crad the woodbridge leader* 2 per copy - digifind-it · crade crossings, must go ! 1 the woodbridge...

8
CRAD E CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 . AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP ^ Per Copy rtKTH YEAR Woodbridge, N. J., FrWay Afternoon, April 5, 1929 PRICE TWO FIRE RESCUE SCENE TO BE STAGED"AS PART OF FORDS COMMUNITY FILM I prfl Will SaVe Fair Heroine from Flaming Ruins as Fire- men Fight "Blaze" and Smoke Under Direction oi Cameraman Dan Dorn. To SEEKS icESTATE AID John Balia and.John Uodash, both . f l ) A PfJ|/> lfi years old. who escaped Irom the if RArTlv. County Workhoifge last Thursday afternoon, walked Into police head- quarters'here last Saturday morning and gave themselves up. Both boys \ll ll , y , w on discarded overcoats, l'oiiee, who i had been notified of UiPlr «HCape,| *ere watching the UndaBh home h b ' M Member oi Lions Club, He Tackles Highway Safety Problem. .. ... , ,, ,, , . , , ... , *ere watching the UndaBh home Mayor Jtfllliam A. llynn wan made the thrills 01 a Hollywood studio, lot, Ate promised (when th* boy's Mother came out and a number of the Wnorti.rln^ l.lons hen Dan Don., tfRed Bank, communityfilmicarnera- fcf^"ft ^ ^ ^ & f f i J S Bank, community film photograph aitre scene tq,,bj3 used as part of the ununity.nim tipw b^ing produced. Miirjprie Maier, pretty heroine of the film, will be rescued Con taken back to the county work- ! evening Mftyor Ryan's rtame " *** ! » ^l blaring building'', by. Dick Predmore,'thrkwrt ^ ^ ^ * nvn, Keasbey and R*ritannre depttrtment nRparatu« and oners when they decided to . «f tho cnmnJinipR Will twist '" - 'walk. They stole rides on tr -IS 01 WO Companies .Will assiSl. jCrftet h th t T house ln^ custody 'of an officer. ' V--{ suggested a*'delegate to the Balia and Bqdwh bad been gen-. al Convention to •&<• held In Louis- tenced la police court here on March vtlle, Kentucky, In June, but .he de- iin'is of the companies .Will assist. < Hare of the flames and the belching smoke, will be-'nmi (I by light flares firifl smoke bombs, which, though not MAYOR Will AWARD SLOGAN; CONTEST PRIZES ness advantages of the Fords s«c- . I tlon. School Children Will Receive | «iKnr, IO win n b e e t "n 1 -liced ?a e ceiiuioid Awards at State Theatre Tomorrow Evening. . .. . . , , ' t was.the second time that Dd- In tho least danmious, will produce da H|I ha.d escaped from'the in«titu- a realistic scent! when the . film. 1 tlon. tinted a llama red, will be shown at the Vwtm Theativ utter it» comple-l tlon. t ' , 1 The flrV Bceno IR only one of a (fern-n (if liitereHtiii;; episodes in tht> ; community plctun;, whose object IN. to set forth the residential'and bvtsi-i tnke a ship Committee,' would compel him trucks to tt( foregp the pleasure of the trip, CurtWet where they Hpent Thursday | The matter-(rf maktuc axholce of a Krlday, night In a deserted delegate was laid on the- table until , '• •• the next meeting. • . - Mayor Ryan, who wns called upon several time* when a- dlscusatoii tiroHe as to waat tbe club might" do to help protect traffic on Amboy ave- nue near•••'.'TMfBtMkVfn",.B«ld be had burn working on the problem for some time. He explained that he had made efforts- to ^et the State to pay part of the salary of an officer to take care, of traftV, but had BO far met with no assurance of co-opera- tion. Ternkjn^-it unJUBt that the Town- compelled to imy H mnn's! WILL PLANT TREES , ON ARBOR DAY: Cameraman who has life. 1 bud' over * ' A. uynii win pit ,iinotogivplier, iiruiiuuticea . |,rt?.cH to tho schdoi children ol the most enterprising and un the slogan p r i m In the ant "home towim" he haa I •iind> contest at the State viBited. ^ ' tomorrow evening.. Mrs. A . . . . - - - .__ g% n w, idoliih will Introduce Mayor I f I I \ H W I ) K K ,t the close of the flrst p e r - i " W U ** T T V " " V ... Kl^ht awardu are to be Mayor Ryan and Prof. Love TZ££& S^ITS*"^. J? 11 Speak af Exercises In ^TXXX'Z^ 'Woodbridge Park. „ . t .^uf «& Jilt ..saaoUnfi, JII laJi t .be .used for i the ptfrpdse. Itrwns tlie desire of Finn- trees which have been pur- the Township .Committee, he.ad.ded, chased with money raised by i m p i n g ^ ' j g & i u Y o f fee? they of the TownBhlp Public Schools are' B ho' u ld spend the taxpayer's money h, the publfc school children, |Uil LLU V LJXLLAr , whom are-»ti«nd4«g-(}r«ni«nar.|_*^ _ _ - .fwiM] I niz 1 M... l .:H«Uk.BuilU.the Way I W 1 L i l u L V l 1UIX ;. :tiili -(he Milky Way/' Sub-j ii i.v Raymond-Jackson,.Eighth . . ' _ ' v n ' . . — ... lian-on Avenue School, aged H o p e to Mart raving in lWO l! ! ,',,i ,,ri» e r "Drip-Drop, Never! Weeks; Truck Fleet Busy nil 'Milk fund to the Top.") iiitill by Anna Sowlka, Fourth| i School No. 9, age ten. I _ , „Ml pnw>: "Quarters, Halves,! Contractors working on' the new |]i-,!l,ir Hills, Milk bv. QuartB, Pints highway intersection where the new i;illh." Submitted by Evelyn'Route 25 croBBes the Shore road in <i\ Hiliool No. 1, ago*eleven^ (Avoncl, will begin tha work of lay- '•'""!' Hu«l%«,'rt \imf 1* o«r''"B ll 'e concrete pavement within I." Submitted by tn foe planted with impressive exer- cises in observance of Arbor Day, next Thursday afternoon. Three trees will be planted In Woodbridge for something the suue should pay for, The mayor suggested that the Woodbridge, Rahwuy, Perth Amboy And Linden Lions Clubs endorse the l'ark and the fourth ia to be planted ] idea of the s.tate w i n g for most of on the grounds ot the Colania.iichoQij4 1 , ft «eet et patfoMing the Shore ro»4L TII v-<. Thp in Anto Accident Seen •i Cause of Suicide llroodln* uver 111 health which followed Injuries re- ceived in an automobile acci- dent several weeks ago is be- lieved to ,lmv* been the reason for the alleged suicide of H»rry t'ateman, j(4, g( New Bruns- wick avenue., Ho»eUwh, e»rly yesterday morning, l'gteman, vn6 wdfc uiurried and leaves, two children, la Mid to' have shot himself through the heirt wHh a tthpinnp* and shells which he iind purchased rt- ' cenilj. i " ;30 o'block. yeitarday morning, whlli> Ms family wirve asleep, his wlte, Mary, was Bwakene?i by the noiBe of a •shot and. ran to htsjywm,' whem he was found lyinis on the floor, He ilii <l « few necoiMln. 'lattij'* ' ' , " . "Coroner .p. K. HanSen wnw called and i>ronounced tleatli as due "lo s\iicld*- Tha body was tykt'ji to the Uurke l-'iinornl , Home in I'er.., Aniboy. HIGH SCHOOL FACULH TO STAGE PLAY "Seven Keys to Baldpate", Mystery-Thriller Selected for Annual Event. "The .Siveii KeyH to Baldpate", mystery play, has been chosen,for presentation by the Barron Ave'nue High Sclrbol I'Kcutty on April 26th. and 27th. In the school auditorium. Tbe play promises to be a bigger success than ^the two presentations of past years, "Captain^ Applejack" FIREMEN HOLD STUBBORN BLAZE AT BAY AS 6ALE THREATENS WHOLE SECTION Woodbridfe Hotel, Wo^jlbridgq Lumber Company's Yard, } *nd N««rby Stores Endangered; Firemen Ntrrowly I Escape Injury as Walls Crash. in memory of the late H. Urewster where It pftsaes i Willis, bounty superintendent- of tlve tmralcipalH! The Barrpn Avenue High School % their f eepec- Fire, of unknown 'oHtrin, whkh utai-ted laje Monday noon, destroyed A burn.and maphirTe shop adjototeg the Wobd- Ijtydge Hotel and tlireatene.d for a time to degjroy that h)storjc ' taitdmarR'-[ii the intersection af Green strpjsf arid RahWay avenue. ,<•..'. ' • • , . Seven,ftBemon narrow\y escaped injury *hen falling .•walls toppled',«B the' /lames ate into the wooden rafters and' sills. •. The firemen who escaped injury when the iront wall col- Inpsed were: Fred £ehrer, Harold lilundy, 'Charles Farr and Anton Sila^owski, . Bert Huht. Willinm Prior-and Joseph Eerraro had "*a close shave" wtyeh Iiurning rAfteraand corner posts fell about them aa they-*wfc trapped beiwectv the burning atrueture «nd the wall of a buildinK owned by the Woodbridge Lumber Com- pany which" adjoins the property. Mrs. Catherine Van Ness, owner of the hotel and tho ad- joining property, all of which was formerly part of the William Heilly estate, was workln^on an up-.—. per door of the hotel mid did not|/^f> i fin A W 1O know the wooden siniature WKS I n l | i | \ t t l I n A l f l 111 flames'until §he beard 1 the fire en- v»*w m vw*^i»* MV •"• Tllt *" *" TOASTMASTER AT BANQUET Committeeman Officiates at Dinner Given to Retiring December Grand Jury. Committeeman Jacob r.rausam, ot Woodbridge, wag the toatii muster al '"."SeVeral member* of the cafit have already been cllosen and ; Pills exercises will be held on Thursday i gantzed In the neaf future, Charles EC ^ ner y mornings Supervising" Principal > Schoeneberger was Reeled manager Dr °P er John H, l^Ove ^till- offer the tree to ! and "trainer". •• Mayor William A. fi'yan, chairman! Steve Hruska won the door prlae. ot tlie TownBhlp Committer. nutti I Lion President 1'ord named give a DflettKih, Th« everciseB I Georee McLaughlln, Jim Dunn* and men were called. gt«".tfe«-fti*ffletl ft)) PITflMr fW saving the hotel," stnld Mra. Van Ness on Tuesday. "They certainly dl* excellent work." The flames, fanned by n strong southwest w(nd which reached the force ot a gale at times, threw buck tbe streams of water which were under two hundred pounds' 'pressure, The pump worked at capacity to furnish pressure enough to light the wind sparks and bura- ! in Uie afternoon lot Schools No. 1 concrete pavement r,rendu lwu w <fBiis and No, 1 age with a11 »°»* M « "*»««». t0 out at the local pme: "Give ot fU..titii; Milk ltMtia» Health." j Your ii ; iiini iiy Joe FratteroU, School No. ramps leading from the Kahway'slde to the Shore road and fruin .the Shore Association, 'will recull inoidentB in the life ot County .Superintendent on W1UU at ihe exercises at the Colonia School which Will fulluw.. the jrjge planting here. Tlu J oiganlzation, of Which both men wt-re members, was Wil be for pupils Herbert Schrlmpe, nicinbera of and No. 11. The i speaker's committee for April. 'Foresters Install Officers for 1929 and are to |be rented foi -staging of the show and every effort ia lo be made to make the performance a t ' professional as possible. , The proceedK will be donated to Ing emb,er» aqrqss the street where ««reral store awnings eati«ht flre. Firemen were blinded several times by the' smoke and sand wtiich b hh id hi g, a biuiQuet given.the retiring Decent b T¥ j t Pfff' R^ Q b*r T¥rm Metuchen, l g Pfaff's Res^aurstrt,- st Monday afternoon. tbe high wind swept Into their faces!, they "fought the Committeeman Grausam Intro- the the High Bcliuol library fund. Supervising Principal Love, who Is Benlor supervising principal and the only charter member, oi tlie Middle- sex Cou.nty Supervising Principals road "Help the Milk I and Make Someone Healthy Happy." Submitted by Martin to the Rahwaj section com- the priw: "Milk Uun,8 In the of Health. Submitted by uave-been completed. One wman Third Grade bchool ^ ifd' ml jNo. ii. llti'v'.T |Eiia Newman, Third Grade, School i. 1 1 . The drive, which was to have IIMI tomorrow evening, will be uiriu-d until next Friday ev.enln^,' lowinc a meeting'ot the-workers l<l in the home of E. H. Boyottjln |on Uuhu-ay avenue, Monday evening. i< chairman in charge of the vart- .-. sections of the Township are: |»iis. K. Barth, Avenel; Mrs. George l.lddle, Fords; Miss Marie Dem- A fl>et of thirty trucks have been with only short interruptions due lo Inclement weather, hauling the dirt l for the , g and the approaches all re-inforced' concrete bridge has "been finished .and the three abutments are lti place.. The steel for the,second section Is..J ready "on the Job" and will be. organised at Uie Sewaren Hotel In 1899. * Looked like Burglars, But Wind Gets Blame duced the -speakers including County 01 tne I Prosecutor John E. Toolan, AMII**- .-. J « orn l ei ' u l t 1 lh , e ,«I 1 °P w^reitunt frosecutor Francis A. Mona- It Joined the hotel building. , Thvee| glmn am i Abrahnm Nelson, foreman; lines of hoae were used off the o t t h e tetlr , ng Jury , ZSf JKSf. ; . % ! « ^ t «•;• «-usa ra conducted the after- ' ^T-SS^tv^liS^l^n » ™> wlth ft fe * a " 1 n'murks/and, to the rear of the building, Ir sHinied to be the opinion: Of tfr8> The annual instnlliition ofi officers of Cuurt Barroji, t'oreatets o( America, was held'In lt 'e Hungarian' Reformed church hall on School' street Monday evening, John Al- Golf Tourneys to Start Soon at C o l o n i a Club in J In a le.W..d»y B ' [bright, grand junior woodward of the local court, conducted tbe cere- 1 ' irtDny. He wau iiasisted by Thomass i Smith, supervising deputy, grand 'chief ranger of Carteret. The officers- installed were; Michael Goulilon,-chief range.v; William Gecsey, sub chief ranger; Daniel Ternaj-, lecturer; Jacob Gor- ! don, treasurer; William Fenton, re- cording secretary; August 'Dernier, financial secretary; Michael Kleley, , senior woodward; Thomas Katii, tl )e j junior woodward and John Elnhom, senior beatle; John Leffler, junior ; Sewaren; Mrs. A. •¥. Woodbridge. Ran- "lie dollar will lake care of one Iclnld for one week. It Is honed to •ti Iliin this t'linducted In than two years, the most »UC- il ever held. will is a pa . 1 dHve which is the first = g ^ jfted in theTownBhlp In Thu B „,„ and ., pleted before the highway can be used, will cost more than a quarter of a million dollars. The design Is unique and was devised by engineers of the State Highway Department to eliminate all lett hand turns and to avojd crossing at grade of traffic t l The Board of Directors of (Colonla Country Club will hold u _ interne 'special meeting Mtraday evening to I beatle; Thomas Gerlty, trustee for 'map out a program 1 for the year 1| flve yearBt Francis J. Kenna, a member of Courj Barron and deputy grand. chief ranger of Court Standard of Perth Amboy, was elected represen-. The high wind la^e Monday afternoon is blamed for wTOt appeared to be two breaks in . Iseliti homes. Windows* wen? shattered and silverware strewn about •+fte floo» in both housea. S r e r J r ^ Brwmett, of War- wick avenue, .called'"utiltce''arid"" said that her home and one ad- jacent to it in which a Airs. ^Pcraflwmtt lives, had been en- tered. Windows were ruthless? ly broken and silverware- wlilch had been on the table was thrown about In both houseB, she said. Motorcycle Officer (Jeorge , Ballnt was sent to Investigate, He found unnilBtakuble evi- . dence that the wind Imd shat- tered the panes of glass and had blown things about indoors. p critics that the proper tfay to light keeping the entertainment entertain- The affair was pronounced: by chance to curry ci^tjrfir wbldv might have -Ignited evpiy butldiris to 'the, vicinity, Tlie damage to nenrby butldlnt;a f Proaecutaj. f i i n of^vh* (f«i{t4'-J«l'y from tliin'S to tlie prysent day. the lest times to the present day. He described It as a "filter" between the ^ ^ is a pa . »«P out p K have to be com-1 The dates for golf tournaments and nuvo IU.UC vum , , t(-hnn will nrnhahlv nfi special cup matches will probably be deflaitely set and the program for tlie official opening arranged. Jiights to Stage Cohan ...„ work on the Karltan ftlver Bridge, one of th# largest units of I the new highway route, has been re- tarded during the winter mouths, U is expected that wanner weather will see increased activity on the structure which i».scheduled to be completed during the present year. May L Heksch Opens Violin 20 at Atlantic City. Studio at Sewaren were started Wednes- by* members of Mlddle- I'ouncil, Knights o/ Columbus i he prosentaMon of "The Mean- Man in the World", a George M. Cohan play. The performance |be stoned at the St. James'' Scnooi i» liii<iiiiii-iuiu on May 2. William I i (lei'ly, uf Criintord, is coaching Henry Heksch, director of the t-onal Conservatory of Musi,^ o Golfers have been turning\ out in tative to attend the Forestar's Con- large numbers duvins the pdat few |cention to be held on May 18, 29 and week-ends. More'than sixty kddlctal" 1 ' Lx *"--"- ""•• ot the ancient and honorable game were outon the links laBt "Sunday afternoon. The greens aD«J fairways are now in excellent condition and ready for, the sumraef'a Bport. The officers of the elub are' C. D. | Snedeker, president; Oscar A. WU- (Oontlnued on Page 7) M. £. Sunday School Plans Children's Fete The Sunday School Board Of the Methodist Episcopal church will hold a Children's Day fete early in June. Many G u e s t s at C D . A. Party will not be more than a few dollars. lml v iv ! 1 ? ual b . rough ! ^ tore ._ l . >ie c6urt!i Thtj loss at the Van Ness property is covtred by Insurance. * New Firemen's Organization Is Launched Here and the "It 1B the duty of the grand Jury and the prosecutor's office not only to secure indictment of the guilty," Hiild Mr. Toolan, "but to protect Uie innocent and those who through un- fortunate circumstance* and not through criminal intent, have be- come entangled In the meshes of the law." Local K. oiC. to Attend Annual 5-day Retreat Twenty members, of Middlesex Council, Knights of Columbus, will attend an annual retrfeat to be given by the Redemptorist Fathers in the St. Alphonso Retreat HouBe on West End, near Long Branch, on May 10, 11 and 12. Local Knlghls will leave on Friday evening and the retreat services will begin at 8 P.M. Rev. Fr, Turner will conduct exerciseB. A branch of the International Firefighters 1 Association to be known as Local No. 21)0, of the Uniformed 28 Births, 18 Deaths Recorded in March organ- Twenty-eight births and eighteen deaths were, recorded at the office of Wood- | t h e B o a r d of Health'iMt month, ac I Firemen's Asaociatlon was lsed by seven members of tiiD „„„ bridge Fire Company, No. 1, Mon- ! cor d| n g day evening. A charter has already Health been granted the local and .meetings! whlch wa ¥ filed" with the Board'ot are to be.held on the flrst Monday Health in their meeting Monday ere- of each month to the monthly report of Inspector Peter Peterson, 'Ing. Local Post to Co-operate in Safety Week Program Court .Mercedes, C. D. A., held, a very successful card party in the Columbian Club rooms Monday eve- . . . . __ ning, more than a hundred guests|Legion, .will'endorse The Cardtnala being present, j Mrs. F. Witheridge i an <} enter them in the State League was chairman of the committee in' o f junior teams fostered by Legion- """'" "' l Th ftl T t wjy furnish Woodbridge I'ost, 87, ^American charge of the iirrangements. W. Kennedy, of Avegel, waa awarded a special prlze v Non-players' prizes ••»»•» -- . Preliminary plans for the went were were awarded to Michael Goulden, 1'erth Amboy, and a graduate °»- *^i made at a.meeting ot the Board- hi i Mrs. T. Seiners, 11 «< P. S. Mayo aud American Institute of Music wll ' ' - - - a. violin Instruction studio at 1 dSe WuV^rrK ad' TroTieycrossing tomorrow after 'ThoBH. taking part'are: Margaret j cept beginners as well us 'lily, Helen Daltbn, Ethel Cam- pupils. «n. Kllen Campion, Andrew DOB- u«d, John Campion, David Gerlty, IIDIHUH. Drennan, James Mulllns, J. i\ (Serlty, Jt M WUtflfl,Keating and the home of Mr. and MrB. Van O. Manger, of Hidgedale avenue, Mon- day evening. Mrs. Van G. Munger was elected chairman of the commit. Mrs, T. Oertty. \ Prizes In the games were awarded to the following: fridge: Mrs.. Alfred Coley, Mrs. Woodbridge ro3 and reel enthusl- at» (locked to the annual flsher- nens get-together held at the 9'erth Amboy ' Hardware C<jj.'s store (last night. . Harry M. Jackgon, of High street, ^upending a month at his camp- iie near High Bridge, N. J. • ttlllyaid Humphreys, ot HUDJ- & Hyan, ii 111'aVhis L p 8 T beagle hound, answers ta "Tin' 1 HJHV.. klaAlr ivht(Q ill Mule ame P<lly. g un, "Tip". Baftr',black, Has six white tips, npie, ft d t t ix hite tip, p, four feet. Reward tor return to list Main street. Turner Howell Elected Rotary jClttb President P. Turner Hpwell, of Sewaren, was elected president ot the Woodbrldge Kotary Club at tlie weekly luncheon held In the Craftismen's Club yester- day. Township Engineer .George E. Merrill was elected vice-president, Aylin 'Plerson, ol Perth Amboy was the Bpeaker. His related inci- whlch occurred OP «»hlu« tr'PJ h« has made"within the last Th^^lUb voted to entertain the Lions' Club of Wpodbridge at a din- ner and to bowl them afterwards at a date to be announced later. Householder Mutt Aid tee In otiarge of the arrangements, j . F, Ryan, 'Mis. .M. P. Schubert, She will be assisted by MrB. Frank Mrs. Morrison Chrintle and, Helen McDonald, Mm. A..S,.Bergen, Mrs. - Ralph Stautfer and Miss Helen Pot- A report on the activities of the home department, which was organ' Issed a year ago, was read by the few isied a year ago, y Superintendent, MrB. A. B. Fitz- gerald. alres. The ftcal Tost furnish emblems for the baseball uniforms. The Cards, last year's Township champs, will play their Brut game of the season Sunday afternoon. ' Indi- cations are that the pine will be a (Stronger outfit this year than- they were last. Wpodbridgei Post will also aid in Milk Licenses Granted Three milk licenses were granted of each month. The charter members are: Arthur Hunt, Fred Mawbey-, A". J. Thomp- son, Leo Gorrls, William Allgaier, Charles Acker and Fred Zehr6i._ The officers elected at the organ- ization meeting were: Arthur Hunt, byThe"Board O f Healttrduriiig the president; Fred Mfcwbey, vice-preBi- monln of March, according to the dent; A. J, Thompson, secretary and i report o f Health Inspector Peter treasurer; Leo Gorris, sergeant-at- p e r s o n filed with tbe Board Mon- arms; Wlllfcm' Allgaier, Charles day . even i, lt; . Those -granted It- Acker and Fred Zehrer, trustees. Nathan Duff Appointed Land Case Commissioner Attorney Nutkan Duff, of Duff and Duff, ' WoodbiiJjge, haa been ap- .polnted a commUsloner to examine and appraise the lands of John and Mary Bohaca, and to fix compensa- tion for certain glands to be paid therefor. , Thu appointment was FOilltBP room house, alter April 1st. Splendid locaUon, Butment. i»- false, all Improvements. 114. Phone Frederic* H. Co, IN»TO4NOB AXD" Sewartn, N. J. h M'8 CAREFUL DRIVERS TO GET 10 % DISCOUNT A ten per cent discount to care- ful drivers will be granted by J. H. Concannqn, Woodbridg,e agent, of the Travelers' Insurance Company, on all policies written after March 25th,, 1929, it was announced at the office of the local real Estate and Insurance ilrin last night. "This generous reduction is a premium paid tp the oereful driver, who should not, bear the Increased Insurance burden created by the 'reokleM motorist," Mid Mr. C o w in War on Mosquitoes » oni ""in addition totoe '" ' •• ,we offer a.time payment It New Jersey U to be moMiuitoet during the coining sum- . «r the co-oueratlon of household- free from enables every car owfler to be WUy Dr, mer, the co-operatloi ers ia esBentlal, according to Thoniu J..Headlw. State Entomolo- gUt Dr. Headlee, speaking over Itation WOS.on the Rutgers Uiver ta last We dtibenltiN in th« fl«ht to S mosaultoes Ues In water ttontalnfiM f stopped up r S r t t m w d d«H»fc rain barrels and rsiatub». » •- and completely lld t without ing compelled to. pay tlje full amount within thirty days." POLICE FIND CAR An autP.valued at MOO owned by Samuel Mahler, ol 7»'O«rdon »twet, was found abandoned, on rt street. Av«»jl, 8 d f « w bV Pftroiman M bld«» Pollc« Donahue. Whist: Mrs. KatherlneTlannagan, Mrs. J. B. Levl, Mrs. A. H. Ernst, Mrs. T. Thompson, Euchre: Mrs. H, A. Neder, Alice Sandalil. Pinochle; Mru. Julius Rhode, Mrs. E, Troat. Mrs, Patrick Campion, Mrs, Bdward Einhorn, Mia. Walter Gray, Mra. Thomas CoupUnd, Thomas Kath, Walter Gray, W. A. Goden, Mrs. Little, Mrs. P. W. Murphy. Pan-Tan: Mrs. Chris Witting, Mrs. August Uaumann, Margaret Moore, Mrs. Michael Conole, MrB, George Finn, MIB. William Golden, Mrs. C. J. Walsh. '< Rutgers Expert to Give Radio Talk on Poultry Prof. Wllliaid 0. Thompson, pro- fessor of poultry husbandry at.Rut- 'gers (Jnwemlty and naultry husban- man at the State Agricultural Ex- periment Station, wlfi give a radio address on "Giving the Chickens a Chance" over Station WOB at 6 o'clock Saturday afternoon, April 13. Th« address Is dn» of the series ot ten talks on agriculture subjects by members of the Rutgtre faculty, and will be ot Btfeciat appeal to the looal people Interested la rftialntf ohlckeuB, opening the-..Safety Week program made , b ' y Hupre me Court Justice in Perth Amboy 'Monday evening. Clare ri ce E Case, The Bugle and Drum Corps has been lnvlt«d;™to participate in a para4e-o» Monday evening to be given under the ausploes of. I'trth Amboy Post No. 45. censes were: Rorden's .Farm Prod- ucts Compainv Madison avenue, Plainfield; l'aulua Dairy Company, New Btreet, JMew PrunswUk; Wood- brook FarniB, Metuchen. Announcetl ' The engagement of MisB Ann Duff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Duff, of 59 Brook street, Woodbridge, to Jack Dober, of Lakewood, was an- nounced yesterday by Mrs, Duff, Tho wedding'will take ptace at Lakewood on"M*r Sth. New K . t o ( C Members Will be Initiated Twenty candidates will be Initi- ated Into the .nm degree otthe Knights of Columbus by officers ol Middlesex Council in the Columbian Club rooms n^tt Thursday evening. Members of. nearby councils^ have been invited to attend and a social hour will follow the ceremouy. The flame gtow will be given their second degree at the Colum- bian Club on Thursday evening- April 11th. They will receive the last degree on April 88th... at the Knights' of Columbus headquarters in New Brunswick. State oncers will asttint in th« latter oeremouy af Horseless Buggy in Spotlight at Rahway Avenue Fire fire. w t which condldftteB ik y Carteret. and A horseless carriage is more of'an attraction than a big Joe Herbert, Fords garageman, came to the fire in Wood- bridge Monday afternoon in an "International" "horseless buggy" built between J892 and 1898. Crowds who had been watching the flames turned and ran from the scerie when Herbert's auto came down the streot puffing and belching blue Tlie car isa genuine, antique. It was the second drivert affair purchased bya resident of the Township. The - - ':..-' . - relic'B nrst owner was Dr. S. Lock- na l\ • • wood, a Lveterln&ry surgeon, Who- rLT6 U 6 S t F 0 V 8 1Vedou Rahway * veuue until nls White ft fle»s, ftwu, l « » l realtors, plan to re-open th« "Brajnar,d Lakto Park" dev«lPPW«ni.^ Qranbury in the near future. which condldftteB fronj New Brunswick will a>o te initiated, CYCUST HURT Theodore A«yn, ot Harriet street, Arenel, was Sightly Injured last aaturday 1 att^opn, and a btoycle wnloa he was riding was badly dam-. ag«d when It tiruck the rear endot a truefcirwk by Stephen. Superior, of Left street, Port Beading, Tbe fias owiied bythe I*b«r Coal Home Furnishings Fire,' of unknoiro origin, did sev- eral hundred doHan) worth ot dam- age to the cellar and furnishings in a basement kitchen In the home qf Alex Deak, at. UQ Bamtord avenue, Tuesday alternooi. The blase waa Bonaned to the lower floor ot th.e bouse which 1» WW* by Alex BaJ Th l U WltUlly «<"ered b b int. .The loss U l»»uran«e. Al «<"ered by death about ten years ago. Herbert got the caf about « year ago and took it to his garage where he put It In running' condition, He- claims it will do thirty >mlle» an hour—on tbe level. It bas two speeds forward and two cylinder^— aft. It Is steered with a lever and . driven by a- ojiain. K bat 90 sell starter but <tt bat a w w s e gear. All efforts to,establish the eiMt ' age ot the vehicle Inetudlug a *ee,rch ot the recordi of the InternaUenai Harveeter Company, bM» Um fruit*. .'*

