony now ex-, the official view'of the picture.pects beginning with a sweep of Yet, M doen't lav too much emphasis on ivhat is reallyM K f f l S . h t l | i : Pretty startling in view of what has been the situationginn. . : .here tor the last tour years .
Lust week's line-ups: \ Maybe I'd better point out that all previous hopes for, 1935 at Rutgers were built around two magnificent tac-kles, both freshmen last Fall—Art Hillhouse and' WrightH.ire. Hillhouse was so big and so good he's been lured to
M. - , i - ,-rIVi i ry , Hi . .1 'ii ti ii'lu. . r f
(Mil)al> II. I"
hsker Invites Fifty To September 3 Rutgers DrillI But He's Still Looking For Center And Kicker
indeed but defensively his teamshredded away after the firstthree sessions and the veteransskimped under a deficit they nevereven threatened in their last turn
• with the willow. The final total
willootiiall
/' is Universityprc-season f'
. al N'eilson Field inr.ruuswii'k on Septeni-
il|i a squad of fifty: iflvitt'd to report to
: \yifiler Tasker. Of thev nine are letter) win-
"• 'ii veterans having been:•• si|uad since last fall.1 > chief problem will bei center to replace the two
•• i •. Al Twitchell und Elmeri, wlui have been sharing
• i post assignment for thelie yearn. The Rutgerslias ttiven no indication asiimhable choice at centeri during the spring train-"I Rass Coan, who played
(in the cub team was 10-2.
last year,lil l
pused for a
iyear,
l« along with Joe Morrisi, Zimmerman, substitutel Al L d l l
eny is ii promising bull-car- played the winirs .' ' last fall. 1'ete Kornicki and Mike
Bullard at'e expected to retain the
y p uHer and a fair kicker but whether
ivill be arjle In make the gradeinst such competition a.s Hob
and Moe (irossinau tin*
Venerus, center fielder on the
sciwon is a question..Kddie HluiAbei-B, Wully Prin-
vl'it, mid Dick Keating all of whom'have' had experience us varsityfield generals, will be augmentedby Morris Plevinsky, a sophomore!who appears to • be one of'-thf1
smartest - quarterbacks to enterRutgers in gome time.
At right halfback, Joe Nilan,Tony Naponmo, and Cuno Benderremain, although Bendei> may beconverted into a fullbuck tftisyear. Nilan should be due for hisbest season and may be the Scar-let's outstanding buck.
V»n Mater AloneWith Art Bruni and Carl Sch-
wenker, veteran fullbacks, lost to
. , , . . — . . . - , , n , winning1 combination, w'as the Intackle portions with Bob UK'tlsh , -. , , . , , , , . iami Bill Uirew cominK up from,of t l l e ^ H c s k s h e d j t h r e e h l tflie cub siiuud. , in three tries, which islpractically
At the Ruiu-d posts Tgaker has perfect, especially since one ofHurry Lang, Lepn Chamlo, a n d ; t h e d r i v e s w a g a h o m e r a n d t h e
Allgaier Oufpitches BlyerBut Drops 2-1 Duel
To Ariito Nine
That Woodb ine Field Club-literally went to the cleaners thisweek. Georpe Liittunzio's cham-pions of the defunct TwilightLeague -wound up on the wrongend of a 2-1 count nfter nine briskinnings with the Aristo Cleanersof Perth Amboy. And they hadled from the second to the end ofthe sixth, too. Sunday, then1
enemy is to be the Carteret A.
Hector Gardner, Jail of whom saw , "T """ , . , „considerable aetfon lust fail - a l - ' o t h e r t w o t n P l e s - Genovese wasthoii(?h Lang is the only letter the only other hitter to tag Moranwinner. Donald Snxton, cub guard 'more than once, The losing pitch-last year, shoiM make a .strong ! e r r e d e e n i e d himself somewhat bybid for the varsity along with Art , s t r o k i n s o u t a h o m e r u n o f h i s
1 . , ^ ., . „ , , own. Sabo, who threw him theV.n D.r Noot An End? Ifour-bwe ball, did better with, the
VimDer Noot and Coan, b o t h ' o l h e r Old Timers. He whiffedtall and rugged, can be used any- j n i n e m aii,where. There is a possibility that! ^he line-ups:VanDer Noot will remain at end j •->und that Wallack will be'shifted to- „ ,
' Whlli-y,
XV. V. t .a I. I
Miii ' lieV. Illi '. ilI-', l . ' z in , a s II ilH'K.-r. i-f It IIWriter, lb :i IIVkur. L'II I ll l l x f l . i- I IIT. l.'sli). If I II.1. [ . •«! , i-r :i IIA'pui t - r , p -I li
l l c l l l i l u - n ( ^ |l>! i l l . r Ij ' S i i H k y , lh I II .I I i i ' . si Hi I II iI Ul.vi'i'. 1) :l II '1 . . lo l ly , r :l II II O ' rn i ' , 2h !l il iI P ' I B I I I I I . HS :l ll .