Upload: others

Post on 01-Jun-2020

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

C R A D E CROSSINGS,

MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2. A N INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP ^

Per Copy

rtKTH YEAR Woodbridge, N. J., FrWay Afternoon, April 5, 1929 PRICE TWO

FIRE RESCUE SCENE TOBE STAGED"AS PART OF

FORDS COMMUNITY FILMIprfl Will SaVe Fair Heroine from Flaming Ruins as Fire-

men Fight "Blaze" and Smoke Under Direction oiCameraman Dan Dorn.

To SEEKSicESTATE AID

John Balia and.John Uodash, both . f l ) A P f J | / >lfi years old. who escaped Irom the i f R A r T l v .County Workhoifge last Thursdayafternoon, walked Into police head-quarters'here last Saturday morningand gave themselves up. Both boys

\ll

l l , y , w

on discarded overcoats, l'oiiee, who ihad been notified of UiPlr «HCape,|*ere watching the UndaBh home

h b ' M

Member oi LionsClub, He Tackles HighwaySafety Problem.

.. ... , , , ,, , . , , ... , *ere watching the UndaBh home Mayor Jtfllliam A. llynn wan madethe thrills 01 a Hollywood studio, lot, Ate promised (when th* boy's Mother came out and a number of the Wnorti.rln^ l.lons

hen Dan Don., tfRed Bank, communityfilmicarnera- fcf^"ft ^ ^ ^ & f f i J SBank, community filmphotograph ai t re scene tq,,bj3 used as part of the

ununity.nim tipw b^ing produced.Miirjprie Maier, pretty heroine of the film, will be rescued

Con

taken back to the county work-! evening Mftyor Ryan's rtame" * * * ! » ^ l

blaring building'', by. Dick Predmore,'thrkwrt ^ ^ ^ *nvn, Keasbey and R*ritannre depttrtment nRparatu« and oners when they decided to. «f tho cnmnJinipR Will twist ' " - 'walk. They stole rides on tr

-IS 01 WO Companies .Will assiSl. jCr f t e t h th t T

house ln custody 'of an officer. ' V- -{ suggested a*'delegate to theBalia and Bqdwh bad been gen-. al Convention to •&<• held In Louis-

tenced la police court here on March vtlle, Kentucky, In June, but .he de-

iin'is of the companies .Will assist.< Hare of the flames and the belching smoke, will be-'nmi(I by light flares firifl smoke bombs, which, though not

M A Y O R W i l lAWARD SLOGAN;CONTEST PRIZES ness advantages of the Fords s«c-

. I tlon. •

School Children Will Receive | «iKnr,IOwinnbee t"n1-liced ?aeceiiuioidAwards at State TheatreTomorrow Evening.

. .. . . , „ , ' t was.the second time that Dd-In tho least danmious, will produce da H|I ha.d escaped from'the in«titu-a realistic scent! when the . film.1 tlon.tinted a llama red, will be shown atthe Vwtm Theativ utter it» comple-ltlon. t ' , 1

The flrV Bceno IR only one of a(fern-n (if liitereHtiii;; episodes in tht>;

community plctun;, whose object IN.to set forth the residential'and bvtsi-i

tnke a ship Committee,' would compel himtrucks to tt( foregp the pleasure of the trip,

CurtWet where they Hpent Thursday | The matter-(rf maktuc axholce of aKrlday, night In a deserted delegate was laid on the- table until

, '• •• the next meeting. • . -Mayor Ryan, who wns called upon

several time* when a- dlscusatoiitiroHe as to waat tbe club might" doto help protect traffic on Amboy ave-nue near •••'.'TMfBtMkVfn",.B«ld be hadburn working on the problem forsome time. He explained that hehad made efforts- to ^et the State topay part of the salary of an officerto take care, of traftV, but had BO farmet with no assurance of co-opera-tion.

Ternkjn^-it unJUBt that the Town-compelled to imy H mnn's!

WILLPLANT TREES ,

ON ARBOR DAY:

Cameraman who haslife. 1bud'

over

• * '

A. uynii win pit ,iinotogivplier, iiruiiuuticea. |,rt?.cH to tho schdoi children ol the most enterprising andun the slogan p r im In the ant "home towim" he haa

I •iind> contest at the State viBited. ^ 'tomorrow evening.. Mrs. A. . . . - - - . _ _ g% n w,

idoliih will Introduce Mayor I f I I \ H W I ) K K,t the close of the flrst p e r - i " W U * * T T V " " V

... Kl^ht awardu are to be

Mayor Ryan and Prof. Love TZ££& S^ITS*"^.J?11 Speak af Exercises In ^TXXX'Z^

' W o o d b r i d g e Pa rk . „ .t . uf «& Jilt ..saaoUnfi, JII laJi t .be .used for„ i the ptfrpdse. Itrwns tlie desire of

Finn- trees which have been pur- t h e Township .Committee, he.ad.ded,chased with money raised by i m p i n g ^ ' j g & i u Y o f fee? theyof the TownBhlp Public Schools are'Bho'uld spend the taxpayer's money

h, the publfc school children, | U i l L L U V L J X L L A r, whom are-»ti«nd4«g-(}r«ni«nar.|_*^ _ „ _ - „ . f w i M ]

I niz1M...l.:H«Uk.BuilU.the Way I W 1 L i l u L V l 1UIX;. :tiili -(he Milky Way/' Sub-jii i.v Raymond-Jackson,.Eighth . . ' _ ' v

n ' . . —... lian-on Avenue School, aged Hope to Mart raving in lWO

l!!,',,i ,,ri»er "Drip-Drop, Never! Weeks; Truck Fleet Busynil 'Milk fund to the Top.")

iiitill by Anna Sowlka, Fourth|i School No. 9, age ten. I _ ,„Ml pnw>: "Quarters, Halves,! Contractors working on' the new

|]i-,!l,ir Hills, Milk bv. QuartB, Pints highway intersection where the newi;illh." Submitted by Evelyn'Route 25 croBBes the Shore road in

<i\ Hiliool No. 1, ago*eleven^ (Avoncl, will begin tha work of lay-'•'""!' Hu«l%«,'rt \imf 1* o«r''"B l l 'e concrete pavement withinI." Submitted by

tn foe planted with impressive exer-cises in observance of Arbor Day,next Thursday afternoon. Threetrees will be planted In Woodbridge

for something the suue should payfor,

The mayor suggested that theWoodbridge, Rahwuy, Perth AmboyAnd Linden Lions Clubs endorse the

l'ark and the fourth ia to be planted ] idea of the s.tate wing for most ofon the grounds ot the Colania.iichoQij41,ft «eet et patfoMing the Shore ro»4LTIIv-<.Thp

in Anto Accident Seen• i Cause of Suicidellroodln* uver 111 health

which followed Injuries re-ceived in an automobile acci-dent several weeks ago is be-lieved to ,lmv* been the reasonfor the alleged suicide of H»rryt'ateman, j(4, g( New Bruns-wick avenue., Ho»eUwh, e»rlyyesterday morning, l'gteman,vn6 wdfc uiurried and leaves,two children, la Mid to' haveshot himself through the heirtwHh a tthpinnp* and shellswhich he iind purchased rt- 'cenilj. i " •

;30 o'block. yeitardaymorning, whlli> Ms family wirveasleep, his wlte, Mary, wasBwakene?i by the noiBe of a•shot and. ran to htsjywm,' whemhe was found lyinis on thefloor, He ilii <l « few necoiMln.

'lattij'* ' ' • , ". "Coroner .p. K. HanSen wnwcalled and i>ronounced tleatlias due "lo s\iicld*- Tha bodywas tykt'ji to the Uurke l-'iinornl

, Home in I'er.., Aniboy.

HIGH SCHOOLFACULH TO

STAGE PLAY"Seven Keys to Baldpate",

Mystery-Thriller Selectedfor Annual Event.

"The .Siveii KeyH to Baldpate",mystery play, has been chosen,forpresentation by the Barron Ave'nueHigh Sclrbol I'Kcutty on April 26th.and 27th. In the school auditorium.Tbe play promises to be a biggersuccess than the two presentationsof past years, "Captain^ Applejack"

FIREMEN HOLD STUBBORNBLAZE AT BAY AS 6ALE

THREATENS WHOLE SECTIONWoodbridfe Hotel, Wo^jlbridgq Lumber Company's Yard,

} *nd N««rby Stores Endangered; Firemen NtrrowlyI Escape Injury as Walls Crash.

in memory of the late H. Urewster where It pftsaes iWillis, bounty superintendent- of tlve tmralcipalH!

The Barrpn Avenue High School %

their f eepec-

Fire, of unknown 'oHtrin, whkh utai-ted laje Mondaynoon, destroyed A burn.and maphirTe shop adjototeg the Wobd-Ijtydge Hotel and tlireatene.d for a time to degjroy that h)storjc 'taitdmarR'-[ii the intersection af Green strpjsf arid RahWayavenue. ,<•..'. ' • • ,

. Seven,ftBemon narrow\y escaped injury *hen falling .•wallstoppled',«B the' /lames ate into the wooden rafters and' sills. •.

The firemen who escaped injury when the iront wall col-Inpsed were: Fred £ehrer, Harold lilundy, 'Charles Farr and „Anton Sila^owski, .

Bert Huht. Willinm Prior-and Joseph Eerraro had "*a closeshave" wtyeh Iiurning rAfteraand corner posts fell about themaa they-*wfc trapped beiwectv the burning atrueture «nd thewall of a buildinK owned by the Woodbridge Lumber Com-pany which" adjoins the property.

Mrs. Catherine Van Ness, owner of the hotel and tho ad-joining property, all of which was formerly part of the WilliamHeilly estate, was workln^on an up-.—.per door of the hotel mid did not|/^f> i f i n A W 1Oknow the wooden siniature WKS I n l | i | \ t t l I n A l f l 111flames'until §he beard1 the fire en- v » * w m v w * ^ i » * MV

•"• Tllt *" *" TOASTMASTERA T BANQUET

Committeeman Officiates atDinner Given to RetiringDecember Grand Jury.

Committeeman Jacob r.rausam, otWoodbridge, wag the toatii muster al

'"."SeVeral member* of the cafit havealready been cllosen and

;

Pills

exercises will be held on Thursday i gantzed In the neaf future, Charles EC^nerymornings Supervising" Principal > Schoeneberger was Reeled manager Dr°Per

John H, l Ove ^till- offer the tree to! and "trainer". ••Mayor William A. fi'yan, chairman! Steve Hruska won the door prlae.ot tlie TownBhlp Committer. nutti I Lion President 1'ord named

give a DflettKih, Th« everciseB I Georee McLaughlln, Jim Dunn* and

men were called.gt«".tfe«-fti*ffletl ft)) PITflMr fW

saving the hotel," stnld Mra. VanNess on Tuesday. "They certainlydl* excellent work."

• The flames, fanned by n strongsouthwest w(nd which reached theforce ot a gale at times, threw bucktbe streams of water which wereunder two hundred pounds' 'pressure,The pump worked at capacity tofurnish pressure enough to light thewind sparks and bura-

! in Uie afternoonlot Schools No. 1

concrete pavementr,rendu l w u w<fBiis and

No, 1 age w i t h a 1 1 »°»*M« "*»««».t 0

out at the local

pme: "Give otfU..titii; Milk ltMtia» Health."j

Your

ii;

iiini iiy Joe FratteroU, School No.

ramps leading from the Kahway'sldeto the Shore road and fruin .the Shore

Association, 'will recull inoidentB inthe life ot County .Superintendent

on W1UU at ihe exercises at the ColoniaSchool which Will fulluw.. the jrjgeplanting here. TluJ oiganlzation, ofWhich both men wt-re members, was

Wil be for pupils Herbert Schrlmpe, nicinbera ofand No. 11. The i speaker's committee for April.

'Foresters InstallOfficers for 1929

andare to |be rented foi

-staging of the show andevery effort ia lo be made to makethe performance a t ' professional aspossible. ,

The proceedK will be donated to

Ing emb,er» aqrqss the street where««reral store awnings eati«ht flre.