1 Ke l ly , i-r :< - :i i l . i i i i u i r r , i f I! II1 Kcl i l e r , If :t II
Tiitala
eran f , 1 c h i i s t i A i V /Danny Van1 Mater is ' j.\.ei|erickson, E mer
i l i veteran Steve i N t H l l Lou' He
The letter winners lost: Art-TMreniu'ii! i> ".'•'•'.'Hruni,, Al ,' Chiimadia, Wood^l""" UU'vicr. if(Jhristittiisen, Le'iij.
i i e m l «I |J T i m ™ ( J Ia b . r. Ii. in'-
. •> 0 o n, ; . il (I (I
i0 0
1 2
5 I)
lust season. Al Lundwull,' the squad, Danny van n a » i .»ii t'ent.nr two veara aeo i the only remaininjr, veteran. Steve
StMiiowirz, S!1U (jound fullbnckivho hails fronv Huck»ttstown, andMackenzie Dunn are sophomoreswho will make a. bid for this post.Stanowicz is potentially a greutblooker and line-crasher butwhether or not ha is experiitiH'gdenough to oust) Van Mater thisyear can not be decided until theteam runs up against Columbiaand Princeton
What Tusker intends to do withthe forward wall, no one knows.It is possible, that a wholesaleshakeup will'lake place, WalterWlnika and Howrird Wallack areveteran ends who/ have been in-vited back. They fill \>a augment-ed by the presence of HilyardSimpkina and John Pomeroy who
••Hi center two years agoi shifted to end lust 'sea-iiiintber candidate,
"• is also a poasibility that1 will try George Vai|Derwho us a sophomore star-tiu'kle and end last year.
Perry M.y Click' " sld ia less of a prob-
- line although a kick-1 passer will have to be de-
i•'•'! to take the place of Ar-I ""'X, ace halfback who jvas'''•'led' in June. Danny Van'' vettsran • fallback, will•;i|dy carry the brunt 'of the'!1IK ussignment ajthpuah Art
v w>l>hoifWW-4eft halfbackII lialiway who did most of the'" '^ fur the freshman team
'"M, will be
Newt Hall, Lou' Hemerda,Kenny, Carl Schjvenker, ArriieTruex,' Al Twitchell, Wllho. Wini-ka, Polly Phelps, Lou Grower.
Langhorne Auto Show tRescheduled For Sunday
Ruined out last Sunday, theEastern A. A. A. champion-ship automobile race* at themammoth Langhorne Speed-way will be held this Sundayafternoon with a much laViferarray of renowned driversexpected to »urticipa,te thanwas slated to answer thestarter's flag on the origiuuldate. ;
Griswold, Ic' Klupek, in' f Flurln, i'f •
M. FUirlii, r( .KinK. ''
Totula • • •1 IIUIII
Mai-key, 31)rFlin,. 2li ••p a d k o , II)Sulul. U ••-
1 01 0 0 Uo o i o
O' 1 S • * (I0 0 1 1 «o i II o o
4 0 I)
4 0
. 2 0 U* : -
IS 2 4 1• A. I'. (IO>
«li. r. li.111'. U-2 1 2 1
K 3 1 9. 12,' 1 1 J 02 1 1 0 2
9 1
Veni'l'llH,
Tot ilialiy iniiluim:
(Ilil Timer" -
Hnini'- Viiiin -•ui'onniin,him—Vi-nerun
3 1 1 -3 1 1 II ft 03 1 3 1 0 0It ' 0 2 (I 0 01 1 1 U
3 1 10 12 15 5 1
101 0(1-n i ox—io
Twol1,-ia. hltii—P Kovueh, Marki-y. Fries
lin * - % « r Hlnu.k out-Uy 1»'«>''„., 4 lii Kiili.1 a. Ba»« on hulls - orrlr"imoii' *l o« «» l10 *- l)»>l»ir.
,a M.i, ko- ujid. Steve Hur«.
hyC
1 a T u t i i l a . . H D li
y u j KX. V. C. . . . ' (Mil mill o o o —
r lsl i i (100 mil d U — :Twti- l ias t 1 h i t s—Votf lkiT. H U e l.•Uv. Hiisi- mi liiills—Oft Hlvf f 3
<lru'ck n u t — B y AllniiU'r 4; liy H l y e r
l..ff. :iii -nii'lli.y If ••
Mivi ' l-ali . I'll,n. k l . .- . . . .
lllllrt ', | . . • . .