Firemen were blinded severaltimes by the' smoke and sand wtiichb hh id hi

g ,a biuiQuet given.the retiring Decentb T¥ j t Pfff' R ^

Qb*r T¥rmMetuchen, l

gPfaff's Res^aurstrt,-

st Monday afternoon.

tbe high wind swept Into their faces!,they "fought the

Committeeman Grausam Intro-

the the High Bcliuol library fund.

Supervising Principal Love, who IsBenlor supervising principal and theonly charter member, oi tlie Middle-sex Cou.nty Supervising Principals

road"Help the Milk

I and Make Someone HealthyHappy." Submitted by Martin

to the Rahwaj section com-the

priw: "Milk Uun,8 In theof Health. Submitted by uave-been completed. Onewman Third Grade bchool ^ i f d '

ml

jNo. ii.

llti'v'.T|Eiia Newman, Third Grade, School

i . 1 1 .

The drive, which was to haveIIMI tomorrow evening, will beuiriu-d until next Friday ev.enln ,'lowinc a meeting'ot the-workersl<l in the home of E. H. Boyottjln

|on Uuhu-ay avenue, Monday evening.i< chairman in charge of the vart-.-. sections of the Township are:

|»iis. K. Barth, Avenel; Mrs. Georgel.lddle, Fords; Miss Marie Dem-

A fl>et of thirty trucks have been

with only short interruptions due loInclement weather, hauling the dirt

lfor the, g

and the approaches allre-inforced' concrete

bridge has "been finished .and thethree abutments are lti place.. Thesteel for the,second section Is..Jready "on the Job" and will be.

organised at Uie Sewaren Hotel In1899. *

Looked like Burglars,But Wind Gets Blame

duced the -speakers including County01 t n e I Prosecutor John E. Toolan, AMII**-

• .-. J «ornlei 'ul

t1

lh,e,«I1°P w^reitunt frosecutor Francis A. Mona-It Joined the hotel building. , Thvee|glmn a m i Abrahnm Nelson, foreman;lines of hoae were used off the o t t h e t e t l r , n g J u r y , •

Z S f JKSf. ; . % ! « ^ t «•;• «-usara conducted the after- '

^T-SS^tv^liS^l^n » ™> wlth ft fe* a"1 n'murks/and,to the rear of the building, IrsHinied to be the opinion: Of tfr8>

The annual instnlliition ofi officersof Cuurt Barroji, t'oreatets o(America, was held'In lt'e Hungarian'Reformed church hall on School'street Monday evening, John Al-

Golf Tourneysto Start Soon at

C o l o n i a Club

inJ

In a le.W..d»yB'

[bright, grand junior woodward ofthe local court, conducted tbe cere-1'irtDny. He wau iiasisted by Thomass

i Smith, supervising deputy, grand'chief ranger of Carteret. The officers-installed were;

Michael Goulilon,-chief range.v;William Gecsey, sub chief ranger;Daniel Ternaj-, lecturer; Jacob Gor-

!don, treasurer; William Fenton, re-cording secretary; August 'Dernier,financial secretary; Michael Kleley,

, senior woodward; Thomas Katii,tl)e j junior woodward and John Elnhom,

senior beatle; John Leffler, junior

;Sewaren; Mrs. A. •¥.

Woodbridge.Ran-

"lie dollar will lake care of oneIclnld for one week. It Is honed to

•tiIliin

thist'linducted Inthan two years, the most »UC-

il ever held.

willis a pa .

1

dHve which is the first = g ^jfted in the TownBhlp In T h u

B „,„

and .,pleted before the highway can beused, will cost more than a quarterof a million dollars. The design Isunique and was devised by engineersof the State Highway Department toeliminate all lett hand turns and toavojd crossing at grade of traffic

tl The Board of Directors of(Colonla Country Club will hold u _

interne 'special meeting Mtraday evening to I beatle; Thomas Gerlty, trustee for'map out a program1 for the year 1|flve y e a r B t

Francis J. Kenna, a member ofCourj Barron and deputy grand.chief ranger of Court Standard ofPerth Amboy, was elected represen-.

The high wind la^e Mondayafternoon is blamed for wTOtappeared to be two breaks in .Iseliti homes. Windows* wen?shattered and silverware strewnabout •+fte floo» in both housea.

S r e r J r ^ Brwmett, of War-wick avenue, .called'"utiltce''arid""said that her home and one ad-jacent to it in which a Airs.

^Pcraflwmtt lives, had been en-tered. Windows were ruthless?ly broken and silverware- wlilchhad been on the table wasthrown about In both houseB,she said.

Motorcycle Officer (Jeorge, Ballnt was sent to Investigate,He found unnilBtakuble evi-

. dence that the wind Imd shat-tered the panes of glass andhad blown things about indoors.

pcritics that the proper tfay to light

keeping the entertainment entertain-

The affair was pronounced: by

chance to curry ci^tjrfir wbldv mighthave -Ignited evpiy butldiris to 'the,vicinity,

Tlie damage to nenrby butldlnt;a

fProaecutaj. fi i n of vh* (f«i{t4'-J«l'y from

tliin'S to tlie prysent day.

the

lest times to the present day. Hedescribed It as a "filter" between the

^ ^ is a pa . »«P out p Khave to be com-1 The dates for golf tournaments andnuvo IU.UC vum , , t(-hnn will nrnhahlv nfispecial cup matches will probably be

deflaitely set and the program fortlie official opening arranged.

Jiights toStage Cohan

...„ work on the Karltan ftlverBridge, one of th# largest units of

I the new highway route, has been re-tarded during the winter mouths, Uis expected that wanner weatherwill see increased activity on thestructure which i».scheduled to becompleted during the present year.

May LHeksch Opens Violin

20 at Atlantic City.

Studio at Sewaren

were started Wednes-by* members of Mlddle-

I'ouncil, Knights o/ Columbusi he prosentaMon of "The Mean-Man in the World", a George M.

Cohan play. The performance|be stoned at the St. James'' Scnooi i»liii<iiiiii-iuiu on May 2. William I i(lei'ly, uf Criintord, is coaching

Henry Heksch, director of thet-onal Conservatory of Musi, o

Golfers have been turning\ out in tative to attend the Forestar's Con-large numbers duvins the pdat few |cention to be held on May 18, 29 andweek-ends. More'than sixty kddlctal"1' Lx * " - - " - ""••ot the ancient and honorable gamewere out on the links laBt "Sundayafternoon. The greens aD«J fairwaysare now in excellent condition andready for, the sumraef'a Bport.

The officers of the elub are' C. D. |Snedeker, president; Oscar A. WU-

(Oontlnued on Page 7)

M. £. Sunday SchoolPlans Children's Fete

The Sunday School Board Of theMethodist Episcopal church will holda Children's Day fete early in June.

Many G u e s t sat C D . A. Party

will not be more than a few dollars. lmlv

iv!1?ual b . r o u g h! ^ tore._ l.>ie c 6 u r t ! i

Thtj loss at the Van Ness property iscovtred by Insurance. *

New Firemen'sOrganization Is

Launched Here

and the"It 1B the duty of the grand Jury

and the prosecutor's office not onlyto secure indictment of the guilty,"Hiild Mr. Toolan, "but to protect Uieinnocent and those who through un-fortunate circumstance* and notthrough criminal intent, have be-come entangled In the meshes of thelaw."

Local K. oiC. to AttendAnnual 5-day Retreat

Twenty members, of MiddlesexCouncil, Knights of Columbus, willattend an annual retrfeat to be givenby the Redemptorist Fathers in theSt. Alphonso Retreat HouBe on WestEnd, near Long Branch, on May 10,11 and 12. Local Knlghls will leaveon Friday evening and the retreatservices will begin at 8 P.M. Rev.Fr, Turner will conduct exerciseB.

A branch of the InternationalFirefighters1 Association to be knownas Local No. 21)0, of the Uniformed

28 Births, 18 DeathsRecorded in March

organ-Twenty-eight births and eighteen

deaths were, recorded at the office ofWood- | the B o a r d of Health'iMt month, ac

I Firemen's Asaociatlon waslsed by seven members of t i iD „„„bridge Fire Company, No. 1, Mon-!

c o rd| ngday evening. A charter has already Healthbeen granted the local and .meetings! w h l c h w a ¥ filed" with the Board'otare to be.held on the flrst Monday Health in their meeting Monday ere-of each month

to the monthly report ofInspector Peter Peterson,

'Ing.

Local Post to Co-operatein Safety Week ProgramCourt .Mercedes, C. D. A., held, a

very successful card party in theColumbian Club rooms Monday eve- . . . . __ning, more than a hundred guests|Legion, .will'endorse The Cardtnalabeing present, j Mrs. F. Witheridge i an<} enter them in the State Leaguewas chairman of the committee in'of junior teams fostered by Legion-

"""'" " ' l Th ftl T t wjy furnish

Woodbridge I'ost, 87, ^American

charge of the iirrangements. W.Kennedy, of Avegel, waa awarded aspecial prlzev Non-players' prizes

••»»•» -- . Preliminary plans for the went were were awarded to Michael Goulden,1'erth Amboy, and a graduate °»- *^i made at a.meeting ot the Board- hi i Mrs. T. Seiners, 11 «< P. S. Mayo audAmerican Institute of Music wll ' ' - - -

a. violin Instruction studio at1

dSe WuV^rrK ad'TroTieycrossing tomorrow after

'ThoBH. taking part'are: Margaret j cept beginners as well us'lily, Helen Daltbn, Ethel Cam- pupils.«n. Kllen Campion, Andrew DOB-u«d, John Campion, David Gerlty,IIDIHUH. Drennan, James Mulllns, J.

i\ (Serlty, JtM WUtflfl,Keating and

the home of Mr. and MrB. Van O.Manger, of Hidgedale avenue, Mon-day evening. Mrs. Van G. Mungerwas elected chairman of the commit.

Mrs, T. Oertty.\ Prizes In the games were awarded

to the following:fridge: Mrs.. Alfred Coley, Mrs.

Woodbridge ro3 and reel enthusl-at» (locked to the annual flsher-nens get-together held at the

9'erth Amboy ' Hardware C<jj.'s store(last night. .

Harry M. Jackgon, of High street,^upending a month at his camp-iie near High Bridge, N. J. •ttlllyaid Humphreys, ot HUDJ-

& Hyan, ii 111'aVhis

L p 8 T

beagle hound, answers ta"Tin'1 HJHV.. klaAlr ivht(Q

i l l

Muleame

P<lly.

g u n ,"Tip". Baftr',black,Has six white tips, npie,

ft d t tix hite t ip , p ,

four feet. Reward tor return tolist Main street.

Turner Howell ElectedRotary jClttb President

P. Turner Hpwell, of Sewaren, waselected president ot the WoodbrldgeKotary Club at tlie weekly luncheonheld In the Craftismen's Club yester-day. Township Engineer .George E.Merrill was elected vice-president,

Aylin 'Plerson, ol Perth • Amboywas the Bpeaker. His related inci-

whlch occurred OP «»hlu« tr'PJh« has made"within the last

Th^^lUb voted to entertain theLions' Club of Wpodbridge at a din-ner and to bowl them afterwards ata date to be announced later.

Householder Mutt Aid

tee In otiarge of the arrangements, j . F, Ryan, 'Mis. .M. P. Schubert,She will be assisted by MrB. Frank Mrs. Morrison Chrintle and, HelenMcDonald, Mm. A..S,.Bergen, Mrs. -Ralph Stautfer and Miss Helen Pot-

A report on the activities of thehome department, which was organ'Issed a year ago, was read by the

few

isied a year ago, ySuperintendent, MrB. A. B. Fitz-gerald.

alres. The ftcal Tost furnishemblems for the baseball uniforms.

The Cards, last year's Townshipchamps, will play their Brut game ofthe season Sunday afternoon. ' Indi-cations are that the pine will be a(Stronger outfit this year than- theywere last.

Wpodbridgei Post will also aid in

Milk Licenses GrantedThree milk licenses were granted

of each month.The charter members are: Arthur

Hunt, Fred Mawbey-, A". J. Thomp-son, Leo Gorrls, William Allgaier,Charles Acker and Fred Zehr6i._

The officers elected at the organ-ization meeting were: Arthur Hunt, byThe"Board Of Healttrduriiig thepresident; Fred Mfcwbey, vice-preBi- m o n l n of March, according to thedent; A. J, Thompson, secretary and i r e p o r t of Health Inspector Petertreasurer; Leo Gorris, sergeant-at- p e r s o n filed with tbe Board Mon-arms; Wlllfcm' Allgaier, Charles d a y . e v e n i , l t ; . Those -granted It-Acker and Fred Zehrer, trustees.

Nathan Duff AppointedLand Case Commissioner

Attorney Nutkan Duff, of Duff andDuff, ' WoodbiiJjge, haa been ap-.polnted a commUsloner to examineand appraise the lands of John andMary Bohaca, and to fix compensa-tion for certain glands to be paidtherefor. , Thu appointment was

F O i l l t B Proom house, alter April 1st.

Splendid locaUon, Butment. i»-false, all Improvements.

114.Phone

Frederic* H. Co,IN»TO4NOB AXD"

Sewartn, N. J.h M'8

CAREFUL DRIVERS TOGET 10% DISCOUNT

A ten per cent discount to care-ful drivers will be granted by J. H.Concannqn, Woodbridg,e agent, of theTravelers' Insurance Company, onall policies written after March25th,, 1929, it was announced at theoffice of the local real Estate andInsurance ilrin last night.

"This generous reduction is apremium paid tp the oereful driver,who should not, bear the IncreasedInsurance burden created by the

'reokleM motorist," Mid Mr. C o win War on Mosquitoes »oni ""in addition to toe' " ' •• ,we offer a.time payment

It New Jersey U to bemoMiuitoet during the coining sum-

. «r the co-oueratlon of household-

free from enables every car owfler to be WUy

Dr,mer, the co-operatloiers ia esBentlal, according toThoniu J..Headlw. State Entomolo-gUt Dr. Headlee, speaking overItation WOS.on the Rutgers Uiver

ta last We

dtibenltiN in th« fl«ht toS mosaultoes Ues Inwater ttontalnfiMf stopped up rSrttm wd d«H»fc rain barrels andrsiatub». » •-

and completelyl ld t

withouting compelled to. pay tlje full amountwithin thirty days."

POLICE FIND CAR

An autP.valued at MOO owned bySamuel Mahler, ol 7»'O«rdon »twet,

was found abandoned, onrt street. Av«»jl, 8 d f « wbV Pftroiman Mbld«» Pollc«

Donahue.Whist: Mrs. KatherlneTlannagan,

Mrs. J. B. Levl, Mrs. A. H. Ernst,Mrs. T. Thompson,

Euchre: Mrs. H, A. Neder, AliceSandalil.

Pinochle; Mru. Julius Rhode, Mrs.E, Troat. Mrs, Patrick Campion, Mrs,Bdward Einhorn, Mia. Walter Gray,Mra. Thomas CoupUnd, ThomasKath, Walter Gray, W. A. Goden,Mrs. Little, Mrs. P. W. Murphy.

Pan-Tan: Mrs. Chris Witting,Mrs. August Uaumann, MargaretMoore, Mrs. Michael Conole, MrB,George Finn, MIB. William Golden,Mrs. C. J. Walsh. '<

Rutgers Expert to GiveRadio Talk on Poultry

Prof. Wllliaid 0. Thompson, pro-fessor of poultry husbandry at.Rut-'gers (Jnwemlty and naultry husban-man at the State Agricultural Ex-periment Station, wlfi give a radioaddress on "Giving the Chickens aChance" over Station WOB at 6o'clock Saturday afternoon, April 13.Th« address Is dn» of the series otten talks on agriculture subjects bymembers of the Rutgtre faculty, andwill be ot Btfeciat appeal to the looalpeople Interested la rftialntfohlckeuB,

opening the-..Safety Week program m a d e , b'y Hupreme Court Justicein Perth Amboy 'Monday evening. C l a r e r i c e E Case,The Bugle and Drum Corps has beenlnvlt«d;™to participate in a para4e-o»Monday evening to be given underthe ausploes of. I'trth Amboy PostNo. 45.

censes were: Rorden's .Farm Prod-ucts Compainv Madison avenue,Plainfield; l'aulua Dairy Company,New Btreet, JMew PrunswUk; Wood-brook FarniB, Metuchen.

Announcetl '

The engagement of MisB Ann Duff,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Duff,of 59 Brook street, Woodbridge, toJack Dober, of Lakewood, was an-nounced yesterday by Mrs, Duff, Thowedding'will take ptace at Lakewoodon"M*r Sth.

New K . t o ( C MembersWill be Initiated

Twenty candidates will be Initi-ated Into the .nm degree ot theKnights of Columbus by officers olMiddlesex Council in the ColumbianClub rooms n^tt Thursday evening.Members of. nearby councils^ havebeen invited to attend and a socialhour will follow the ceremouy. •

The flame gtow will be giventheir second degree at the Colum-bian Club on Thursday evening-April 11th. They will receive thelast degree on April 88th... at theKnights' of Columbus headquartersin New Brunswick. State oncerswill asttint in th« latter oeremouy af

Horseless Buggy in Spotlightat Rahway Avenue Fire

fire.

w twhich condldftteB

ik

yCarteret. and

A horseless carriage is more of'an attraction than a big

Joe Herbert, Fords garageman, came to the fire in Wood-bridge Monday afternoon in an "International" "horselessbuggy" built between J892 and 1898. Crowds who had beenwatching the flames turned and ran from the scerie whenHerbert's auto came down the streot puffing and belching blue

Tlie car is a genuine, antique. It was the seconddrivert affair purchased by a resident of the Township. The

• - - ' : . . - ' . - relic'B nrst owner was Dr. S. Lock-n a l \ • • wood, a Lveterln&ry surgeon, Who-

rLT6 U 6 S t F 0 V 8 1Ved ou Rahway *veuue until nls

White ft fle»s, ftwu, l « » l realtors,plan to re-open th« "Brajnar,d LaktoPark" dev«lPPW«ni.^ Qranbury inthe near future.

which condldftteB fronjNew Brunswick will a>o te initiated,

CYCUST HURTTheodore A«yn, ot Harriet street,

Arenel, was Sightly Injured lastaaturday1 att^opn, and a btoyclewnloa he was riding was badly dam-.ag«d when It tiruck the rear endota truefcirwk by Stephen. Superior,of Left street, Port Beading, Tbe

fias owiied by the I*b«r Coal

Home FurnishingsFire,' of unknoiro origin, did sev-

eral hundred doHan) worth ot dam-age to the cellar and furnishings ina basement kitchen In the home qfAlex Deak, at. UQ Bamtord avenue,Tuesday alternooi. The blase waaBonaned to the lower floor ot th.ebouse which 1» WW* by Alex BaJ

Th l U WltUlly «<"ered bbint. .The loss Ul»»uran«e.

Al«<"ered by

death about ten years ago.Herbert got the caf about « year

ago and took it to his garage wherehe put It In running' condition, He-claims it will do thirty >mlle» anhour—on tbe level. It bas twospeeds forward and two cylinder^—aft. It Is steered with a lever and .driven by a- ojiain. K bat 90 sellstarter but <tt bat a wwse gear.

All efforts to,establish the eiMt 'age ot the vehicle Inetudlug a *ee,rchot the recordi of the InternaUenaiHarveeter Company, bM» Um fruit*.

.'*

Page 2: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

TwoTHE WOODBRIDGE LEADpR, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1»29

sac

WHITE ^A«ffiTO INAUGURATEoN E ID^RN E W SCHEDULE

MAN

Sunday Evening Service* tobe Devoted Exclusively toYoung People.

tfonrge Holup, i s , a laborer, flf!22i) Fulton s t r m , Woodbridge, wasordered held for th* action of the,t iijun County Qrand Jury when hem aj-ralgned in Clark Township ,district ' "«ooti; before "TterbrdM

' Charles Ma'xtaM, on a* atrocious-as-.jsault and battery charne Mondaymorning."' Holup wa*, . : morntng." Holop wa* arwsiea on

V P i« complaint of MM. Anna BMhaotk,?hanne- In ' , M l r i „ „ _ M .u..«t.t»r nf

ttO, of

church. up

A new departrr . .work, involvlpK'a radical rhanRe-lt« Sunday Bfervlpe*, l» to

at the ..WoudbridRt", , on ~_ „ _ . ,

The cuatouvary Sunday , f c

H*V*».A«* tum rn/u>tinffii 'Work »t the Atoerican Felt CompanyJ

• • • nian

LOWERTAX TO

AID INDUSTRY"Former Senator Frelingnuy-

ten Stresses Need of Ntn-partisan Fiscal Experts.

With administration' leader* atco-oppratlng, the tax Inven-

by Governor 'Lar->n according to a

' ;it tmctfl wages will Ht-lmulate eom-iriTi'i> anil thft profefmlonf). With In-

im-Hsinu prosperity, the amount of•l.nvirly, (llaeanf ami rrlm<> will nat-i iirnlly ficrI*Me.\ 'For these irasona, all the "fo-il,|p of New Jergi-x; engaged In agrl-! culture, .Industry or commerce areInUrWpd In-a, proper aoluMon of

i the tax problem. The newiipapereditors and other leaders of publicopinion agree that the only practical

; xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:

,

As.a conclu-

rre'linghujraen: ",preferable to 'have a singlemcr of public finance toInvestigate In a .scientific

ne, ia* system of New Jersey,the cxci'i'Hon of the appolnt-»f a commlMltHi which Is Bu-

rnt" sther am.ftdwenu toAsaenrblj inan prydw KKuoer* JointResolution Nu. 15 might bt acceptedin principles ' ,

•..»'!, the- d •• r.:or -4<wii-apppl^tii!v-Uit». It is exuecifd

an Impartial altidy Independent olpolities' and to roromtnend effectiveaction." ;

9 YEAR OLD GIRLHURT ON HIGHWAY

"felteabeth Sfiriler, 9 years old, o(Cutters Uta«, Woodbrldge, waabruised about the legt when slwstepped pit t*« sidewalk on Amboyavenue and Into the aide of a carowned, and driven/by Boyd parahall,ct 1 West SirWeventh atreet, New(Sfork City, Biujlay aHemoon.-Th*girl was treated by Township Phyat-claa J. J. Collins and taken to herhome. . . . .

TRUE

deliver 'a ahort gfermon, especiallyfpr yoi(ng people. >

The organisation of the "JfounK.People's thurch will be very simple.A cabinet of 'seven Jimlor Elders willbe elected, and with the pantor willmeet regularly £o plan the prostraniBor lltenprvicps and to tftke care olall iniMnewi. ProKi'anin and theme*for tllscusBlon will be chosen withthe purpose of reaching and meetingthe problem!) Hiiri siilrltual needs ofyoiiUK ]>eople. *

While ttjin iK a radical chans« inoiiHtuitt, the paslor aiifl feeBSlnn TFB!that the larpe percentage of younfcpeopU! In the menibernhlp ot Ol<lWhite Church Justify, this »pecinlService each Sunday. -It Is- belle.vt'dtlial the yaung people will apjirecl

ofNo reason for th<'

waft'

FIRE COMPANYWILL SPONSOR

SCOUT TROOPCommittee Appointed to Or-

ganize Boys of Keasbey;P.-T. A. to Co-operate.

- - - , , At the regular mefHIni; or tlie P.ro-Bte the IntereBt of the older people •, t ( , c t l ( i n r l r e company, No. 1. atin th«nr ani-wUl. loyallj suimort tl^;Keashei-..DluMonjiay, It waa voted to

assault^ v e r 8 f t y n nd tine ft the leading taxexperts'of the country, wilt be Be-

' lected "to direct a, three-year scfen-'tlflc btudy of • government ejpendl-ItureTi and ta.\ methods for the purpose of reducint-' the cost ol govern

•ment without impairing Its efflctencyi "Dr. Lutz in to have full power to.li select his assi«tnnt« aod

l'r'lcediire. with not lesathan J75,-,r)0( l I'er >'e»r »vall«ble for the task |d u i . , n K , h l , jlwc,,i y e f t r g ( e nding June]a0 | 1929, 11>:iO nnd 1931.

movement,

Port Reading PupilsHold Lead in Race

for High Thrift MarkEducational Thrift collections tak-

en up from the .several schools inwhich the WoodbTidge NationalBank, la operating" tTie syatBin—wereas follows "8n Mtffch J6th., 19«9: «

Port Reading »153.89No. 1 133.49No, 11 117.91.Avenel 97.44laelin No. 15 70.918t. James1 ..« - 87.91Iselln No. B 45.03Sewaren * 24.11

$710.68

y, jsponsor a Troop of Hoy ScoutrTTIKennhey.

This action was taken In connec-tion with a vtalt ot Scout ExecutiveHerbert W. Lunn. of the RarltanCouncil and WEB the'result ot-theefforts of Miss Wlttnenert, pritclpnlof the Keasbet. School, who had re-

h S l f th l l

financial eyBtems of Chile andi'otandon which Dr Uutt served withmarked ability. Professor Kern-merer l» now absent .In China doingsimilar work. • _....

'Tl»e «ubatitute rejBflliitiorL was reported March 25 by th*. .Senate"Ju-diciary.' Committee (Senator Arthu»N. Pierson, of Union County, chair-man) and received Its Becond read-Ing. The changes In the resdluttonwere suggested by'SSeflator Piwson.'iwho is comiileting fifteen yearB of

crulted the s l i c e s of the local Jlst ngulihed aervice In the- S'-toParettt-Teachera' ABsoclatloi*-through Legislature and is known as the out-It. President, Mra. Dike. j standing leader of tax revision in7Presid*nt-Brtflh-Schuater appoint- N e w

r

R« the troop committee, 'Joseph. p1. ratigerald, Charles Sato and Jo-

fi

OOT "gmrt-tOTtnWMW* a com-sense «pplM to the TOlslng and

fil tlDambach. of the fire company spendlnu of pfAlic money, contin-- - ' ued Senator Frelinghuysen. "New

Je.rsg); holds high place In its valueof manufactured KoodB aB^comparedmith other States, and might takefirst rank if industry were encour-ayed by reducing the burden of taxa-tion ot) factories, farms. stOBfs and

sephand Frederick Dike and Roberttfellaa as members- at-lm-ge, Thiscommittee will meet in the near fu-.tu,re wjth Scout EJxecu'tive Lunn andHarold L. Halt, of Perth Amboy.who In chairman .of the Troop Or-ganization Committee of the Raritan

Sih(xil AMUKIHIHCPort Reading r. J8'JIaelln No. 6 1 * 1 fi Ilselln No. 15 iOlSe.-wa.reu , 13 eAvenel 3 *> 1No. 11 .: iif',1No. 1 55-1St. James' ....'. ;ifi5

1Totals Z.~ 2!U'8

382•fll5278.106UT335232Ufl

184*0

P. C.98969278BT514233

Council, and plans will be made forj the appointment of a Scoutmaster

and assistants to takt- charge of the, troop.

S»>x Problem-" -"I wonder why they" say 'Amen'

and not 'Awomen.' Hobby.""•DeciiuBO they gins hymns and not

liors, fiuiiid. "— Boston Transcript.

3 jour home, youre, your barn

against decay. Don't letthe frost get Into yourProperly for tack of agoo<l coaling o | protectivepaint.

We'll seU you the' bgitt""''We'll also supply the men 'to put it on, If you so de- <Blre,

All the best brands atreasonable prices.

Kelly & McAlinden Co.74 Smith St. Perth Amboy

RAILROAD MANARRAIGNEfHlERE

James Conway, 48, employed atthe Philadelphia and 'Heading Rail-road camp In Port Reading, wasfined $25 and court costs when ar-raigned in police-court here Mondaymorning 'on an asaaulL and batterycharge. The complainant wasThomas Bell, a fellow employee, whowas cut about the face and arras,but who refused to preBg the charge.Conway was paroled to pay.

homes. •" Thriving industries willcreate a larger demand for fnrmproduce at hotter prices,

"New Jersey can support a larperpopulation than it* present fourmillion, and employment of all labor

PONTthwwyoUtJtimlhtttout of the

house fEven if it ra>«i» eye-sore—that'snoreasonto Krapi t l . . . "We'vea much better ide« toluggest. In icafceiy arty time and i t amere fraction of the ccst of a new iuite,you can twHtly transform the old, drabpiece* into thitu* of cltarm and beauty.

SAPOLINSPEED ENAMELcoma in 17 bti|ht eh«ry colon . . . EMV to..pply—quitk to dry I . . PrMtnti • imooth

• ' nc within* hourm!

Real value anil low pncei unit* to form true economy. Oar United space

Decetntafet quick turtioter at small anit prolii. Hence, it it good batinett lor' • . • • . . _ f . . • ' • ' { \ \ '

ui to extend to you, the public, an invitation to practice true «conoiny. .' ; v • ' • , .- • . - - ' • . . . • •

• • • • : - . • • , • : • • • • • , - . - : / , ; . . _ , • " .

Our one week exchange policy is your absokte insurance againit dissatis-

(action. .

. . . Fire from offtntive odor—requirci no tpecUl thinnei.

1926, ja

Wm. F. MurphySHEET METAL WORKTin -- Copper -- Sheet IronRoofing "XP Hot Air Heating

99 WEDGEWOOD AVE.Tel. Woodbridge 787-W

AUH1TING INCOME TAXINVESTIGATIONS

JOHN J. FOLEYPublic Accountant

A XT)

AuditorPOST OFFICE BOX B

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

LIKE

OU can sec the surface dirton a rug. When it is r e

moved you think your rug isclean, but below the surface dustand lint, t&ere is dirt you cannot,see—sharp cutting grit bhidhdestroys d^e fibres of a rug.

Auto PartsTittO kkltd you wttnt to

nuikc driving whether .for iitt-wsme or buKUxena, mhuccQ&H, frlvvi'ythliiK tbat'atcousl «t price* th»t Areright.

Come in and let us lityou out.

Me LEODAuto Supply Co*

110 Main Si. pturie 90WOODBMDGp, N. if

, - Only a Hoover with its spe-cial cleiriing principle, "Positive,Agitation," can dislodge thisdirt., f

Two models—No. 700 sellsfor #75 cash, and a smaller size,No. 543, is $59.50 cash. Terinsprices are slightly higher.

$ 5 Down$ 5 a Month

• We make a liberal reduc-tion on both cash and cred'it prices when an old dectrie cleaner is traded in.

192819281928192619261926192519251925

Pontiac CoachDeLu^e Dpdge Sedan _Dodge Special SedanNash Standard SedanBuick Master Six SedanDodge Standard Six SedanDodge Screen 4 TonDiana 8 SedanBuick Light Six SedanNash Coach "Cadillac 4 Passenger CoupeChevrolet Coach

~*...»

— S _ _ . . -.

• • • * •

1924,1925,1926 and 1927 Ford Sedan*, Coachei and Coupes.• • • • • • - ' i . • ' ' - ' . ' • . . • . . • •

Ford Dump Tnicki, Canopy Top Trucks, Express Body Trucks, e tc

Many others at Attractive Prices. ' ' .

\J .

. • - • \ . - . ; - - - '

} Public ServiceEleqfric aod Gai<Company. , ' I

Please have someone call to appraiiemy old electric cleaner. 1 updetatand1 shall ihcur no obligation. ""

Street and No.

SERVICE

1 * i

"vr

EASY PAYMENTS

^ ^ i TRADES ACCEPTED

• -v

\ , '-.

' ' i,

THE TCAOE MAWC:;THAT GUARANTEES

A SQUARE OBW-

hHMHKMH

BHMsBMMM

MMHMMMMMMMMMMHMMHHM

H-MHMMNRMMHMHMHHM

.MMMMHHMMMHMHMM

MHMHM

USED CAR MART74-76 FAYETTE: STREET - PHONE 27D5 PERTH AMBOV

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK

Page 3: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

THE W00DBR1DCE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 5,1920 Pn(ife Three

111:111"

1..1

MEATLESS MEAL?M b

N0W AND THENAID FOOD BUDGET

T i , .MVIIIK irf ah occasional meat-1u,.,i IH nn excellent way of I

• „,.'IIM> menu and reducing the;'ViiiKtiici. w s MIBB Marie Doer-1"' N,VW jersey extension tpeclal-

in,,,lH, in UaUag • number 6f-,«lv.' dinneT menus. .,ln.sn't aW*'e- With those whol,nt meat, beeautv'of it* nour-Mmilitieii, must never be omtt-m the dally diet. Other food*, juxt HH nourishing and less

iv,. may be occasionally Bub-1 n\\t> asserts. Such foods ln-!,!,<! lima beans, White beans,

beans, dried, p«M, cheese,:•«. and milk in combination

or the ftfregoing. N.utrl-I'H have shown that these

„ III nourish the body as well'•a 1 w i l l . • ' -

dinni'i' of casserole of* limah.ikod potatoes, lettude salad,!

mtiinl pie, 1* an example or a',meal.. In place of the!

I custard should be tub-1children. Another meat-mtght Consist of cheese

,, sdiiillc, baked.potatoes, red'salad, with broWn Betty and

mice for dessert,hose who Insist on meat, thea inexpensive dinner may 'be ]riilicr rolled flank steak, or,,,f with tomato saucer- or apal roust; baked carrots,

mashed potatoes, fruit |

Four Types of Coats They Are Wearing

i lMlIml'-

ih -1

,,, ,i

1 1 , . t n l n

,1,1,1 and crisp cookiw or erachersrt---"~j n iius Kiimf'class Is a meal con-

-i HI: ni a combination of escalloped | .,„ hard-cooked eggs, and maca-i .,„, I|U the main dish; tide dishes of _ ™ Q

,.,! iimiatoeB and carrot salad; w " 1 8

,,,i ';, d.-ssert of fruit Jello with I ", 1 custard sauce. ' --.

Movie Fashions

M K y I H I N T

HHKAKKAHTSllccil Onuiitr*

Whole Wheat » .r.nl with Top MilkChained I'mlflsli RuttvtyU Tiw«t

UMt*

with

MilkTen

B) LUCY

13 to be First

forInformal

I these versions

The skirt Is slim for steamer travel, hut it Is the typefor Central 1 W > ° r s U ? h t l y 'U!L t ( l ^ e r m l J. l}* beln,K o f straight line garment Hultahle for

for ChildrenVNTHKOX""

«f spin rpKtami Celery Ac

• Whole Wheat Ilraultkkttl distant

IMWKK j(Veg^Uble I'Wo IHnnrr)yt t'bUtnew with Poached KKK'N

ftplnach -vHttw VegetAbW' HRUMI 1Itrown llr«*(t flutter .felly

Ap)>le> l i e Mid I ' h e wt'offee * Milk

As Hie . weather groiftf. WarmerimfratlesH meal* isrcjw mote popular. 1tie. sure you get vour,proteins whenyoVTjrilK "lijieat, ft(»wev«r. Chodee, jfish, eggs, mlltt, nuts, will tsive them'to you b«nt/ TIIIB menu was planned ,for nve, Including children.

' THIS VVKKK'H BECII'KS(torwrole of Hpllt • l*ww — One'

pound split peas (cleaned and soakedover night),'two onion* (diced)', onepepper fdicedj, tabteftpoori butter,salt, pepper to taste, one cup thin'creatlf.1-'. EU»ftu.-ilie onions nnd pep-,per in butter.,. Drain the split pews <and^add to onions and pepper. Add,enough^ water_und_ilalt to . taste and |let sTmni+r on Tt'trt-oT^ReTftbve for 1

draped about the figure. It to usual'- , t o w n o r c 0 U l U w e a r!ly thrte-quarter length, and may be B ™t \ . . , _ . L

rldje Loader)

in many versions' colfiiVed or"li'neolTar'ed>

al

nd may becollared or uncollared. I t l 8 a d l s - | The two types of beach coat are

and utility or|t!nctly formal type of wrap, espe- shown In the center. Hoth are ofBut many as are 'dally appropriate for wear over the light weight Bports fabric, ot bright

there are just four'more formal type of afternoon or color and design, treated to preventh ! ! d

1 — •» *— •»— 1 mum luimai type 01 anernoon or ctnor ami aeBign, KBBIKU 10 prerenv.' Ji!!e?!,«JM8e *Ze , o w " " t h e ,^ o a t > ! evening frock, and Invariably fash-! fading or yelltfwtng from exposurethe cape, the shawl and the dolman, loned of rich, soft fabric \which' to sun and salty cllnmte. The coat

N J C AltUnnae DaV T h e C0Rt ta •l«*ved, which dlstln-; drapes gracefully. ' at the left Is a simple bench model,. ' * • • " • » » " « • • ' • / KniBhes it from othpr ivtton nf «ioovo.l \^e Bketch shows three • dlBtlnct cut on the straight lines of the

gttjBhes It froth other typ'es of sleeve-

t i i s i wraps, although the Bleeveless types of coats, with two versions of!sports ensemble wrap, nnd that at

rabout three hours, letting the wntetBra'dually cook out. Place in cas-serole, add the (ream andlightly with bread crumbsbrown In oven. Serve with nof parsley on top.

Hpliwdi — Curefully cleanpounds of 8|ilnnrh. I'lace InWith tight littliiK coyer; usethe water which cllngB to spinach.Cbver tightly and epe*,, Place onplatter, season with salt, pepper nml

and

twopnn

only

Eastern 4t tr HoldsBenefit Card Party

TTir- benefit caira p*rty held undertin' RU#PICP» of AsterlctiK ChRptrr,

jtnl'T ut the Eastern Star, In thef aftxiiH'n'N Club1' Monday pvcnihg,wns n «noop»« ih v every way. Mrs.c-oiui' Lufbarri was chairman off

committee in charge ot the ar-v •PrliM.in the Ya.ne«s.

K»IIM>S were awardM »« follows:UrUiKo: .Logan Bockius. J. F. ta-

f«rr. Koster Uussln|#rr*lri(. Wt H.Viiill. Helen Klngberrj, Mrs. JUjr-nmn-r Mnore, Llllltri nichnrds, Mr*,llmniii r»ck. Earl Palmer, Mft .l."i;wi HockliiB. Mrs. Qeorge Baff-«|IT. Mrd. W. H. Orliwold. HmiB-.NVvin <;nih, Mrs. J.- KJeln, Mrs.Simin. Mrs. K. J. Adams, Mr«: Wit-hiini HclHr. Mrs. Harry Sherman,Mrs Hnrry Keyder. H- J. B»k«r. 8r .MIFS I.»ura CvUler.

,1'tniH'hk; Mr. Sherman, W. F.Kli'tcr, Andrew R»tn, Mamretliii'iiflliclnipr, Harry Conrad, IrvjngMm tin, Mrs. John HUnl, Bmtl WW-i.-r, MIK. Krnegt Hunt, Hlfy CharlesHinklf. Dorolhy Jfllyman, fi. McES-hiMiny. Mrs, E. McElhenny. Mrs. W.Qiiiikinliunh, Mrs. M. Qostello, A. C.Km.in. Karl Quuckeubunh; BenjaminTi > KI.>I . Mrs. Shephard. WilliamM.iiiin MlH-rt Martin, Rose Rich-linisim.

Kuohrp; Mrs. J. Brown, WIHIamfiordon.

Kan-Tjin: Mrs, James McKeQwn.Nun [iliiyers, James Wef Mi

John Hunt,

My MMK. I.ISHKrH

EVKKYUODY likes to l<H>k |in«tly,<'vt»n when at honit" alone.

Pretty Hii(C«*rU> ' inctty tu>KllKn>sinil help life |M8x ninii' >mHH>lhl,v

tlleRc for Women, NeWjOf course there Is also the sleeveless utility and the very Informal types- model, which, fashioned from richer • . — : Pictured l» Camilla Horn,, will take place AprlMa,*1»oket, but that is Invariably so [The first Ii In a rich brocade. The | material and lined, is <inite the thing I (Wad DITWIHK -One rgg, one cup j itortcHl <V«i»m«n wivon wtnr.to nn announcement which miwti-ar-tm-t of. the frock It cannot j utility coat, at the'right, is of plaid! for afternoon or informal evening '—>•"« «" »— '••t-1~- ••' «««iMti»««HMi-m

because It was especially designed' wear as well.

| , . M . I I O ; :

11 made by the executive com- b« considered a separate wrap.of Ui<> Associate Alumnae Th« cane is a wrap without

women representing the *wen sleeves, ftlstlhgulghed by its full,whirh have graduated since looBe lines, unbelted and hanging 1

WIIH founded In 1918 will away fronr the1 figure. It may be of Itin- campus on this occa- any length, colot or styling, though!

I when it does not.reach to the waist-1

niuiuncing plans for the re- line it Is generally referred to aa aMrs. Horace N. CtaTK, Of -CBTeftt; "Specttc typesHi.10k, president of the As-j military, wjifth Is of long,

\I1111111W, stated that the linen and tailored, and of the scarf-

PETER'S ADVENTURESHIDINU FROM THK HI XTKH

DUCK rear*!-Ms-"head and rftffledhis feattierB.

"I was Beared but I kept my wits1 starting what I* to be an, cape, which is short and full enough 'about me. No one was going to

,,i itnit is to'brlng the-alum'in ciosfr contact with under-,ii.-s and to make them moremi with the campus ot today,1 WAX undergone many changes

to. ba thrown back over the shoulders scarf fashion..

shoot me If I, could help It!

juice of oni'1 lemon oiie-ha)f teaspoonsalt. Beat egjf- In JaVge bowl. Grad-ually add oil and salt. Cook to-gether until thick two tablespoonssalad'oil, two tablespoons flour and

- — — I half cup of water. Add the cookedmarshes up to his middle and he was .portion to other Ingredients. Beattrying his best to hide, but the sun well and add vinegar and lemon,sliofie" on: his' sttcfc-that-kllls undlfitilcevan^ beat unttt-crenwy, *oeuld see his face Ju«t w phrin a»could be,

"How cruel-the man looked! HowS I Ii (i K 8 T I O N 8

Wnshlnn lUth Kobe"

Itn-H l -

tendfng tj) her m*be-up in A corner<>f i">r ontch luniHo dressing roomat Hollywood, In a cturnilnic ro«-lume ot Milk and !«<»' HiiKfi+e midsilken robe.