Tnli l lH
tI i
II I III i ::1 II S
lli.l) Tr in i ty 111nil. r Ii.
\vl<l. L'li.. 4 (I i
i l m i k .Mm-.-li
i rrfHi:lli
I II III
A, l'iiiii>\vnl(l,
Close Ones On The Diamond4 • »
By BARRON McNULTY 'one to three.-TS TIME FOR GIANTS
TO STEP ON THE CASTHE GIANTS will have to
tep on the gas while theyVe playing the weakerteams of the Eastern half ofthe circuit or they are goingto have .a hard time comingin in front, especially if they haveas poor a Western trip as they hadlast' time out. And Castlemenseems to have developed anotherinjury to his arm.
Aa it is, in the latest book, theyare quoted an two to one to win,and the Cards, their nearest rivalaare quoted one to two. The Tigers
,ure (juoted at fwo to uue, and thei Ynukees, their nearest rivals at
;• \ Long Island University to play centre on Clair Bee's bas-| "ketball team. Hare, a Rutherford behemoth, can't play' o: football any more, He has an enlarged heart. Another glit-'• " tering youiig man—Harry Brindle, a righ) halfback—is11 "no longer in college. i, ,. Mauric| Bollard, the best tackle in the Eas.t last year.• ^has been battling some peculiarly nasty tropical levpr bug-' i for almost a year and may never be able to block enothern n'end, although he himself says he's fit. The entire backfield;; ,','i troupe of brilliants which never quite produced-'-Bruni,
n L' i' Hemerda, Trijex et al - " - is gone. So have Al Twitchell and" ' _": Red Griswold, the centres vvhjo held the whole team to-7 " -1 gether on the defense. I
* * * * *Ordinarily
, ORniNARILY, YOU'D fwget all this in gloating overthe All-Americans yho would be rushing up from the 1934
! Freshmen brigade. Not this season. Instead, hope must becentered on the good Ifl33 frosh who tjlidn't deliver last
ipa]j—gg((jei:. (my ownjespecial pride and joy), Metzler,UNKNOWNS WIN jNaparano, Coan, Vandernoot et at. It's still true, of course,
Demko's single admitted Ver-jthiit one of the reasons they didn't deliver was that Taskertes with the run which defeated;never gave them a real chance. Even so, you can be gladthe Hiphhills Wednesday for the they're back but no one, I think, will quite sob with a mad,Fords Unknowns. The score wns w:i*i : f l a K 0 U t iti-'l Je?],nski pitched three-hit j W l l d H ^ 0 ^ m o r e m ^ a c o u p l e o f g o o d g u a r d a > ft
tall centre with long arms who can cover the guard holesafter those gentlemen pull out, and maybe a brace of tac-kles-^-that's all Rutgers needs up front.
Back of these non-existent guys, Mush Plevinsky iastill rated the best quarterback prospect;- who's been
j around in a long time, Art P]erry of. Rahway may or may] not find himself to be varsity stuff; Joe1 Nilan may learnhe isn't a mariner and Isn't bound to set a compass course
jajid run on it under any and all circumstances—and, fin-ally, some one somewhere may dig up a sound forward
S.'.l1.. by iu ill n i ; * :F u r i l s !•', ( ' . • . . . mm mi I II " I —U u i y T r i n i l y . null HIM' iniii. -
Twi . - I . i i s i . •' l i l t s Ki i i l i , X.nU-HkN u v a k . S I I I - I - I I U T li It - W l m l a l v y y l .Inml i l i ' p luy—-Si i i a l l i -v I " M l ^ - v i i lS l i ' U r k m i l - - l!y l i i iui-r :l; liv W l m lillTZVli 3, l l l l« | . m i IIIIMH " I t ' Ilillli-l ; J l i y Wl n i l i l l - r / . y l i I. l.i'l't • n i l Las . .- • l ' ' i . n l s l i ; H u l y T r i n i t y I. I ' m p l i• H n . l i i . y .
for the winn^-s.
BRAVES COULDN'T BEAS BAD AS THEY SEEM ,
THE BRAVER under theirnew management are begin-ning to perk up. They arebuying some players in theminors and are going to give"!them a kind of fall training.And a little new blood may irmkea world of difference in their play-tagdunng the remamder of •
passing combination,
CackleTHINGS CERTAINLY don't sound so good, do
they? Tee, hee.'tee-hee, The mirthful cackle my friends,springs from a very elementary reasoning, as follows, andto wit: If at no time could Tasker and Rutgers evolve a
teamme c u gwould do its tricks under heavy fire out
^ ^ ^ c O n c ? d e d b y o n e a n d t ? hf top-noldh, first-They really aren't so bad asjgracie and practically incredible, it might follow,'I think,
they appear- they couldn't be jt d i t t d l nd less uperultr stuff mayd b hi
e and practcally , g , ,they appear- they couldnt b e u j ^ j w j t n admittedly poorer and less super-ultra stuff, may.and better things may come out of l ) e t h e l , e . j 1 b e & n i c e t e a m o v e r there in New Brunswickthe Hub.