Note: Lacy Hilk voile U fea-tured for intimate apparel fors]>rlng and gammer.

Scales Must Be PlacedWhere TtW^an See Them

. . . . , „. , . , , "1 looked cautiously about, trying ^reak'Vy'wingT Slowly ,,c . n , o c u

Of the shawl there is little to^ay. to keep under the water as well as I j t n e stick-that-kllls to his shoulder.I . i*,^'!.*'.***!1 .au.a?^r?L.iflUJ?!i»'M8lbly °°m> N o ^ y WRS l n "'gXt-IStraiKUt he pointed It at me. 1 fell

! eagerly he longed fur a bullet to j To keen the family bath robes In | TltENTON. April 4.—Food stores

or triangular wrap, thrown about the

he raised; good condition, they should be gone and other "commercial establishmentsover every once in ti while to repair will be required, under new rules

moat of them graduated. By - shoulders or swathed about the formrsianding the problem* of the after the fashion of the Spanish:t today the alumnea feel that shawl.

r in ii Increase their own useful- The dolman Is distinguished fromother types of coatB by Its long,looser-draped glge™, cut In one withthe coat. The liTeJvfs may be. caught | 1 1 ^ |"Have you heard the story that's

IhL urounil about Alice?" j in at the wrists, like those shown onl!r;iril it? Why, dearie, I started the model at the left of the sketch,

Transcript. 'or they may fall In- full, draped fash-

Regular Church Services

I!, v.

flock.

Si. JamesIt. j . O'Farrell, pa«lor

Sunday Serrke* "j at 7:30, 9:00 and 10:50

School after »:00 •1«lock

Biiptlams at 3:00 P. M,ming Devotloufr—T:3Q Qck-day Service*—Masies 7:80.

8:803oly Day Sertlcet—Mawe*":00 o'clock.

rrlda»s—Maa 7r«0 o'clock.lonfpsslons beard on Saturdayemoons and erentng* 8 to « and

1 oVlock. Ere* o( Pint Friday*.dl Holy Day: of Obligation* at

I Saturdays.Parish Boclettoa

Rosary Society: CoartBunlon Flrrtpit;iv of month.Buly Name: Communion

of mSecond

of'month.ulallty of Blessed Virgin Mary:nmnion Thlr< Sunday of, raonth.iri» of the Parish: Communionrih Sunday of month.

Trinity Episcopallt«v. J. D. Myers, Pastor

8 A. M.—Celebration of Holy Eu-.•btrlst.

10 A. M.—Church School.11 A. M.—Flrrt and third Sunday j

of each month, celdbratton of HolyEucharist and sermon; second andfourth Sundays, morning prayer andsermon; fifth Sunday, ., morningprayer, litany and sermon.

4 P. M.—Evensong.

the pin feathers rising right on myhack. I waj certain that if I stayedIn that spot another second I wouldnever have a chance to seek out an-other. 1 could already feel a sharp

Then-1 lost

by th«J Department ofand Measures, to locate

pockets and replace lost buttons ' adoptedor snappers. As soon as they show WelghtB _..signs of soil, they should he washed their weighing equipment BO It shallcarefully to keep the wool 80ft and be in full view of the customer at allfluffy. ,. ' . ! times and In such position as to]

Immerse the garment* in a tub of', facilitate the customers' reading of |lukewarm adap suds, taking care-not'the charts and dials. Failure toto twist -thpni,, or the material is comply with the ruling la punishablelikely to shrink and warp. As soon by a fine of J25.

pain between my ribs,my head."-

"It still seems «to be on yourbody " murmured Peter. ' as the soapsuds become dirty, re-

"Don't try to be funny, boy. You I place them with clean water and In Snnny Hula-Hula Landknow what I mean'" Duck was fresh suds* Throughout the process Colorful square kerchiefs of cliif-nulte cross "I wa* so frightened Kof washing and rinsing try to keep fon or fine silk are now being solddidn't know what I was doing. Into'the water an «vea temperature. 'for evening gowns as much as sportsa hole out again-around a rock, If posaible, place the garments on 'wear.—Honolulu Star-Bulletin,behind a olump of .dR-UiU—no mat- wooden ,hungers, to dry, as clothe^ter which lway I turned I waa MrejPlns are likely" to pull them out ofthat the stlck-lhat-kills" would find'shape. Do not expose them to toome out * I great heat. A warm room or a

"Then I thought of a trick that;warm sunny day out ofdoora is hxwtmother had taught me. I would dive [for drying,and stay under the water. No bullet „„„£,„»,, ¥ t !could touch me there. I dlv«d and I — RERSONALS

.stayed under aa lonj; as I could hold! to a piece of weed. Then I spied a

y Avmel Prubyterian3 P. H. — Sunday School at the

•Tvenel School erery Sunday.4:15 P. M.—Junior Christian En-

deavor.t; 15 P.

Services.M.—Christian Endeavor

hole In the bank and sneaked into]' M k t ' d hil ld t the

S. B. tlilhuley, principal of theFoWenth avenue jSchool in Newark,

hut 'hang' off went the Stick-that ikills, and this time I saw a tiny-puffof gray smoke cbnie from the dirbction of the sound. . Then I. saw myenemy." ' \

"Where was lie, rfftt on the pondTdemanded the boy. "I should fhink

] F o ^ r t e n t h a v e n u e s c h o 0 i i n Newark,MuBkrat's doorway, chilled to t h e i w a g t h e g u e s t o f ft,s b r o t h e r i I g a a cbone, and there you found and cilhuly, a member of the faculty ofrescued me. Now you Jtnow as much t h e B a r r o n Avenue High School, onabout what happened to me today as j Wednesday.I do myself."

6661B a Prescription for

Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,Bilious Fever and MalariaIt Is the most speedy remedy known

The fair SetWhen a woman s«e» up in the' air |

she usually1 lands on her husband,l l h

e sy sAbout the only place where a

t h

ervices.8 P. M. — ' Regular Evening

Services,

PresbyterianIttv. tiniest Abbott, Pastor "

StMWflr; APHIli 7th.eimon tope,at 11 A. M.1 service,

of Reason'' a dramaticon the novel1 oy Sir

M .'lilllbH. • ' •the .Honing- a Union Church>• at -the. CongregationalIi Mr Strong preaching.ulity evening, at 8, meeting of1'iiny Men's Fellowship at theiif Hay Demarest, 102 Grove

Ul H

y, at 8 P. M., Mid-WeekSubject of pastor's talk,InderBtandlug of Jesus'

Methodist EpiscopalA. DoyUn F lu Gerald, Pastor

A. W,—Sunday fl1*!!""!A. M. — Morning Worship.

45 p. M. —Evening Service.

CongregationalP«v. Win. V. D. Strong,

Christian Science Society.Sewaren

A branch of The Mother Qhurcb,,The First Church of Christ, Scien-tist, In Boston, MftMaohuaetts.

Sunday School — 9:30 A. M. •Sunday Seme* —,11:00 A. M.

... Wedna«la.v • TsMlninn" Moattna".I P. M '

Thursday — Readlag Room, 8:00j 5:00 P. M-

St. Andrew'sCAVKNEL) ; .

Rev. R. J« O'FWell, P«stor-Services at Public School.

at 9 A. M. Sunday morning.

St.(ISELIN)

Rev. B. C. Grlflen, • pastor.Church on Oak Tree road,

at 10. A. M. jlunday morning.

St. Anthony's(PORT READING)

Rev. C. Galawl, pastor, Church on Woodbridge avenue.Masses at 6:30 A. M. and 9:30 A. M.Sunday morning. '

Evening Sendee, 7:45 P. «•

Our Lady oi Peace(FORD3)

B

»u...<...u^.. v..« „„,. * „..„,..,. .„ About he y p jthat you would have caught Bight of woman dare not stai> to powder her!

| the boat the minute you struck the nose 'is In a revolving door. • |GJrl8 who are easy on. the eyes are |

often'hard on the pocketbooje. |There waa a time when to succeed

..vi u..., u . r ., w .. , L I ">n the stage all a tilrl had to show"Nobody, but I yiought all hunt- w a s n e r ability

era went- gunnlije Jorwatw fpwl In T h e m o d e r n ' gil.i w o u i d m a k eP a

h J I | £ ^ m

pool."."Boat! Who said anything about

a boat?" cried the Duck.

a duck boat. My father—" Just ln | won(ierful cook iftime the boy thought that what he kitchen that waswas saying wouldn't pleaae hla jiew |friend at all and slopped. LuckilyDuck hadn't noticed the break andcpnttnued,• "You think too,much, boy," «ald

hernidely. ' "1 said it saw my enemy

b y a 3teerin6

}n order to eliminate curves, mil-lions of dollars are spent in thisicountry by railroads and overweight'girls. '

When a modern ^Irl buys a ppool

Phone Perth Amboy1 2 9 9

There he" was crouched down among j of thread she may not intend to ithe grasses. He had waded into the

A. M.—Sunday, School.B A. M.—Morning Worship.I P. M.—ChrUtlau Endeavor.

*i P. M.—Brtrahn Worsblpvfednesday, 8 P. M. — Weekly

of the bible.

(FORi«)»'»PP A lUv. A. Wlw,M. Ma»s,M. Vespera.

Rev. C. B. fyaflcn, .Masse* on Sunday morning at_

and 18 o'clock. Sunday School rotlowing flrtt mass.

-Maww-dally at 8 »'elo*k.

Oni Redeemer(FORM)

ROT. A. If. KwyUng, pastorEvangelical Lutheran, Fords ave

nue and Fourth street.'«:«0 A. M. Saniay.School.10:45 A. M. Momln|t Wor*Wp.

"The Age of Reason"A DRAMATIC BOOK SERMON

First Presbyterian ChurchWOODBRIDGE

( H e Old WhiteAbbott

tor

DINE AND DANCE•. A T

THE UBERTY'HOTELi1 ' A N D

RESTAURANTRooms By D:iy Or Week

Wm. Haug, Proprietor202 Amboy Avenue

Phone 1158 Woodbridge

mend anthlng—she may need a newclothesline.—-Boston Transcript.

J. FORT1ERFORDS, N. J

PhonoMetnchen 575-.!

PERTH AMBOYUPHOLSTERED

FURNITURECOMPANY

Repairing , Re-CoveringLivins Room Set*

A S -Slip Covers M*de to Order

254 MADISON AVE.NEAR MARKET ST.

OPEN EVKNINUS 'TIL N1NK

FRESH EGGSFOR SALE

86 Prospect Ave, WoodbridKCK. HURSTER

I SPECIALIZEin

UPHOLSTERINGREPAIRING of Antique

& Modem FurnitureCABINET MAKINGWINDOW SCREENSPORCH ENCLOSURESSUP COVERSRUG CLEANINGCARPENTRY WORK

p "opening prlcois"for a short time only.Telfphon? WoodbrMge1217. F>»Unwtes r'ur-ni.shed. Work called forand delivered.

CHARLESSERMAYAN

28 Main StreetOPP. STATE THEATRE

E . A . F I N NFUNERAL DIRECTOR

ANDfiMBALMER

'PHONE 78*»

168 MAIN STREET

PHONE 4S

N- E W Y (CANDY KITCHEN

PROMPT DKMVJmiES

Our Candies & Ice OfeamREACH THE HEART

; PUltK -WHOLESCMfl ..DELIClOlfa

$3 Maio St., Woodbridge

THE PERTH AMBOYGAS LIGHT COMPANY

206 SMITH STREET, PERTH AMBOY

Heating mrd C—kmg AppUmtz,

Raud Automatic and Storage Water Heaters "

New P r # « n Gas Ranges

S WhamQutlltyQuks150-160 Smith Si Perth Amboy. ft J.

DRY GOODS

NOTIONS

o

R

H

FURNISHINGS

FOR

MEN

-WOMEN

Con-Dw-Rit Radiant Log*

TelepUel43Pe

WE SERVEWE DEUVER

CASTLE'S ICE CREAMPUREST BECAUSE HLATHIZED

PHONE YOUR ORDER

Woodbridge ConfectioneryLargest Anortment of Flavors in Town

SCHOOL AND JAMES STS.TELEPHONE—WOODBRIDGE, 537-R ,

Page 4: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1929

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADERTHE BIGGER STICK

R»err Frirtajr

THE VSUUUBKIWE l»"lN

Ai n i l Main fltfen. V/'

l.%C

Catc

loplcs of Interest are Invited.

Woodbridge, N. J., Friday Afternoon, April 8, 1929

The Ltgal Asptct of the Sewaren Oftinance,. Wn Monday afternoon the Township Cojnrnittee will hpld

a public hearing on, and vol:e fo^or against an "ordinance con-senting to the laying, constructing, maintaining and operatingof certain'pipe lines across and under State'sireet. . . . . by" theShell Eastern, Petroleum Products, Inc.,'appurftnant to lands'about to be acquired by it." .That, in essence*, is wtjaj. the ^dinance is a)l about.,

If a majority of residents can show came why the layingof pipes two feet below the surface of State street will be, perMJ, detrimental to tbe interests of the Township, then theTownship Committee is duty.bound to reject the ordinance- ,

From a purely legal standpoint, it must be apparent evento a layman, that no extraneous or irrelevant? issues"or ques-tions ijhouW be-consid«red. .... ^^.i__L_ J . i .> . , . '..".'

We have" read the ordinahce through very carefulfy anumber of times, and we fail to find any reference made to theestablishing of a phnt or factory of any kind.

Yet the objections, voiced by a group of Sewaren resi-dents, would make it appear to the casual and uninformed ob-faerver, that the ordinance, if passed, would give permission for-the erection and operation of a,n asphalt plant.

As perusal of the ordinance, printed on this page, "willconvince those interested, that it confines itself strictly to theprovision^ quoted in brief above.

If the ordinance provided for the granting of a building1

permit for the erection o! an asphalt plant, the objectors";itfainsl the industrial invasion of Sewaren", would be in order.

However, it does not require-rib' ordinance to j?et permis-sion for the construction and operation of a factory. So long:»s the builder coufoims to the building code, the. fire code, thehealth code, and other local statutes, he has a perfect right tono ahead and build whatever Re "wish esTfoijutttt.

No person or persons, *t we interpret the law, cay be de-terred from building a plant on the grounds that it "might be-come ;i iruisancu." That would be like refusing a.nmu th4.jfj.phtto drive a car btcau.se he "might,"'drive while <li\iuk. Of€ouiSo, he "mipht", but'the law can act only after tin1 driverlias been caught in the act, by complaining, witnesses, adjudged

Memorial Municipal ButTiSTngWood bridge Post OfficeKlre Houie of Fire District No i

lilt said hJttttlons. betw in \V;,,,,fa J

Wnodbrldge, N. J,, onApril 8th., 192«. «t 3:30 In theortefnoon. to consider the final pas-

ge of th* following ordinance* at,which time and place objections' Dnnge iqjrninip. new jlersey,. inthereto may be presented by any,cordanee with tn* Statute in H1l,itaxpayer of the TownAIrk «*•• made an4 pwlded; and

Objectors may Ble a written ob-i WHJBRBA8, hetring on the s,,,,,Jectlon with the Township Clerk: application was field by the .,.,,,prior to that date. Township CotninHtee of the T,,V

B. J. DUNIOAN, (ship of Woodbridge at the Muni/.,TownBblp Clerk, pal Memorial Building on Monrtn

Febtuary 18th., 1»J9, at.8:H p "which h«*ring w u continued iTuesday, March Mh., t«t» , t• „.,"P. M., pursuant to the u ld resoi..tlon and the MIU notice* wiwnt,,whftre^lle laid TownsJilp Commltt,of the Towtmhtp d f ' V o ^ b r i "heard all tHcfte appearing and d<-?i

AN ORDINAK

To Provide (orflutter, CHM«, Cruder Pavementand the JCwesKurr DWIMJM atMadlton Avenue, Awnel, WoM-bridge -Townnhlpi, ami to Pro-

. vtdO tor the imaa»M of Tem-porary Noten or ImprovementUanda «nd to Pnwtce for theAnwi«meJit Theteof.

Re • It Ord»feed by the Township.

;lng to be heatd; and ,WHBREA8, It appear*' that ,

I granting of the »aid^ application »I be in the public Interest;

NOW, THsRRFORS, ^E IT OlCommittee of the Township of DAINED by th« Townihlp ComincWoodbrldge, in the County of te« of the, Townihip ot, WoouhrWi.Middlaex; • , • Un the. County ol Mlddl«ex, «8 1.11. That Madisoi Avenue, AVeOel, to**: _" .

banning at tbe *o«thw«iterl)r llfw1 1. The Tojrnihip of Woodbri.l..oif Avenel Street and extending. In tbe fountjr M Ulddlesei conm,,.

2 t h l i tg. f j

•o«thwe»terly approximately 1.2B0 to the laying, uctlng^maifeet t<$. life norttaeliste/ly line of,ing andI operating Of two 12•• „„„Lenox Avenue, he imj»'<>v«l oy the Jacketed aiphalt flux pipe lines, i«construction of concrete curb, gut- 10' ffuel oil pipe line*,..six r K1[-,ter • grade and cinder pavement, »n* line-kerosene *nd flje protin,,th* necessary drainage therefor, un- .Pipe tines,, six « ' ga«, oil, and dh•-.der and by virtue ol th« provisions oil pipe lltiea, t«n pipe linen varyi,of an act entitled, "An At\ Concern- In slM from 8%" to 4" for wat,,ln»,Jii»lclpalitIfs," approved March air, steam and drain lines, .under £11,,.2TTl9l7rthe amendments thereof across £Ute Street^ In the Town>hr'and BupiiletnenU thereto and other of Woodbridge In the Comity ,laws applicable th^«tQ. ' | Mlddiesex, at t point approxjnuit. 1

2 Sild lm¥hwero«a- shall be 1.1.56 fe«t north along State Sn.Vn'owri a» ihb matsoTi AVemte.'froni the taUCTtttlon.of the «H,I,.,Av nol, Concrete'Curb, Gutter, Orade ly side ot State Street and the no,iand Cinder I'avcment Improvement, erly ilde 01 Woodbridge Cru-ii, •!

3. The sum of Eleven Thousand Shell Eastern Petroleum Pnnim($11,000.00) Dollars or so much Inc., a corporation organized un.i..iip.reof as may he necessary Is here- the laws ot the State of Dpiaw^.by. appropriated IO in*«t the cost of Its succeMora and ; assigns. ,;.arrymK out said improvement. grants to said Shell Eastern I'M;

4. Tehi|iorafy notes or bond* are U'um Products, Inc., its sticn,;.,,liereby ai|thori?«'d to be iBfiU*d,'(rom »ud assigns, an easement a|.|ui.line to time, in an amount not \p nant to land* about to be arm;!;

the sum above appropriated,"by it, Its successors and ato the controlling pro*l- Inn On either, side ot M

of.Chapter 262 of the Law* of Street, to lay, construct, mini,-^ T f f i d a d l

1 :

C. B. D.'Charlesjl, Dmerit.•!••

i The tuneral of Mrs-' Christina*» !' i'isaniellt?, 87, will be held from the

•• home pi l\w dauptitfr, Mrs, Saba-i tino Antonelll, of Woodbridge ave-

, *l*nue. Port Reading, tomorrow morn-' | ioj;, followed bj -. St-rvlcos .in St. An-

Ituonv's Church, Port Reading, Rev.

intoxicated bv a reputable physician, and fouivd.guilty in court. IN thejj.ummn,, i must c w u ^ that I k m * nothing, at ,11 about radio. j ^ ^ ^ 0 1 ; ^ ln<£rn>ent

• ... • . i t l'erliaVtMs .ifimi.-ion m,.v nflVrt the validity of my sir.^tions I w l d b r t d w> WY hinv no linli., in our home. I abhor Jazz. It rnakt. me ill. There« woottDrmge

nr* manj tood i«otnu»s without jiizz to be liad for the turning of a knob,1 rrcret that 1 have no rStlit) for

Congressional Radio

TWTJof real music. But t have two small

;. IP. and I t'-ui- for the sanity of myself and family if,ii ,•>• pvtr learn1 how to pluck ]azz out of the air. Soj1 postpone the evil day. I know U Is almost sure to ;. ine. si.nif day those girls will speak up and demand;i.i/2. and then we'll have a radio. Hut maybe I can!;t!turd a sound-proof'study on the roof by that time.)

s• » * *

o don't pay any attention to nie~w1i

tman Aspecl ot the Sewaren Ordinance ^We have found it-a dangerous policy to present both sides

bf any question. It is the only fair and just poliey, but it makeslew friends and many enemies. "The opponents claim you arein favor, the proponents claim you are against the proposition,and those who don't take sides claim you haven't got back-bone enough to come out, flat-footed for one side or the other.

, Let us look at the Sewaren question from the human side.

Here are a group of residents whose homes are located inthe one residential oasis along New Jersey's thriving industrialwaterfront. Tftey naturally wish to preserve that residentialzone inviolate.. We, of* Woodbridge, and other sections of theTownship would object just as/ strenuously, if a large factorywere to be built next door to our residential districts.

Mr. F. J. Adams; of Sevyaren, wrote a letter to the editorlast week, in which he stated that Sewaren^should have beenzoned as a residential section. That desire on the part of cer-tain Sewaren residents is likewise quite natural. • i .

Try as we may, however, we cannot conceive of Sewaren > inx congress. 'Especially it a rule w*e adoptedJ . ,, ' , I . Ti . , . - , . ; , : nimncement of the number of persons listening to any

as a purely residential community. It -is a residential island; senate and Housj chambers.

Mrs. PisanUsllo died in the home( her daughter cm Wednesday eve-

—LKOAL ADVEItTISEMKST—

FINANCIAL STATEMENTfor

FIKE .COMMISSIONERSDistrict No. 5

•n 1 ttttt about I - — — =radio. But I want to sussast that our nationali RECEIPTS

Confess should be on the air. As tt matter of political • IfaLance in •checking ac-expislitney, 1 believe It would be advantageous to have! count on March 1, 1928 51,767.56

deral radio broadcasting station at,the capltol. At least certain sptci-! Balance in Savings Ac-hours on this radio should bo turned over to >the Congress, dividing; count.on .March 1-, 192*2,000.00time equitably between House and Senate. .i Receipt* from March 1,if our Congressmen realize that tbe whole country might tune in and 1928 to March 1, 1929 5,077.28

l sttn tin.•>• mlcm bi; mure'cureful about their use of their time. • —;nIf Senator liingwhocU of Blngvjlle knew that his.'nelghbors back . |8,8*4.84

home might overhear eve.ry. word of his, he might find It harder to foo||the home folk aud placate them with Congressional seed packets. \

It is well known that the speeches th*,.Congressman sends out under;his [ranking privilege are not the speeches he actually delivers. He gets __1929"leave'to print", tnd that uiyts him licence to make up a speech, that no-] "hody would let him deliver.1 even if he wanted, to deliver" it.- Balance

The radio would eliminate the "leave to print" swindle. The home- Boardfolk, could learn ..Bomethinfi about how liuch of a lilt their favorite son

tho

DISBURSEMENTSDisbursements tram March

1, 11)28 to Search 1,

g a radio an-n talk in the

set among hundreds of acres of sa• dustrial purposes.

Not only is the greater part

meadow tit only for in-

...13,590.88

. J 5,253.96of Fire Commissioners,

FRED FOERCH, Clerk.

•Atch.-notes or bonds shall bear in- j approximate^ tbe said pointtere«t at a rate not to exceed six per j period of fifty years,cent i»er annum. All other matters! 2. The Township of Wnodi.r;,:in mspect of said notes or bonds;In the County tif Middlesex roi,,,Miall bo determined by HIP Chair-ito the .laying, _constructing i,. ••man ot the Township Commltue,; talnlns and operating of tun _me Township tMerk and TownBhfp! steam Jacketed" asphalt fln\ •Treasurer, who are hereby author-', lines, two 10" fuel oil pipe Hn> -iced to execute und Isuue swid tetu-jS" ga&olint-kernscn«> and Hi.porary notes or bonds. Jtectlon pipe lines, six *'" _;, „—-Sr^ttr-fh* worlt-el-«al4-luiBn)xe-iaiuljilejeLoil ,plf«[ .Hne», unnient is'to be done in accocdanca Unas varying in sl*e from 2 ! / ;with the plans and .profile of the for water, air, steam and drain iMtuHson'Avt'iiV, Averie!, Concrete under and a"ero« StaiS SU«.i, n.Curb, GutU'i, Grade and ^iudei1 Township of Woodbridge. ,:.Cavement Improvement as hertto- County of Middlesex, at a fioi!.!Tore describt-il, made .-by George R. tant approximately ' 240 f.-i .,Meinll, Towntihip Engineer, and the along the e4Bterlij^-*ld>' of >speciflcalions tiiereoT,,'wlilch are now Street from the l»t«rseciii)n <\< <on flk with the Township Clerk. easterly side of State Street i,m!

G. The-improvement shall also In- westerly side of Old Road, t.y -clutie such extension into intersect-j Eastern Petroleum Products, In.ing streeia not beyond the pronerty; cor-poratlon organized Under th--i"1*...side lines of Madison Avenue as may; of the State of Delaware, its sine-b« determined by the Township Com'jaorB and assign*, and grants tnmittee to be necessary to protect the Shell Eastern Petroleum I'lmii.improvement. ' ' Inc., its successors and assigns

7. Said improvement shall be]eaaem«nt appurtenant to lands ui.i.'.imade and coruplete4 under the su-lto be acquired by It, its sum^i,,pervision and direction of the Town- f and assigns, lying -on either s-ui. •ship Committee and according to the1;aald State Street, to lay, con.-n••• •provisions of an act entitled, "An maintain and operate the sai.i •:•,Act Concerning Municipalities," lines at approximately the -irhereinbefore described. '' pOftt for a period ot tittf yt-arf.

8. Ine cost of .am improvement, 3, The said pipe liner shall •••shall be assessed upou the lands in burled In the soil beneath the hn\ •the vicinity thereof benefited or in- State Street at a depth of not in-creased in value thereby to the ex- than 2 feet: The pavement of •t«nt of 'the benelit or increase. said Stat^f Street shall be restnitd i

9. This ordinance shall take effect'its original condition by the s:r..:immediately upon Its adoption and Shell Eastern Petroleum Proiiu •advertising aa required by law. , Inc., its successors and assiMi-,

Dated March 25th., 1949. . Its orihelr cost and expense.To be advertised March 29th., 4. The uses of said State Su•••'

to which this consent U given .for which these- easements arc -' ::•

ADVKItTIKKMKNT— ;ed, are to lay, construct, in;ii:.: land operate aaphatt Itux pipe in

I fuel oil pipe line*,

and April*5th'., 1929.

NOW, it may well be Uiajl the radio fans will be, all against this proposal.Perhaps- time or Space or -whatever it is that Is used up on the air Is j

too valuable to be given up to the doings of Congress. i" 1 . . f«ph#ps jatz, which'I do not happen to appreciate, rifty be more ini-1

—UXiAL ADVBHTI8KMENT—

CHAltTEK 11,888Kesoivf District No. 2

Report of Conditionof Tbe

N . O T 1 f K| and fire protection pipe lines,

OUt it IS flanked on two Sides by industries, which produce, portant to the American people, than a first-hand knowledge of what Is go-! WOODBRIDGEsmoke, fumes, and odors.

The plant to b,e located at Sewaren on a tract of approxi-,)mately 150 acres Will,trot have any such objectionable features, Iwe are assured by attorney for the Shell Corporation and by]the,technical director of the Shell Corporation.

on in their government at Washington,see the governmental radio tried.

I don't know-. But I'd like to

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that °« P1?* l i n " . water air, steam 'the -Township Committee will hold a i d r a l l l

1 ^ i I» Hnes, and pipe linw :•meeting at the Memorial Munlc-ipal petroleum and petroleum i.rmL,Building. Woodbridse, N. J., . on a i ld. derivatives connect ng pij"' •April 8th.. 1929, at 8:15 o'clock l n ! t 0 »>« cohstruct«d by said Shell h..-'the evening to consider the final P a s - ! e ^ Petroleum Products Inc •sage of the following ordinance, at successors and taslgna. lying or. .

™ . « . . 'wh ich time and place objections easterly and weaterly^sides ot a...-NATIONAL <^reto may be presented by any Street at approxlmjrtely I.' •*" r t " W n l j taxpayer of the Township. j points hereinbefore dwlgnaU.i

Objectors may file a written ob-i.. 5. This ordinance shall tak-• •jecMon with the Township Clert l lnm6d^«>y «P°n »ta

prior to th« date. i p r ^ri^ . . 1 3 r . J%w •',„„

"A man in Newark spent an hour yesterday, shooting peo* 1

- B A N K -of Woodbridge, New Jersey..aX tke,. CJiiSfi 9? JBusiness . ^ Iprti

on March TT, 1929 "l^SOURCES

I pie for ho good reason!; and we were rather surprised to learn! Loans and discounts _ . | 542.27s.93In considering the legal and human sides of the question, ; U i a t h e w a s a n o r d i n a r y . m a n i a c a n d n o t ai prohibition agenti" °^ r d r a f l 8 — • 1UM

The Birds Are Back

we should not lose sight of the fact tttat the Boytitons have j _ ( N e w York Herald-Tribune, Apr. 3;)been payrng taxes on those 150-acres into the Township treas-'nry for more than half a century, and that ah attempt to blockthe sale of that purely industrial land to a reputable industryis hardly "a square deal".

Then there is the question of fairness to Hie wdrkingmaii.Unemployment is a curse to any community. One reason whyeo bany families in the Iselin section needed .help a few yearst'go, was the lack of employment nearby.

'"Though the initial plant of the Shell Corporation will call

j Other bonds,I and securities.Banking house,

43»,18; F- and ' flxuirei,

• 002.7 3

Suburbanites may,have some trials and tribulations during;it e a i estatethe winter, such as wading through spow or muddy street^.! J^e

u

Spring,, however,' brings ample coinpeiisation denied the city j Besewa

274,540.00

75,q6.9l

2,303.36

) , '| " . ! Cash and dueThe birds are again with us. Robmslin pahs, flocks of bJue- j backs ....•.,,....?...

birds, 'song sparrows, and many ot^ier feathered songster?, flit j°iher i b a e U - 3,586.61

the employment of only fifty men, the anticipated expan-of the proposed Sewaren plant would multiply. that| num-

ber by ten within a brief period. : iSurely no company would buy a tract gf one hundred and j

fifty acres at great expense, and then use only a dozen acres!of it. _ ' . | , ' , • |

It is to b'e regretted, that certain residents of Sewaren will Iinterpret the natural evolution of their industrial waterfront i

^ o u g h the trees »nd brush ,, t ^

n df l y 0 U a r e ^ u n a t e you can hear the clear honk-

h ° n k of the geese, flying high in "V" formation on boonlitb o u n d f o r t h e North countopr.

. • v . An Ancient AimdionProhibition\has always been with us. In the year of Our1458, Parliament passed a law altogether prohibiting the

TOTAL _ f 1 068 799 38fclAHEH'HBS

Capital stock paid in - f 50,000.00Surplus _v . : . 60,000.00Undivided prolit»—net 16,241.38Reserves for dividends,

contingencies, etc. - 4,000.00Iteaerves tor Interest,

taxes, and other «*>penses accrued andunpaid _.„_.."_ ^_ 3,750.88

and

AN-OBDftiAME

Comteutlng to the , . .CoiiittrucUng, >laiiiuin\ii|{Operating 6T Certain ripeAcross -Mid tnder Slate Street,in the Township of Woudbrtdge,Ht Two Pkwra by Slull Ka»t*riiIVtnilt-um ProciiictH, inc., ll»>Huccewors and Asttlgiut, anil(•i-unting »n KaM'nH'iH to HliellK-Mtem Petrulvum • Pro4uct»,Inc., Its SuccetUiurtt wul AwdgitH,A|ipurten*nt to IJHIUK Abqul1 tobf Arqulred by It, Its Kum*< •sum and Assign*, to IJI) , (.'-on-etiuct. Maintain anil Oi^nUvCtrlala Pipe lMwz Airons «nd

lor » Teriotl ol Wfljr

il»29, and April 6th., 1929.

—LBtiAL ADVERTISEMENT-

X V D I JtIVirt itMidtnf n»*eomisilw*i"it' i-Secretary and TreiMrurer'* It<" ^

Mart-h 1, t«m to Febhuu iK, '"-"ro: Balance as per Cuh. BookI IMarch 1, 19J8L % "'; Kent. (Port Reading Build-!' ing and Loan AMO.) - - -;Note discounted , , I"1

I ttecf Ipte' froni TownshipI Cbllector Larson - 1'"; Transfer (ram Savings De-! partment ___..__-, *• '

'an invasion of industry!" Their strenuous objections'c^n be;Kame of golf, which/it w«s feared'would usurp too much ofily understood; however the Scotsmen's time .

Due to banka,

standing^ d e » 0 l ! i l 8

aseasily understood; however. j the Scotsmen's time. , ,

. Still, the industrial progress of the community :at large j As late as 1692, golf was prohibited on Sunday. Quote themust be considered; the question of employment for the ever' 'a 'W: "That nane be sene atony mUtynies. or gaimnis upoun the]growing population of the Township must be considered; thetSabboth Day sic as Golff." . |rights of the present and future owners of industrial land must'. * But it seems there was bootleg golf. Attempts to enforce 'state of Newbe considered; the welfare*of property owners, taxpayers, and|*ne unpopular \&w proved futile, and there are many such en- Co.unt>1 o t M l

merchants whose business ,will Genelit by increased popula- t r i e s " P o n *«« kirk session books^ such as "Jamej and George " ' M

tion, must be considered. iw.«..- __J .™—1._ m....: — 1.1 _ . • , •»

After all, iUs the people who not only live in a town, but,\vho work in thai town, whose whole lives, interests' and prop-erty are In that town, who should be considered! , ' LOSE A MINUTE AND SAVE A LIFE1

The commuter is everywhere welcome. But he should not That's the Blogan of the American I»eg\oii Safetpresume to dictate the evolution of the town in which he, makes j sorting Sunday. More than 27,000 people were'kftwi -« -u«,Ins home. The workingman, the businessman, the taxpayer, Iaccidens last year. That's more than the population of Wood-

loclud-apd

. 28.197.86310,497.64603,396.01

LU5.61

Duffus, and ChM^ea Stevinson convict for playing of ye golff, g w e a r t h a t

t-fternovne 'of ye Sabboth and "ordained helf a raerk," «?.ww

eek,auto

THOMAS B.„ . CMbler.

f Subscribed and'««<irii4» bsjora me

the merchants and professional men of the town, and all thosewho gain j:h«eir livelihood in this locality, must be consideredlirst of all.

The 'new Einstein theory is published in a »x-pagepamphlet aelling ft)r twenty-five cents. On the oth^r ha&4>on« can make heads or fatb out of a quarter. ;~>. The NewTttrker, - . •- 4 _ . ;

bridge Township! Hundreds of thousands w?re injured,maimed, or crippled. What a picture oi horror!' tet 's pastethat slogan on the windshield I4W)SE A MINUTE — and SaveA IJVF'' i •

There isn't* doubt ttiat gre*tcii uplift mo*«-

and belief.

t'ne'abovnamed taSkI4 k 4 ^L •

this 2nd., day ol April, 1929..E. M. TSUIB,

Notary Public, (8BAL)Correct—Attest:

JOHN F. RYAN,W: .OUY WEAVER,J. H. CONCANNON,

* Directors.

—LBGAl

^ g i uplift mo*«rtfant it that «rWoh is doae with, tfee autoinobila jack—LQuis-ville Times.

, tlPB IS HEBB8Y QIVftM th»t| the Township CommHUe will hold awm* »V tbe M«aorl*l Mtrakanaj

WHERE A S ^ A petition I has been!tiled by Shell Kaatern IVtroleum!Products, Inc., a corporation organ:iwd under th« Lay* ot the State oil Houneand

1DISBURSKMENT8

Salary Account: (Jani-tor, Secy, TR«*S.J Com.* P. O f c K V

insurance: (Plrempn, FireDelaware, praying that the TownahluiLight PowwA( woodbridge, in the County of! Wa

Trwlt). He*t and

. W a t e r •,Middlesex, consent to the laying, ; i n i « r w t on noteconstructing. maintaininK and oper- Miscellaneous Expensesatlng of certain pipe lines across and ~ ~under State Street, at approximatelythe two places hereinafter desig-nated,.by u l d Bheil Eastern- P<Hrol-euai Produets, Inc., its successors, , ts successorsand asaigu, and Krunt tg ukd Sbell•BOliltf" T t r t ^

g , K•BOlirltf" TBtnrteunrIt d

tntr,ctertntr,Its successor* and. assign*, an ease-ment to lay, eonsiruct, maintain and

t id iy ,

operate said pipe linesunder, said 8Ute Street

d t

aeroai and»t each ot

the aald two places hereinafter des-ignated, appurtenant to lands tboqttQ be acaulrfld by it, UB succejioriand assigns, (or a period bf fiftyyears; and . .

WHEREAS, pursuant to a resolu-tion adopUd by tbe Tfl*n'»ali> Com-miU«e'ot'tbe Tuwnshlp of Wood-bridge, in the County or Mlddl«e».ott January Itth., m i , notice ofa hewing on Uw said application tobe held «4vthe Municipal MemorialBuilding on Wonday, February 18th.,

Hi < f c ' : 1 M | r t ' « ' / L«*d*r *»d inthe Woodbridge Independent, twonewspapers published and circulatedin the Townjhlp ot —e •

Balanoe aa per Cwh Book(/ebruwy J«, 1911) -

! » • •

SAVIMOS MtPARTMIOBuk Balance (Manb ! « , /

Bank InterestDepoidt „ —

1 I'1

|Withdrawal (Depoait to

C h k i Aoff

Checking Account)withdrjivtl t io p*y

note)Bahvace (Woodbridg* Na-

tion*! Buk, February1929.) y -'^'" :' ><:r- 4-°

' ; ' i6 . l i" 'u I hi t* tanin^ct tty» books < >Secreury u d Treasurer ottin Commia^oneM ot Port >:

Ing, and h»y« prepared, tnei •!the above Balance SbMt fromt B l1st., 1921 to

I I #

*»i*A.in five o t W e mdfct

Pott Ofllqe' * ,U d SUtten

Ion, __

18th.,

Sheet

v«o4br«4giMarch Uth

,«*" ! • •

Page 5: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRILS, 1929 Five

WILL BE HELD ;HERE TONIGHT

I First Class Scout Emblemsand Merit Badges to beAwarded at Meeting,

Homo M E|ConferenceApproves

AsBoclntlon ot the fitII1 special "Fathers

Four boys, all resident* of Jcrto'y! Plans for Junior College" "'"' found wandering.

street by Police.School I I'hftulteur Andy Blmonwn Tuesday J*

to Jersey Collate «fp«nte»ary Collegiate In

Wife Complainant.

.udrtoriuSbnevening. Mrs, 3. J. Dunif

S?».. t! menu,

o n of the Woodbridge ^ . ^ w ( | |lonor of the Rarltan Coun-| w o t v -by M r i ! A { Bautaann,,„,!* ot America, ll ta be; E d w i l / d E l n h ^ n " s l » a u m » ™ .„, I,, the Methodist church Q o l d e h M

n o r n '

ere .played and prlxesrs! AuKiist Hainnann

II. Love, i !.Mra Barron

I W

, ; 1;i.ihn H i'»vr> J"H>-"""-D • | mr«, uarron i, . ^hooin. will be the chairman, 18 r . , »nd Wiilt

•". ' . ; n ) , , | L. Ogden, who was r«-''' ., '..ppnlnt.'d District 8«OUt CQ1J1-•" ';„;„,• will serve ai secretary1 'M,,,, ,r,i A. Tapnen, R. ,p. Tyrell

,,,,,,1,1 i>. Hayden, chairmen' ,m. lv of the committee* of

' '" , • i :\2, 1(3 will serve as Mem-' , i tii'r Court ot Honorand wilt

,,i badges to the local ScoutB' |..,n. met the requirements for

, i" l th8«;!. DeJoy/Mrs. Arthur Ernst",

Wednesday. The'Btltute at HkckettltOWn, New J e y ,range In ages from twelve to w e r e approved .yeMorday by the

Newark Conference Of the MethodistEpiscopal Church, When it met for

2 d l l 3 t L k * '

Stephen Barr'K a laborer, of Lwavenue. Hopetawn. was ttntenced toserve 30 day* 1n the county work-

lar-the •{*•»'"K ot a Junior home when arralKnetJn pollw court |here' last evening mi .drunk and dls-

Hi» *lJSe... M»ry,

THE PERTH AMBOY SAVINGS INSTITUTION

y ge Infourteen years.

New Radio 'tR 72nd .sessionNewark.