Continued on last page after all.
WOODBRIDGE
SNEATHERS THE SPORT CLOCKTURNED BACK
Better Will CampaignFor Justice Of The Peace
jf Mr. Bfiylan hm\em re turned to tenchin^ fin'l
Wriirht irivpn the now [>UH-
Just Five Year* AgoH 'S
FRIDAV. AH.TST 1*".. lMfi
;«-(.v^v, ,»i«lity '.;•: SJVM-.C -.ha# VSuTing i n ic r r iy w e r e f»Cfii !>>' '!•>' n i ' - p v !
^._ -•:" makinc a choice. M w e e r , ^competent per«on>. which we i!
' - f r year Mr. ' a n ( i '"'>' w l ' i c h vre"'1
i. '"anii « art? Prote«t« asrai'iM the Boar.l ' ; a<*tr i'fiir r«m»urn(f tesi-fc- . ti*u*wi\rt vructfl ifl Isel.m _<)•.;;!'c , ; , r . ; f _ i n Avene'. Se- '-h" week. > "t1 ' * - finaM me:Kr;,-hcv ar.i) ,c:rawVierrv a?.'! f.'hci
; a v i-.::i.i-i : : t f a " w i • i ' ' i fum:' .
.'Sv(- a r i i . . : - r , n : "v.i- t e a
; -r,.- '»'. a .-avitur f>faenuc qualiftc*
fill t'r.e
conceded that Iri-ptpd resiifnationn from t.might have (while still employins; thf-n,
Cour t Upiet Ponib leniirht. after «tntinjr ' h i s
i of the possibility nf Miss\Vriifh: l iavinp a souml ense, Dr.
i- warned that " the Supreme,(^»li('i v^ioQ^ rtpnsiftTT trr the;»•";':an Township Chalmers ruse• •(•Vf.l y<vj ilon't know where you •Miii) " ' The deri'ifm Mi|'t>"rt<"l n ••
In effect. Dr.o u t ) it "destroya the tenir,,«in<r the teftrher can hr f...writ* a resignation ever'.
The der | iBnrsrd's richt to hold
BOTTI HURT DIVIN(!.<•(, R o t t i . 13 , r,f | , i_, •
AventK1! H o p e l a w n . w n » ,•t h e l " f t k n e e " a n d l,r,' |i
a l ' d o w n th i^ wf-i-k -.•. ' ..i-k whil i- d ivini t n, •. •
fiTini t h f \ ; n i r ' , ; r
A : - DORSEY
' A ' .
r , i
**••<• c •: c.:n"iSt;« I. -
: . :n;-t<l v- Matwf that >'•
if* decision. K<-
PETERSON -A - ' i '
!,
V. . ; ,> ' . '
P.
T'.f
I r . s U : :
<-.r H.i'.'trniar: his battery
- Appeal CoillyAT. "ip'peai vould be
ct- t ly "•'•r. it :« Vtlieve'i ••;*:•:« of the area furrow:I ' - rs^y nit* -wi!! i'n.=i?t t!•;,*:er. t*> the hi(fhe"«t if,^
CLOSEONES• j ' L (•
». *. I P.'
; • a -
\ -u, v,, ?
iv.' f* '>pl6i.th^r< wiJ pn;r,t- opposition within rtie c'>'.-;.-
n>:tret t o ' any p r o p o s a l -AT.: J.._ 'I'1''<Id. ><i'i.d}.e t h e ta.XTj£Ver.-e:-"iarg-e, wi th a iarjre c o j r t fee
•There ]•>, on the o t h e r han<l. • ' •a r i r u m s n : t h a t . t h e m a t t e r is V a•:-
Tqr >:' t h a n as it, m e r e l y affect- ••.<. ( j t. , A m b o y Aven ' j e -Gjeen S t r e e t «r<-a'•cr •he • " ' f ' m 6 hold to the op in ion that ' v '
•. ;•!.'; U.SUJ*.'-
c:vi.
C L A S S I F I E D A D S
"<
-,;r.i ;.iare. although the ' ^ t - . - n encompasses the e:.;,i-, . i^ St tve O'Nei! are n a ' u s of - .hHoca! zoning, OP;. : .; fr.i-n.njf their ^-asPti ^ ^ ?" l.1, ' r-Bt ' h e presentjJeM-', :,•••".' .".e- j/'.an. that ;- to:: !t-tru!ar pitcr.er- ar.i
an'i hop*
-.- a:.(jwi>d to .stand, wilfra.the •.vavff.r r.ew on*lauehtc ir.