Luk*'s

was tti« conipUlnant,

Plumbers Get licenses,plumber* weft

Levlam '

Goldpn

4 Hurt WhenAuto S k i d s

Through Fence

ln

A new departure In rtfofe selling ably~" actei"'upin by the Soard «fT teeftrtMff t»TthV rfrtmrt _Is announced by Concannon'a Music trustees ot the Institute In January Health , Inspector PeterStore, of'Woodhrldge, where a spe- and so with the Official sanction of They are: , •ela^sale ot radio,will be staged to- the Conference th« junior college of I A, R. Dttkaon. Hopelawn; Michaelmorrow. Complete tube equlBmefft Centenary tolleglaU InstltuU will Stafford;,. Perth Amboy; Frankfor standard radio. «etB ,on sale will b'»g1h it* irdfit 6ft" September J i .Plr lg l , ' l¥rtli Amboy;be gfven free lo all purchasers on 1&29. Or. Kolwrt ,J . Trevbrrtw,: berger, " " 'Saturday. Many local residents are p r e d i c t of Ceattnary Collegiate | - .expected to take advantage of talji Inatitule, will lead the Junior C p l - , ^ ™ "offer . i v - , v , ^

- — E - ^ - * . : . - ^ — i . u J-

A car driven by Mh. Aletka Wager PltlP

liSS

ii,-ii(ioiiH for Klrst Clans u, .MM| M.-rlt Uadges have" been n e r ( Vmfv a v e r l l l ( 1 j , e t u c h e n i w h t c h,1 t'rmii RPV. Ernest S. Ab- skidded on New Brunswick avenue,,'niiiiiiHHter of Troop-81;- Alex- Mppela«vn, yesterday' afternoon ln-

,;. u. QuelcV acoutrnMter jurC(i a t h i r t e e n y(,:,r o l d b o y d a m .:;::, iinil John T, Tetle.y, Scout-- ngerf two fenced ami another car be-Tiiiop 33-' * ' - ' fbre coining toja Ht»j>. George Mrai,

.nc,... 'troops wlll.be present 13, oM.orctta atieel, Hopefawn, was,(,,i and the speaker wlll.be badly.'cui about the light leg whenl]!,,,«-, «i South Amboy, Ansls- struck by the auto owned"by Ctirm

ol Troop'.31 and wagner, of Metuchen.of Troop 101,! Eliiabeth Monroe, of Metuchen,

Ruth Macnn, of I'erlli Amboy umii lAccutlvn Herbert W. Lunn Mrs. WaKner were bruised and

liaiitan Council Headquar- suuken up. All WPI:I> treated at the,11 !„. present together with i>«th Amboy CHy Hospital,

,, picsrnlatlvea of the Rarltan i The car which wus struck by the,\ cordial Invitation Is ex- Wagner auto was parked by the

tn nil Ihi> parents and friends curb. It Is owne<l liy Oscar Sund-;iiu,u In Woodbridge to be (julgt, of Fords. Th.' fences which

i.ii this occasion. j were broken are Inhaled In front ot. 1 •••! - . - . Itire hrtmes of Thomas Dwyer and Jo-

Anna Peterson j B e " h •8« M - j ' ...EntertainsG. L T..Cbb||in..gc|n/eiinr' Hwtm

u-rson, of Ridgedaiei at Birthday PartyhostPHs to the mem-1 Mrs. George •Sclwunser. of Dun-K. T. Club of • the ),am placp, was \.hv hosiess to a

Church at a nr»up of ftilldren who attended aiit:Id in her hcnie on Tues- birthday liarty which she gave fornlim. .Mrs. A.«O. Brown (|1Cr daughter, Dorothy, TuesdayHi, entertainment program ^ afternoon.. The IHHIII: was prettilyii/1^|iiano SOIOB. Miss Caro-: decoraUd for the evept. Gamesni.rii tfiid two original were played. Among the guests\lrs. W. V - i ) . Strong JSall were^ JUra. i:rei.Sehwenjsej;_auu..ltetil Htory on "Easter". Mar (iKU!shtw», Aniiii and Ruth; Mrs.ad u Canadian poem and ??tiarles schwenzei- and her daugh-

it.lml Wtloon -sanp. •Mtefl'ter, Ilwtha;' Robeii s«;liwenier and,i Wilder cloned..Uie.urojram Katluy-u und Ruth ^trfuaR.

il piano solos. ' ^ ^,:!.•!• chairmen appointed at, plenty of trout h;i\e be,en plantediiii lin-Hs «OBi}ft)h which fol- st stoni; Mill, ns>nr High llrldgc,i, : Mra. W. V. D. Stroni,'. this year, according to word rfoni

John Fleming., ..p0-,," Williams.

^ Afterthe paymentsare finished

BARCELONA'S"PROGRESSIVE BARBER SHOP"

A. tire that wilt stillbe new and ood forft year or two

\i.ii.i

Mi lie

(!.

Now Located at

120 Main StreetNEAR AMBOY AVENUE

Mrs. John:M.. publicity.

....-•• iH'i'scnt were: Rev. nnd,u V. D. trong, Mr. and Mr». ]i MM. U Mr. and M«, Mac-(I.Mi. and Mrs. John Fleming,

i Miiriha and Carotyij Laurit-|II. Anna Johnson, Mildred Wilatmj

i ^li-n Dockmader, Mrs.. A. G.mi. Mrs. Ktlit-1 Dlgne, Messrs.!

illiain I,,iur!lHcn, A. Josaen ai>r'!les ThomaH. !

I Inod r<»t>i. i liiijinar, 1)5, a laborer, of

i'i'ft. wiifi flnpd $5 and C*ourtvin-n urralKiied In police courtMondjiy morning on a drunken-duirge. »

GEORGE R. MERRILL

CIVIL ENGINEER

8URVEYOR

WoodJbridge, N- J.

In addition to eighteen years' experiencein tonsotial service to Woodbridge potions,Bdrcellona's now possesses the most ap-to-

v date, sanitary equipment. At our new ad-Hre'ss yon will tind new, con\tQrtable,, air-

. cushioned seat, back and head-rest chairs,new sterilizing, hot towel and electricalequipment, and a department exclusivelyfor ladies' bobbing and hah dressingservice.^ . .

There ;ire ninny reasons for saving money. .The best roason is . • • /

To get more real living out of life, • comfort,leisure,.travel,.whatever you want. ' ,They *re all in J^ savings pass book.This is the only mutual savings bank

,in Perth Amboy

THE PERTH AMBOY SAVINGS INSTITUTION210 Smith Street, Comer Maple Street

General Systemic InfectionThru ORAL PROPHYLAXIS

Si'it'iitists an- cqmtnK more and more to believe that a greatniiijorlty of all infections enter the body through the mouth.Ii is JUKI nx Important, both for your health and for your \*v--uiial satlefactlon, tor the mouth to be kept clean, 8B it is tor• ..iir body to bo bathed with soap and water..

Decayed 4<-etli are Inconsistent with oral cleanliness. In-iv. wd broken, and loose tteth give rise to general syMeniinfection with its attendant permanent bodily injury in onf

. i in HI or another. . ' .• , ' • ,»

Dental X-Ray, examlrtattori. correction, and treatment o£womb, conditions may be tiad at the office ot

Dr. L. SHAPIROSORGEON DENTIST ,

104 Main Street Woodbridge -

PHONE WOODBIUDQK «25 FOR APPOINTMENT

Otkri Evenings UiitH 8 on Tncs«lay, Thursday.,and

Barber ShopTownlm T

PAYMENT PLANThere's no advantage In buyingtires on credit unless you buythe kind tiuit will laxt long aftrrthe payments are finished andforgotten.

Credit pays when it enables nman to select the brand !u-knows to be the best.

We want to show jouwhat j u s t a dollar crtwo on a tire will 40,

BOUGHTONGETTER A t

TIRE CO.Madison Ave. & Jclleisoii St.

'ei-th Amlniy, X. J. Tel. 1(17

GENERALIt's the second 10,000 mites

that makef the Bi<> hit.

TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTXTXTXTTTTTmiXXg

fl Private Passenger Automobile Owners!

10* Rewardfor

THE FUNERAL HOMEOHEEN STREET AND BARRON AVENUE '

' Ev«ry Facility Which

Mortuary ScienceHaa Provided

k A. JH1RNER - : - A. F. .GBBINERFuneral Directors

PHQNB WOODBRIDGE 264 •

Dorsey MotorsINCORPORATED

AUIHOIUZMD UISIUHJUTOHS

»ple & Fayettt SU. «rtb Amboy

Careful DrivingNovr you can buy Public Liability and Property Damage

Insurance at lower premium costs. If you have establisheda record of safety for 24 months, you are entitled to a re-duction under

THE TRAVELERSMERIT RATING PLAN

You can enjoy lower premiums, pay for them on easyterms, and buy the very best insurance and service • fromthe largest multiple-line insurance organization in theworld. Telephone or write for fall information — noobligation. • ' _._.»_

J. H. Goncaniion

ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW

76 Main Street•X1XXXXX

TELEPHONE2 9 «

Friday, April 5 2 — Features — 2

Chester ConklinIN

"TAXI 13"— ADDED FEATURE —

PATSY RUTH "TROPICALMILLER 1N N I G H T S "

2 — Features — 2

KEN MAYNARD

"CHEYENNE"Sun., Mon., April 7th. and 8th.

EMIL JANNINGSin

Sins ,£ FathersTuesday, April 9 2 '— Features — 2

Renee AdoreeIN

"Tide of Empire"— ADDED FEATURE -

SPIRIT OF YOUTH with DOROTHYSEBASTIAN

Ladies! TEHVU^IV Free Silver NMrt!

Woodbridgei

xxxxxxx

Wed., Thurs., April 10 • 11 2 — Features — 2

AdolpheMenjou

IN

'MARQUISEPREFERRED"

Geo. K. ArthurAND

Karl DaneIN

All at SeaLadies! S U FREE CHINAWARE!

Page 6: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

THE WOODBftlDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL S, 1929

for mjpper Juirt a

Indeed, from

IN 50Births K6peCT#0Birth p

New "Jersey Last r Year;Cancer Deaths Increased.

TUKNTON. April /

te\\ di-ath rate fp>ii» tub*r«uloil«',for l»2,H is the lowest in fifty vwin,;arforrtlnit lo thp State Departnwnt;of H.aHh. The death rate ' fromcanpfT. altliaiM?h ullfhtly moT« thinfar 1027. Is thfc.JitKhett y*,t recordedIn tbo state. ' . • ;

The death ml* for the m t iub-Jpct.tt) slight correction when com-;(illation Is completed. Is 1*1.98 per1:060 estimated, population. Tim;liln'n-raU- wan 1».»« Per 1.000 In-jliahiurits. • •

"i'rartlcally all comnuinirable dts-Vases «iio* a somewhat" lufclier i a fwith (tie exception uf s c i i e t fi>mand tuberculosis," the departmentstates. The raio from, all lorms *f ituberculosis U, 7«.4 l>er l»fl,00O.populatlou. which compart* favor-,ably wtch »- fate of SU-1 f roiB <l\e;same disease only nve years ago. ItIs also the lowest rule tor tubercu-;losis since IHiS when mortalityrutiM wert (list compiled Jp NewJersey. * I

•The- death ute from cancer amiother malignant tumors ig 110.2which, alUiou*.! only slightly mort>itauQ Uu- l»t l rate of 108.5 In Hiehighest )<..'i-vcordeu. The, pn«u-,monluS als , -how a considerably increated Hue for IS**- the ratwwan 91 X „.' 1UU.000 inhabitantsand tor 1928.111.5. „. "During u-.^ approximately 70,-200 births were reported which Iseiinivult-nt to « r«ie til it.Vi I»-I1.VU0 inhabtv*nt*. Total births n-«liortvd decreased about 2.8UU fromme preceding year a,nd the rate dt>-dined more than a point, the 19«»rate is the luvtial i.nte 19Uo but itih iiktly that a higher rate would,liave prevauieil in mat yem (19upinail uil births been reported. Thelow figure for 1S28 Is merely a con-1tinimnce of the decline noted since j1 a 17 when me raw was 24.S8, j

"ThP number of deatlis of Infantsunder one year ol age per t.OOttjbabieti born alive was <>o.i whlcti is1

slightly hlgtfer than the rate of Sl.Jlfor the previous year. The 1928'rate is, however, tne second lowest.rate attained and contrasts with a irate 01 1314 in 1911. The approxi-mate number of mother* who diedas a result of childbirth is 400 or]S.S per 1.0B0 baple* born alive.

Thme are matters for philosophers mother frost itBnrt lor casuUtR tint not for boys, week ago.

J ^ ^ l ^ f i ? WheSw^eeTt^ sorrow of a millionsrtile In lost It'ls iwualljr gone ior- yean. - *• _______ ,er. Bo, too, with ra5tner«. I •— """fierald cannot spe*-« 'n4^* can-', Ftwt Mmt*_ot « « « »

not think. His mind Is no match to*, S w i t ^ _ _old so suddenly —-1 . . . . . . -

the earth fall-*-«ye» BANGOR, Met i r o «••*•% 1W+V " « t » i « • »•»•• « * • A • u

that saw.th* cake buke *ni «aw hl« Mhnaa to be

«ai,,.pool at the opening of thefishing wason oh "Monday,1.4 H. poundi and wasHoraca W.. Chapman, of ninuu

j president o l t l e Maine Fish ;,',',',-Game AMOdatWh. Eighteen r

President boaU.'ffloM Of thtm' manned h.v u,

April i.—The ffrat Juit .below the water-works dam'Bangnr dawn oroke.

jfefteya t * Telephone Hrtidquarteii

S A prog**.

CiemM Ih'Kllik!. qpper li-fi; hi-

ll) HOY A. UIIHtONSlop rentrr,They battered

(Stall Writer Ior Onirai 1'rew andThe WoodbrMge Le»tler> | that.

--OJfcA. III-. April i— The sor- after . . . .....__ , „ . . , _ . _,. .. row o( a miHion years pe«rs from1 Also he says they threw a gas bomb receivedThis compares*wllh 6.1; 5.4; 6.2 and! t | l e eyes of'Gerald DeKing here. * Into the room after she was shot and0.0 for the preceding fonr year*.' _| They are eye» .prematurely sad-

A lt

"In brief the year has producedthe lowest tubertulosls and highestcancer rates y « recorded ta--N«»-pJersey and while not as encouraging ; boy. In tactas~the very favorable year of 1927 j twelve,

d i f d l d l j

dened and grown old as though theyhad lived and seen Into the ages.

yei. Gerald to jiul a lltlle, b« has just turned

yis considered satisfactory and lndl-jcates that the trend Lowank lower;h|gKeQeral death rates has not

,.changed." -., \The department record show 1,056

deaths due lo accidents'in whichtuovlng automobiles were Involved. |The figure does not include 19 deaths;

i d t d 21'

A month ago lie was pitying withf h

g ptoy*. -He wa* thinking of theb h ih h i h

i

and his father, renter, below; Charles Ha<H<'}- lower right'

in the door. But he helped suppon his bandagedGerald say;* they didn't have to do laUur, whose head was swashed and

He says they battered it in whose arm hune !inii> at his slde^they had killed his mother, testifying to the'-teirifle heating the

" at the hands of the dryraiders who took a lite for a pint,pummeled him and then killed hisdying there on the floor with blood |

all over her. .wife.1 screamed and screamed," Ger-] Gerald saw and heard the cold

t1 screamed and screamed, G e ] Gerald saw an

aid «ay*.~"Buyihey only turged me clumps-, tall on the casket, but most

• NEW JERSEY BELLTELEPHONE COMPANY

A thing of beauty, it is built notonly for today, but to meet thef»<julrement«> of the expandingfuture.

It hornet the central direction ofa toot of society that serves all

*ihe"peopk ^f the State tnti»mately and constantly, andhelp* to promote their welfare.

In its conception and in itsuse it stands a public expres-sion of faith in die State andin thexpower of telephone«vice to aid its develop-ment

baseball team on which he is thecatcher. *

He, was asking his mother:"Mother wlU we have cake for sup-per?"

But now he no longer thinks suchdue to motorcycle accidents and 21 'things. Now he no longer talks tofatalities due In Inhalation of motor b.U mother, because htik JBOjlWr isexhaust. The total of 1,056 deaths dead.compares with 1.Q&7. {or 1927, which1 she died before Otnld"*period showed a twenty per'cent in-j young eyes.crease over 1936, when 861 deaths: calling forpecurred. While the number of while a dry raiding part* ot sncr.inadeaths has'been Increasing annual,^ and deputies pounded to U» doorthe death rate per 100,008 registered „, tn<.|r home,motor vehicles has declined from The deputies, lud guns in their2.04 in 1923 to 1.53 for last year, hands. They had machine guns, re-

Aoalyied, the motor fatality flg-' rolrera and shotguns. I bey also hadurea'Show the death of 629 pedes- gas bombs.trians which number Is equivalent, But first they fired at Gerald'sto 60 per cent ot the total. Appro;)!- mother and she just gasped Shemately oue-thjrd ot the pedestrians Bwayi<l against the vail. She hungwho died were children u»deF 1 5 t o r a "linute to the telephone re-year of age. Eighteen^-per cent of reiver and then went down all cov-the drivers and occupant* ot autonnv, eretl with blocd.biles who were killed were under !0 • tired IlUBdty ;year a of age. ; Gerald saw' thu. He al*O taw the

Collision uf motor vehicles with officers bash in his father's headrailroad train

and cursed my father. They wouldn't.of all he saw flieni, becausrireeven help lift mamma. We had to!not speak, he cannot think likedrag her across the room and down I grownups. He cannot reconcile thethe stairs. Somebody told me that

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •reasons pro and eon and the variousmoftl intrtemctos which made probibltion a law. •

He reason? only in losses like thetime he lost six of his beautiful bluemarbles and cried all night. Th»

Now his mother

she wouldn't hate died, either, if thepolicemen hadn't thrown the .gasbomb into the room after they hadshot her. Oh, it is awful."

Central Figure of TragedyGerald la the central figure quite! marbles were gone,

naturally in the latest tragedy to,•» gone.fc l tw rigorous enforcement ot the1 Shadow* of a million years movedrv law fittingly In his »yes like the shad-

"The great state of Illinois' has ow» m sometimes » e at dusk on ataken official cognizance of the case. »»ke when the wipd to sighing andAlready the state's attorney general, the trees sway on the mirrored sur-Oscar Carlatortn, has appointed ( a c e ° r ™e *?i? r; . _,Charles W. HadRy.Uie assistant at-» Bejwnd Polwt of Tearstorney general, to represent him and And he cannot cry. He can onlythe commonwealth at a thorough in- » u t t e r v l t b b i s childish mind like

' into the shooting which' <M> old man puttering feebly acrossin Aurora sayiT'fcas

ruthless. <The snooper, Boyd Kairweather,

who was hired at five dollars a caseby the office of State's AttorneyGeorge D. CarbArry, of Kane county,and the man whose affidavit for sucha small betrayal sum, sent dry raid-

and

A Bigger, Better Store Awaits You at BLAKE'S100 MAIN STREET

a room.lyhat 'matters it to him that a l>u

hullabaloo is now being raised,throughout the state and peoplewverywhere are writing him ledersand sending telegrams of consola-tion.

What does it matter to him that

NEW STOCK, NEW FIXTURES, NEW LINESincluding an assortment of fine

FISHING TACKLEfor fresh and salt-water anglers—reasonably priced!

ecs out .to kill Mrs. DeKing, has been- after hU mother was dead and thein hiding under official protection dry raiders searched the hiAise they

in, was re»ponsible for with the butt endof a-shotgun. Then s l . n « t f i e 'ufBl l l ad« « f d e a t .h maae the found; only half ^gallon of home-

The hi£he«t number of Gerald picked uj» a rerolTer aadsnoi, * h a d o w s ° ' »SM move In Geralds made wine, made trom grapes that

was-76 fn 1924 and Jne lowest was T i m T a the lee, »'•>«•**«• •«•»-• hi=T Gerald saw th« c«ld clumps of|grown from the. little67 in bQth 1525 arid 1947. (Joilleion' eyes closed whenwith other vehicles was the causte of the trigger.;l? fatalities and overturning and Everything since that day has been.running into stationary objects wa.* a dream,lo Gfrald. He cannot teciviponsible for 315 deaths. , "imcile a boyJs prittlsophy. He rea ;

^———— • suns Instead in i*i=rf*.< Once 'he hadhis mother. Now the U dead.

That is the on.y way Gerald Danh ( R l n l | iliiQk becauM- hi= iuln< still b youngl91 0 • U*l • ttiouj h nij eytB'are oh, ao old.

i ' , , „ . '• I t°v c o u l d rfarce belieTe how oldJAccording \to Edward A. PrudenJ^ej j ^ ^ Sowrlhliij seems to

vice-president and^trust officeroX the m ) Jye j n back of thent. Toucan seeFidelity I nion Tru*f Company ot l n lneiu, ('r jouNewark, New Jersey, (he-year n lne- ; a g o n i M o ( ma'n>teen tweril) eijht haa been a red ^ lD , B e mletter one for the, trust companiesund banks that nave attlve. tru»t de-partmenls.