DOES THE DIZZY ONEWAST TO BE TRADED?
IT h a i.iiv t h a ! t he
isn't more am-
.• n t h i- m
. y v,-'n,-i'.•••.":
I ' l y ^a H - ¥A.!1
sr.ti thai
THIEVES.<C .T.'.ir.ued from page 1 i
Fifty trallon- of (ras wen- ; ,ferc-ii from the garage of Ge"!1^Mi.I.a'JKiiiir. ori Kir.K O f i i / i -i-i-.;. t ; !'"i tralloh.- w e r e t aker . '.<:••:M;,- Mi'ha'.-i < ihrkow>ki of f i , ;Avt-: , t t .(.'etl.er w i t h a t i r e , w••.•.:Mai".;i. H a t a j c z a k , U u r . b a r A . .
i.e-.v ::i-'_- had ' w i n s t r i p p * ' ! f io ;i. • i-a! w h i l e parke iJ ii; fioi.* >•?.i- ;;o : -e .
i i'!.i.-i' p e t t y t h e f t " inc lude 1 ! 'i,<i
BELL'S DRUG STORERAHWAY A V L , CORNER OF GREEN STREETWoodbridge FREE DELIVERY Phones Wdbg.
jtli.h y
he Iia:: o : >ngss,rjli 'H-! r.o>e and t e n poui.ti-tiai!- ar.d t h r e e s t r e e t i s .-to
-f.O'.UJ i*-.V.ii.c.6!U.ho..U5e a t Jli. !• i
i r . t ' r .a r ' : i ! ' . rnaj-JJe dec
i ; r j - : r.e i,a- a - inct-re t iesire w'•:'^: .-• I,<>;;;- win a n o t h e r per.-
""TTTJT! ""AT"TTTT'"I'r'."-'?TTt. Tl'rillTlg.'ht?-".: * ' ' t "*-1
j . ;o*a ' ' . / . ' c(.,]'i pi tch t h e m into s ' ! t e i ' r
'^M^tlTlS^'New Traffic Rales NeededZ- S " r :itVh« bi"ifw Sp^^gy ftacC Wig&f5'rn with injuries. Fit
I . 1 I) I M l II \ l ! l . \ l \ >• a:ir.. and Panne'le': never ouite re- . •, • . - , ,., . , , Tl , -
« « , « : from his -back' s train."" t h e ' " ) l n l o n o f f - h " f o f P " " ' vJii'-V:,on. f.'ritz h a v e »x,t.' Walsh.
!.>:iTi -D-it from time to tun t , and The machines are parked liel-Mt-i f>tt had ' to play third base. j tef-r-selter all over the laiKUcapi-
• Courage like that of the Giants and it j.s virtually impossible foidi.-i.'i'.I- a puiuiatit, dut v i r tue , the two policemeln who are avail-
' always tome under the : a Me for assignment at the t rad ..! '• wiri- 'at the payoff.
Mrs. Leahy AnnouncesDate For Mower Show
Mr-. Tli-in
i I'jh
[.(•!»hy, chaii1-.jTn.-.-.i ' o d i i v t h a t!f...-r.li;"<: ' Wflm'i.ii'-s• i.lii i t , a n n u a l Fa l l
on T l iu i . - duy .
[ gto adequately handle the situation.\)'ith thousands of people millingaV'ourid the area] scores of d"!in.i.
> l i i v e i > tryiti ir t o n i a l j c n 'piii-k' ao ' . - away aiid- t he irf.-noi'al eonfu-
-ion which r e s u l t - ;•. di t l icult pi'n'i-I !'•!(!• (.-oni'miil'. tin;1-!' c h a i n e d witli> [i:c>erviii(f peaci: a n d sa f e ty .
. - h i i
\ l : : c , ( : i l , r ,HM-: i N r H : ! . , ,
d be (.'ivi-n iiiqiie'diate atl'Mfor under the tin-tn'ii-lain
(ielai! of poll •»- raniield rt«;nji,i-ibki l'oi -'.ah
Flower- juaci.->i <f 2 and
KIDSFarberTo Open
_ Inn CalienteJ I i i i ' J ] (1 F a r l j t r h a - a i i i i n i i i i i ' t d
. ('iihl,nmd from p/uir' nttr I tl io o p o n i i i u of t h e I n n f a l i e i i t i : a tt.in.f.-.- ;,t l,at. Mi.- - c u r e d o n . e h i m - ! ' s f ' ampl je l l S t r e e t , K a h w u y . fol-
l o w i n g a K t ' i ' a t i u n s a n d renovaLiunc o m p l e t e d t h i s w e e k .
.-elf a n d d i n v e i n ^ u m j l h n - r u n .Tin i : ( . M a u - t 'roo|/ i-i>, a f'ai1
H-n.-i. . n i ' i i v r r y r l i ; o l f i ce r a n d ' ]i(i- |, M r . ' F a r b e r a n n o u n t e i l t o d a y
U-tr
l ^ f i -r | | [ J ' ^ * / >L * ' I '* * / J L l l " . 1 L I | | l J J \ ' *
T* - i f A b» k l | \ , | bh I L I 1 V M I I \ . ^ . 1 I V ^ ' I L i >
l ice frtiin l.indi.ii. I losc l lc , Kli/.a- J t h a t un o r c h e s t r a will j jnivjde jmi-bi-Ui. Ni-v.Mrk, ihicki-n.-.iKk, J e r s e y s i t , f o r d a n c i n g W e d j i e v l a y , F r i -C i i v ui,i | New York es to r t t -d t h ec.-d'avL, of •>- bu.-,,, in the Fold
i i n i t « i : r * t ^ i : i i » < v l i M A R T .1 ' ! . i : - 7-. Ni-.v f' .r ' ii .. • • - ! ' • ; • • A n . H o v
Not One Mislaid!i;','!; :!un of the c ildren
NOTICEliOHKItT •!.
to tl)
had to change fiorn their busesand 'jo by ferry and subway lo the
day nnd Saturday evtiliiit'T, witiia floor show every Saturday nijrht.
Entering Inn Caliente, the dec-oration Vchenit rebuilds one ofold Mexico. Mui.ala well- execut-ed by R. T'lawfoiil Benjamin, of
y y Ar,i,i « ini^hap limned the I ^V
Kld l d
Avunel, formerly u lii'oathvayI ' iI I I - • - , , • , , , i . , i . " ' " ' • '""• ™ i ! i " " » i ' » l » | ™ " " • • M - c i H C a r t i s t . 1 l i e l r o n l - o t
."', '•'•'••• - > ' ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' I I J " . ; " ' n a y . Xot a. chi ld w a s mislaid ' e v e n . bu i ld in ic has a N o i * e n d e t o
L " ' ' ' '"' ' "! ' , '" ' v , i <•"' t ' -mpovi i r i ly a n d , us (-'ox >aid w i t h l l u l x .sei1ible u M e x i c a n scene-.fc'"V: • " i l 1 "•-•••" I'L-tu'l ( " I i - „ w , . U r y .smile l a s t ni , fht , t h a t r e p - , , . , ; , ; , ; . , :
yartist. Tlic front- ,jf tin
oralc-i
l o r p r i r i n i
s i ! ,:•'•. : ;,t k u b i - n ' - I ti i i . ii J Ii F i i ' e -
u i i . n ' • >-t, \ V o o d ! > i i d ( r e , T o w n -
< l i i | , <,! \V . , . , d ' . r i i ! ; • ( . - , \ . J .
' " ' - • "••'"•• ]i\ i l N - v - - 1 ; " " 1 ' 1 ' " • : - i n r . : c , ,>: h a i l , , . c m v d a i b l a n k i - t'"'••••- • ' i ' i ' t ' - i y ' " w r i t i n i ! t o : | 1 U > , , , , , , , , | u , ( ; i a l l l s - L u m ^ .l i . -I. I ' Mip . t i . l ^ w t i . , h i p f . l e r k , , n ( . , , t . a ] , | | , ^ . l , t h e e u r r e f c t s e r i e s
a p r a c t i c a l l y . i n c r e d i b lperfi*<'li(iii.
It iill (•o.-t. t h e y o i i i i t ' s t c r s on lya ha l f do lb t r ;L]iiiM.'c ftir hu-, fi ire,
In iitidition to fine wines amiii|uors, Mr, Farber,. wil spedalizin .-fi-viiiif dinners.
^ p l m
. ' ' ,' . l ; | l i h K I J - • M l ^ l ' - I { ' c i . lc the pennant
Job Printing inYour Business
In your bmillcu, what-
ever it ii, you ar<" in
...ii.tanl need of print-
ing ul tome tort. At the
Middloex Pre>» you can
K> I lli>- belt at the molt
ifiihiiii'able pricet.
to.ll Ui For An Eitimateon Your Job
MIDDLESEX PRESS18 liREEN STREET
WOODBRIDGE•I,}. WuuilhricltfB S-1710.
SORE MUSCLESquickly relievedwith-RRR1.1 Rubit in. btimulatcslocal cinulation.
^ { ^ A l t s comforting' warmth 6oothei
muicular aches and paint.Used fur H7 ytarn to rtlieve stiffjoints, neuralgia and oprainfi.Reduct'b inflammation. I'ene-tratei. Duet nut blister.
RADWAY'SREADY RELIEF
GAS PAINSwind mlu and ttumai;li distressMinrt- i|ukkly relieved witti" R R R". TKe comfortingwarmth, uf a teaspounful In aglass u( hut water expella B»tunit brin^b you prompt relief.Great for that "morning after"feeling
BKHglva comforting warmthKattrnally and lnttrmlly
BUSINESSMEN'S EXCURSIONTO PLAYLAND SUNDAY
Ovur lil'ly local busiiu->> 1>I;II)I]I;and ihei.r friunjls will enjoy a boatexcursion to Hayland, It.ve lk:a<li.
!.\'if\v Vifik, Sunday. Private au-lip|nnliiit|s will leave the Wood-liridK'e I'ailroad stutioi! at h:l.', A.\lf The boat leave's Ewhaii^cI'ljice, Jersey City, !itjlt::iU A, M.
BITTEN BY DOG]iarl/aia Siheider, 11, of Sil/.er
Avenue, in Iselin Wii l.dtten onthe leit arm this Week liy a doyowned by Hurry Lake, CoujieiA \ i ii in1 .
I ' - ' iv ' MI N t u l . i.11,1 .U,: , , ! A I I K H - I
w I., r . ih T i i n i r .
PR. WALTER FAGANSURGEON CHIROPODIST
FOOT AILMENTS143 Smith St., PERTH AMBOYm u m s : I< IHI> u : : tn . u , i . s i i - r . , 7 - s
^ ' ^ n m ^ U N K S H A V . ' i • ; I U - 1 2 , I . : I I I - 5
k i M i t t i . ;i.- l ' - i -1- M v s i t ktMn-likii i i lh . i k r t i
I l l s w
,n!.I I-., i.• I , iiH I',,
l\ • ! Hi
,||I.SW <-r Hi.- I,III u l r,,i , , | ,l,..f,,4-i
i H I.I (.Mn-likiik i i j u i i J l y . , z
lii-.ir iHi.t , , | ' isl.hiiiiiihi, i.II ,. . .u i i > i i . i i i t - 1 , u s : , , o r H I D > . : I I . I i . i i j
w i l l I n ' l i l l i i - l l ; i . K t ' u l l l i ' M , " l . m i l l , n 1
y u t i' I ' l l * - H H l i I 1 , 1 1 1 i n l i l i . l n , I ' , , i . , ' , , - .
Ml'» l ik i ' l . "»( | a ! o ' ' l (n i tw 'n a '^ ' l ' I -1 . ' i :
l i i i , i i in l I ' i i i i i . - k i t w i i i M M . k . iU l i ' i w n u s T i i l a w k n w i ; t M . M / . | ,w i f e , l o T i i n l l y l l i i i l i l i n i j, - \SMH'1U. I l (m • o f K l l z u l i e i lJ n - n t y Cii l ' i i i i l -ul i i iM, o n | M " | / 'n i l f i l u i l U u k T I I I - I'.niiil. I .. 11\\ ' l l l> i | l l l ' l l \g | - Ti lWIIHll l l i . I '.UNI . ,Ml i l i l l eS fX . N e w .li-l'N'rV: il I|. | , ' , | ,l l i ' i - t ln i E i l i ' l n i i i n , u n ; ii i . i ' | . . ,i , j f
I ' l i ' l a n t l ie i 'UUS,. v m i i l l . . II,.. f,,;.M m w h o I K I M H :I n i ' i i i K i i K ' I ' l i i i . i . ,
h i l l ut' c u m i i l i i l i t l . . ^
'MIUITIN Ko'l'Siii'TSolicitor l/f ''"IllI'Lui,.,!,!
207 liUMul HliVtt,•' Elliftbtth, NVw JersujW. I. 8-9, 16, as, 3i). '
GRAND OPENINGITOMORROW, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THIS GREAT EVENT1
Free Candy!STRICTLY. FRESH SALT-WAJER KISSESWITH EVERY 50c PURCHASE OR OVER
ON OPENING DAY
Free Cigars!TO EVERY GENTLEMAN VISITINGOUR FULLf STOCKED AND UP-TO-
DATE TOBACCO DEPARTMENT
Free Ice Cream!A PACKAGE OF THE FAMOUS
MOGLIAS ICE CREAM WITH EVERYPURCHASE
BELL'S DRUG STORE WISHES TO ANNOUNCE TOthe public that it is ready to *e*e you ali the time with ev*rything that gee. with an up-to-date DRUG STORE. DRUGS, PATENT MEDI-
CINES, SICK ROOM and HOSPrTAL SUPPLIES, TOILET ARTICLES, CANDY, SMOKES and ICE CREAM. OUR PRESCRIPTION DEPART.
MENT will give prompt and cartful attention to ail Doctors' orders. AH goods are FRESH AND PURE.
MAKE OUR DRUG STORE YOURDRUG STORE FOR EVERYTHING
YOU NEED
REGISTERED PHARMACIST INICHARGE AT ALL TIMES
Our Store Is Entirely New - - EvenDepartment Has Been FullyEquipped With New Goods
INDIVIDUAL SERVICE: Give u» an opportunity to serve you. You'l! receive prompt and courteous attention. Make this your Drug Sin
and feel perfectly free to call on us at all times. We are careful druggists and cur aim is to be the best Drug Store in town.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES-PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
Reg. 25c Size
FEENAMINT
Special 14c
REG. 85c
KruschenSALTS
Special 47c
25tListerine
SHAVINGCREAM
Special 14c'
25c SIZEListerine
TOOTHPASTE
Special 14c
" 50c
PepsodentTOOTHPASTE
Special 29c
" 2 5 c "•"
RUBBINGALCOHOLFULL PINT
Special 9c
REG. 35c -Double pistiil-
WITCHHAZEL
FULL PINT
Special 12c
60cCALIFORNIA
FIG SYRUPSpecial 37c
REG. $1.00Houbigant's
DUSTINGPOWDER
Special 79c
Dr. Brown's Genuine ASPIRIN, 5 gr. 100 tab. Spec. 19c
25,c SEIDLITZ POWDERS 1-doz. Spec ia l l i e
75c Lady Nan COLD CREAM Special 29c
$1.00 BLAIRS FOR GRAY HAIR Special 49c
75c Coty's
FACEPOWDER
Special 54c
REG. 25c
MYSTICCream
Combination
Special 19c
$h00BEEF, IRON
&WINEFull Pint "
Special 49c
50cMILK OF.
MAGNESIAFULL PINT
• Special 24c
75c ENO SALTS50c DR. DICKES SHAMPOO
Special 36c
Special 19c
Reg, 25c
EX-LAX
SpecialHc
$1.25'Fountain Syringe
o/Hot Water BagGUARANTEED
Special 59c
50c
BAY RUM
Special 17c
25c i .COLGATESor
WILLIAMS
T#LC for MenSpecial H e
REG. $1.25PINAUD EAU DE QUININE
HAIR TONICANC 35c COMB
Both for 77c
REG. $1.25
Gilbert ALARM tLOCKGUARANTEED
DOROTHY GRAY KITCONSISTS OF
Cleansing Cream, TextureLotion & Suppling Cream
Special 98c
SHOE TREESFor Men and Women
ALL SIZES
Special 17c
25c
Squibbs'
TOOTHPASTESpecial 14c
REG. 2 i c
Johnson's *
BABY TALC
Special 16c
I l . - . . , i .. , •,->.•.
75c
Squibbs'
ASPIRIN5 gr. 100 Utv
Special 34c
COLD CREAM
Baby ,
CASTILE SOAPMade with Olive Oil
3 fofor 19c
REG. 60cCONDENSED
JAD SALTS
Special 37c
$1.00
OVALTINE
Special 51c
10c SIZEPalmolive
orLifebuoy
SOAP{Special 2c
% Tp Cmtomer
25c PITCH'S SHAVING CREAM
10c
L U XS O A P
Special 5c3 To Cuitomer
10cWoodbury
FACIALSOA.P
Special 5c2 T> Customer
Special 14c
35c LIFE BUOY SHAVfflG CREAM Special 17c
10c TOILET PUMICE STONE Special 5c5O.c SPEARMINT TOOTH PASTE Special 19c25c PHILLIPS DENTAL CREAM Special 14c50c WILLIAM'S AQUA VELVA Special 29c
Reg. $1.25
J5ERUTAN
Special 84c
REG. 25c
DIAMOND *
Floating- SOAP
Special 4c
REG. 25cDentalac
TOOTHBRUSH
Special 9c
$1.5Q VALUE
Jeris
HAIR BRUSHPURE BRISTLES
Special 49c
35c SIZEWILLIAMS
G L I D E RBrush less
Shave CREAMSpecial 14c
10c
STYPTICPENCIL
; Special 3c
35c
GEMBLADESPk(. of 8
Special 19c
Res 50cDr. Brown
TOOTHPOWDER
Special 19c
50cJeris :
HAIRTONIC
Special 19c
Pive,rsImported
PERFUMESpec. 3 for 25c
Gillette
BLADES *Pkg. of 5
Special 16c
• 1 —
REG. 60c
Wild Root
HAIR TONICSpecial 39c
50c
Kolynos
TOTH
Special 31c
REG. 50cDr. Lyons'
TOOTHPOWDER
Special 31c
25c
NAILBRUSHESSpecial 9c3 for 25c