Mr. I'ruden in discussing t"he re-cent national survey nude hj tkeTrust Company Division'< o( theAmerican Bankers' Association »>•»,''The sweepins strides being made

iy jaouier ,• wuoMr mother wayMil liauoc Uki;

.me to love God

look Close, theVou can

GnhM-oian«. .,Gerald putter* with nil boy's mind

to find the cause ti&« an old mauupping (MWy with his cane to findtti« way about • room or down aB t r e e ( . . • " ,

|iU|. h* can r.agon only In the1

ps g term* of Ion because [hat la how altby the trust compa/iieMiiifc'lruM, de- bo,.» reawn. The> CIMM that way!partmenta of banks are algnlfleantly even though their eyea »re age* old'revealed by the. Hesulta of this most —agM ^a like G-rald't eye*. iextensive inuuiry. Queationaires "iiaiua is gone aaid Gerald. "I1

were sent out unking the banks to re- k a o t n^, t^,,, wt.,, ^M n e r g ^ ;port the number of tinieg they had name was Roy Small. They call.him'been named execulur* and trustee* » deputy therin. 1 am (lad I aholunder wills last year, the number of him. He lulled my mother , whoinsurance trusts obtained and the never hurt anybody. ~~amount of insurance covered by good. jg,e did notthem. MVnfn these responiea were idey say. She taughtrouulled, they, allowed the gratifying md'obey the flaj;. Now when 1 bearUta lo f 4l.uT» appointments u ?s- the "Sur Spangled Bauer' I no'icutors and trustees under will* dur- longer feel a thrill run np and down!i"g 1928. • |uiy bati. TU* --i#r Spaafled aan-'

•'WhUe this nsure ny no meant ner' «laa4t for law. *Uib my toother jrepresents tin- total number of ap- told me to re*>e«t. But th» law,POtntmepia for all corporato flduei allied my mother. 1ariei, It K»inB added significance Tow* MOMTU. WftfcBe? |when we realise that the latest $o ola has Gerali frown In o*eKe4»ral Estate Tax statistics ahow abort weak that h« eaaaot cry. Be tthat,, there were only S.114 eatate*' went, to bis moihrt tTomeral aad theof- more than (60,000 reported for whole town of r\urora lurBcd o«t to :

the last current year. ' . luourn with him. Tk« .lupetal pro-!"It U dlfflcult to appreciate fully"', ccMloa wa* treuit-i.dettslV ton*. I'eo-'

Mr. I'ruden goes on to say. "the uW In the town wrre niulterlag, too.'pignittcance of iheae Dgute* — what Uerald kanw* n.^i bis mother wa*

•they mean as a tremendous teith \lllttf lor tre doiiara. That to thentonial in rtftecllns the public's re*- priw Hut Boyd FairwMiUwr, aprl-ognllion of the integrity, eaViency tale dry iBooptr, who doubled a* anand imperiur uuallftcatlou o| tru« auto taletman. i-c«iv«4 for 'swear-UatitutionE in' the admlnlatratioa inc out an affid.tu that Genld'tand cujweryatlon of eitataa. ^do*d aiothcr, Hrv Ulltavn DtKlag,

coii|parativ« &sur«« f«r f te- had sold him a A*M of BMvuhiBt,years are equally.impreaaire. i Wh«a the dry "UMMS CMM wltitwm« Iustitutioni ieport«4 their 4e««' arttumtnj « | many gulb

.g avpolntmentr duriai 1»1T, aid tear ga* txiuiw to anarch th*wbkh shown tivu Hit inweaat to te houae, Gerald* Uth«r. Joaeph 'a total of 1.4,40? or 49 par cent. At King, woujda t i<-i thew Uu Hathia rate, the number el taUiH that tloo. th*> *«%rcb warrtat wmatftuitlmately will b* settled by baak* etly made out Tn«a ihTIryawl trust oeuimiiUw U doubiuig wen went back iud g«twery two years. ana «K»re g a w .

Printing

?

•PHQH*; 14 0 0

' J

R SPLIT BAMBOO RODS$2.50 up to $7.50

TROUT REELS15c. to {1.00

LEVEL WINDING REELS(Anti-Backlash) $2 up

Wet and Dry Trout Flies10 c. each

Indiana and Colorado

S P I N N E R S . . . i . . . 15c.Leaders. 15c Floats .10c

Famous "Mustad" Hooks

SPORTING GOODSA Shipment of New, Low Priced, High Values

Baseball Bats — Catchers Mits — Tennis Racket* — Tennis BallsBaseballs -u Fielder's Gloves — Toy Gott Clubs

Eastman Kodaks & Films — AD PricesDEVELOPING & PRINTING

- 24 HOUR SERVICE -Bring in Your Negative* — For Quick, Cle*r Prints

Latest Novels - 3c per Dayfekke'i Brand) of ^omrath'j Circulating Library

GROWING EVERY DAY. Bifgett Selection ot the Latest N»»el» to Choott From ,

[.BESTSELLERS IN FICTION JUST OFF THE PRESS ~ON SAUg AT POPULAR PRICES — MAKE EXCELLENT GIFTS

J.BLAKE- M.j« in« - Candie. Cigar*, etc. — Stationary —

AGENTS FOR LOFT'S FAMOUS CANDIESONE HUNDRED MAIN STREET ~

HMHHHHHMMHMMMMMHMHMMHMMMMMMHMHHMMMHHMMMHHHHHMMHMHHHMH

:HM

•MM

BKMHHH

Page 7: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

•'\™W-tl"W;7*&$

THE wbdbBRtDcjE UAISIR, FIM *v; A i m g, im

Woodbridge STakes 1, Loses!

Against Fords

I Richards, f,'Clark, o. ...

g. _ _Voorhees,'. g. . _ j .Mesick, g.".._ t

IBS212

Fowl* ^ A.14 11

| ,

w oof The score by periods:

lt „ ,

|Fulle*t«tt|1"t !.'.,,|4 A. A. defeated the ?»nderban, t ",. l.askcteera .in Fords! y^"6,8*! *• -.•- -,,(,1 court by a 35-33 score Sorenson. c. _ ;

. evening to » * • t t o r - w o ^ y r * y t - < " ~ - " •• —nf a three gahie series to •"dorf., g. ,

Township championship,iirldge clan won Uie prevl-im their home floor on the

it' previous by a 39-84 wore.hini and deciding' contest will*, ,,i in the near future on, a,1 rmut If one can be secured.)

I mi l s quintet made' a spurt,upcning of the last tussle to

,,, a comfortable le«d In tho.iiinrtfr. The visitors came,'iiuni In the second canto and, H tour point lead, bei<5T.S.lll«li,;ili t>ndf(l. , They kept, the i

SORDS POINTSBig, Bad Harry Must Watch His Step

Uyion to BeoitNational Game

Golf Tourneysto Start Soonat

(Continued from Page 1)the. third Btanzaj

, tone the game In the final i.; of play when the home: —i:m.<l a brief rally. kerson, vice-prpni<li>nt; J. A. Du,ii,,n starred for the winners, p l e " i s . treasurer; Kdward ,K. Cone,

8ec«;eta

lords A. A.O. V.3 2

,ini:i, f

• i i ' .nil, C-

i .i 1 it i i t l

t i l l , I . ,mis .

14 7

5';

\\\•(,,,,n

. , , field goals and two free »ec«;<**ry..I'icliards caged flve two point- T n e Board of Directors are: E. K.

,„[ a lone single for the losers.! Cone, J. A. Du l'l.-ssls, R. S. GUI, 8.,:„,,.„• V. Hay, A. B. HuU, William Hobllt-

Mil, Edward Morris, Charles, W.__ ' Nichols, Louis Neuberg, J.* P. Pat-

„' terson, W. H. Roillnson, C. R. Rose,2 C. D. Snmteker,**. N. Savage,, James, Smith, Oscar A. WitKeTsorf ana Johni a. Wright.; Golfers at the I'rescott Hill Golf

j]j and Country Cluh In Plalnfteld wilt!

( _ , h a v e an eighteen hole course with, . theHotal yardage increased to 6,7 50,

'this year. Construction on an addl-m | tlonal nine holes has already been

started. " I'ar for (he courM will72. The addition will Include fivefour par 'holes, two par five holesand lwo par.three holes, Numerousnatural water' hazards due to thepresence of a.brook will be a featureof thei-new division.

The Linden public golf course1,will be officially opened for the aum-

Jier at an early date., Followers offlic sport are already swatting thepill through the fuinrays and Intothe rough. The grefn fee on week-days IB one dolliu and on Sundays$2.50,

Woodbridge

f.

G._ 3- 6„ - 0.

F,01161

611

12 9. 33.oro hy periods:

- - 14 5.ue' ....--:.•!. 11 .12 3—33 .

S.. Page Schol»y, nttqn. Department Athletic Offl;ce'r of the American Legion, liasIssued a, call to all I'ogt nndCAunly Athletic Qfficen, to at-tend a*me*tlnK tomorrow after-noon at two o'clock,'at theuoonift oLEbtiffs Ollp«ant vm\,

\ State and Broad Streets, Tren-

BARRONS TO CROSS BATSWITH RAHWAY IN FIRST

GAME OF SEASON TUESDAYLarge Squad of Diamond Candidate! Being Sifted by Coich

^Ricj , J i l l Hands Working Hard for Berths on VarsityNine; *Junior Dam h»U uams

Bored-by American Legion- Post*In 4hin state. A1 it Is. estimated -that , morethan three thousand boys under("nvp.ntwn years «f age, will bt»|iluyln£ bnaehnll in this .Statt,undcf • tile supervision' of tlui

American Lesion.1 . i

Cable TwistersTrounce Steel

Equipment 5| having some trouble, with the early

' The Standard Underground Cubic j spring Charley-horses which" follow..1 ba»kptfeci*B of l'erth Amboy trounced I rigorous practice. Several veterans| Outfield:' Cacclola, Janrtrlsevlts,

the Avenel St'cl Equipment five4o 1 may be switched to.fill in on posts;Koslc. Brennan and Sherman.

CoftcK Rice of the BArron Avenue High,School varsity! nine has his charges nil ready for the firsi clash of the season 'iwhich is \6 be BtagerJ at Rahway next Tuesday afternoon with '"•'the'-Rabypay High School, furnishing the opposition. It is tooparly to predict, n win and the local mentor wouldn't do it any—way, but the~#ea>Rh of material'which has" been turning outand showing up,-.\vell in practice should make it a good game. .>

Tke pitcfcinfc and catching sectifiM'Mii'^tClrare the bad;-bone of any .team are a little handicapped by the loss of ma-terial which la to b.& used In other. :— — —positions. The moundstnen arc! .Catchers: Montague, Di-nraan,

'Aquila andPitchers:

Lofekle..Wukpvets; Schmidt,

he A f r i c a n from a Brat to Clashon the Diamond

with Fords A, C.The Woodbiidve Cardinal* Will

WoodbrWg*

11 land, f.Tl.l1 1 !

. . * • •

OUTDOORS'That Split Bamboo

\ \ i

It]

l

now a lot of fishermen who, and eventually weaken the, line.li<'ti they buy a split bamboo But take your rod, the favorite

ml. ih. ir nuiricB are over. An a that has served you well for the lastuM.i of tuft, they havo Just be- two or- tbree Masons, and look Itmi Ni> matter how carefully over; The chanceB are that- the fer-I,III-IM-I| a bamboo rod may be, no rules are shaky, the tip offset, thei;.11.1 how carefully g lued, Jointed;'guide windings frayed* here and

.mited, Time, the deutrpyer, there, and the wood or cork griplm.-w as goon 88 the glosslly loese. ••

,.d wand Is t i k e n out of t h e ! To get tneThost enjoyment out ofi h m v ,..IS1. j fly-casting for trout, the split bam-

ets ut t . ujHl dries in the hot sun; accurately, -with- a minimum of ef-»iien twisted rudely, when; ' o r _ L _ .ed or

Ity JACK SOKIW(S|Mirls ('iirUMHilsl-Wi'lifi- tin Central l'ress and Woodbii(lKoJje*i!er)

NO innttrr wlml » pln.vi-r's inline may h« or ll<>\V (;T«»t it reputationhe luv< nuulc, llu- niiuk must be towed In tin- ranks of the De-

troit Tiger* this jvitr. Miumgcr Ituvky Himls niad^ (lii« plain theoilier A&f whvn he siiKK^Mod asking wnivers on Harry Hrllnuumlor IIIIIIIIK to comply with ti-aftiing ml«*8. ' • «•,

Hcllmaim Is i«\|Kii<-<l to IMIIII down first huse iliU'nenxtni. HB isu hiitciof acknimUdniil skill with 13 years of major league expert-emu behind him. Lust yt-jiv he lilt .342 and in 1921, WZX, 1025and 1027 topped tho Amerlc4in League hitters, Hut Harry mustbehave or.take (lie gati'. • .i,, , ,f.,.,,,

'• Harris nas I>«U' Alevander, a $30,000 rookie from Toronto, wholed the International Lbn^ue batters lant year, for first Imwr emer-gency calls. He. IK H big [ellow who etui drive the ball with much(rn»K aivd hAN actually had more experience at the initial anck thanHelimmiii, who H|H-III most of Ills time tn the outfield.

be.

, , ,. ,_ , , . , , „ "I Wukovets has been tried out onplace tie in the Perth Industrial H a s - ! t t a m o u n d H e n n 8 a f f t a t , w l l a n d

k e t ^ I l -teaKim last Friday evening j n a g a e v e W p e d a ho.,k to go with Iton the Y M, c. A: ceTrrtlTi I > p r t h ' w l l j j n - T n S - y ^ f o V ^ ^ hli a n aavaflTBTfP .1\mboy . The winners .will meet the H e , g ft b , t o t j R m e ,„ .„ ,„ a , . m w , l l ( 1 , ,f er th Apiboy Hat tmi whoi.were t n l m , - v hold hlpi down for a few days. Ion Hie.triple knot to decide the in- Ql^ w n 0 ^ y g u h f o r " w u k | P " , |dustrlal League c h a m p l o n a h l f Vann'bt oontrol the Vlll at times but• Cassldy starred for the Under- ( s h o w s a streak of brilliance once in

I ground clan with eight field goals I a while. Mentor Hlce In tryt#8 himand four free trys. Hanaen Bunk j out with several catchers In the hopefour field goals a n d \ t £ o slngleB f* that they will Bteady hliji.the same outfit. Lebeda atarred tde\ s t l l m , a l l i . ) a s t t 0 i,e considered a s ' S u n ( i a y afternoon.

( I a hurler, )iaa been given a few v trr-outs . - H r t ^ ^ i u r e that h^ can pitch BW>M -]f , „ _ , w _and h e j p a y be right, but whether he n v e d utf to their name and failed to

Tl, iB not, Tt lookB l ike an ouifleld post ftppoar. Th» Cardinals put. In a20 itaa been set aaide for him. He Is couple of hours of stiff practice,

a fairly consistent hitter and there- , The Cards, Township champ*f'ire should prove valuable wherever! y p a r ' a f e looklifg for gampB withhe w'orks.''• , junior teams. Oamwi can be ar-

Mpntague and Denmart has -been ranged by call ing Manager Miller, at— alternating a s catcher and thtrfi* his home, 360 ABboy avenue.

21 12 54 baseman. Dentnan Is a little slow | _ The probable line-ups for Sun-9U-cl Equipment • '• - iwlien speed counts and Montague Is day's clash:

G. • I'1. Tl. g M d on the receiving end, so it; Cardinals: Dunlgan, l b . ; Cacclola,.looks a» though Uwy had £he)r spot 2b.; C a m p i o n ^ m ; Dunham, e.uIn thfi sun reserved, ; i . MurtaKh, If.; Brennan, 3b.; Ruddy,

Hawkins, the .big freshman, Is cf.; Barce lona , rft; Nagy, p '

the loeers, casing nve field (The Bcore:

§. I . t!«61e Co. .a.

Caasiciy, f 8Hansen, f .,,,.... '4Dover, c 4Mantoji, g 3Lupo, g, 2

The Birds were8C, i edu-,ed t q p ) a y th(. Hopelawn

last Monday but thet t h i

V.42 100 8

Lebeda, f: : 5mfcrfiy, f- 1.

Kara, f., g -. 0Corey, c - _ 1.Sheets, x, _• 1lillele, g. : 0Balstow, g:,1 t. . ..i , 0

Referee, F/ank Healey.Umpire, "Rad11 Baklch.

0100110

Tl.10

30 i2'310

LEE'S LADS HIT NEW HIGH MARK"Independents", a group of unatuched

Thl8jaHeTBtral^ls !Jt'multiplied a thousand tim«.;8«id as ^ u c

' l ing .

The "Independents", a group of unatuched bowlers,^ i ! Co\a

rUoT' thTUt chalked up a new high team total for the alleys and trimmedis To invest in ft new one, one aajthe Recreation Five of Perth Amboy in three game& on the i

i&1tfue 'but"shaky!!striPs o f t n e Craftsmen's Club Wednesday evening. Seven!7jack'and7o"rth*'many7hou^ti>«r« »« «ome pi«*«ant evenings ofjof the Township clan, rolled over the two century mark in as

limt-H in the course ot a day», r«i>air w"|*tia'hf*d, ,o1 fou; „*„_ ,ai,.lmany strings, which is also believed to be a vecord for the local

season over,I Any reliable tackle store sells fer-;

ninety per cent rule cement, winding silk, rod var-[alleys.a lisinrmeh put a,way the, rod, jnUh, guides, and tips. JT\\e tetter . Truck Dunham took honors for high single string and for

but not renpectfully. two come In a bronze ntetal whlcu- . . . particularly «are Ju»t is generally conceded to be the beBt.you put It. There may be aJ Snake guides and a pear-Bhaped-' near by; .or intense cold may | ring tip, wltliout agate or bakellte

i-tfully,don't

y ; e cold may |ring tip, g• »t the wood.vaxnlsh, and wTnd-:Unlng are best for the fly rod.

or it may be In a place whore' When replacing any winding onprevailing dampnets «eepn 4n the rod, be sure to scrape all old

varnish oft the woodr so that the

u

t-urtI'th,-

Itiirlf.

; ii tlic cracks in the shellac,rate, when the robin comes wound silk: rest* directly^ on the

bigto

again, and-the sap itarU wood; Dab a llttte wrntoll on theIn the trees, the angler's winding and rub it In with the upB

faster, as he thinks of pt your fingers, tp hold It Ini pjace.oneget

Which heas each new

over

three game total with his 234, 230 and 192. Art Lee rolled a216 and' a 206, while Mesick followed him with a 216and a 201.

The scores:Independents

Art Me : "George; LeeWay lorDunhamMestckSimonsen ••

178... 183

.. 18ft_ . 192

216

80615816622*in

206

957 9.55 1026

178188164198210

Booban

158145.139

121'

no8 3 4 938 733

I Recreation216'Halligan, - 170__JAndy _ -_; 132178 Parker .'. 181230|Morftn 199

LJ~= w. ,VK jf~, —a—. -w —--- I.-- MesiCK - - &IQ s in 198 Seaman — 152always1 Then give it thre« or (Our coats,season! When all new windings have beten

! re-varnished, "clean the rod thorough-seasoned angler, of course, |ly with lakewarnt water and soap.

•ill inspect all his tackle weeks be-|to remove all dirt, gretae, oil mm,\h« snows o( early March have]dry It thoroughly, and apply tn<}

H..I. He will Inspect it .for the.! first ooat of varnish, making surespots which he, knows, f>om: that It is warm enough to flow

l-'Tltnee, will be there. .and apply It thinly, po not tbe in condition, for satlsfac- a varnished paH with your brush,

the split as the marks will Bhow. Hang butt, . . , , , . • t. i i.utrue al-1 Joint and tip in a dry placej And |jOyS roHed a few games with the big pins, but they soon

wall varnished; ferrules

K. OF G. TOURNEY DISCONTINUEDTournament games were discontinued by the Middlesex

Council K. of 0/ bowlers when they met for their regular, alleysession on the Craftsmen's Club alleys Monday evening. The

DSiHlrtight, free of rust, or dirt

and the guide i !th« second coat.

switched to the ducks, which have become quite popular.(continued on page eight)

working hard to get a chance at first., Ford&r'-iflnsen, cf.; Jagan, 3b,vClark, Barron veteran, held the sack Fullerton, ss.; Handerhan, If.; Ca-last year and appears the likely tella, rf.; Wlfislng, 2b.; Heilly, lb.;chance' for number one again. Sackett, o.j Elko, p. ,

— Lockle is a .fair1 utility man as he; - ^11 can catch and works Kood in any in- HporU Query ' "

i field pOBt. • • • « . Herman ThomM wants to knowI Toth, captain of tlie nine, may whether anything will be donelind himself playinj,' sfinrtstop In the inward barring Mr. Ooolfdge fromfirst few games. "Red" Fullel-ton, the Presidency in 1932 under thewho graduated .last June, has left a' piayerwrlter rule.—New York Sun.,ap that last years second baseman —

may And himself obliged to All.Tilth is foxy op bases and is a good

FishingTackle

ofQUALITY

HODS, KEEt.S, LINKS,I'' I. 1 10 9 , SMNNJSKH,puiaa; HOOKH, BAIT110XK8. LBADBRS, H-Y-IIOOKS. ItOOTB, "WAD-KltH, AND EyERY CON- ,VIONIMNCE NEBDKU HYTHK ANOIiEU.

<iet Your license Hem

F1SHK1N BROS.157 Smith StreetPerth Amboy

for the famousO b Motor '

creased pleasure which a rod or gun(jives after many years of staunchservice In field or stream.

Fishermenare invited to drop in atNo. 8 Fifth Avenue, Av-enel, any evening to in-spect my lines of

Wet and Dry FliesSpinners, Hooks,Tapered Lines, Leaders

O1UIKKS TAKEN FOR

Thomas RodsDevine Rods

- Hardy TackleWaders Wading ShoesFly-Books Creels

Dry-Fly Boxes, etc.

E.E. Raymond8 Sth. Av*> Avenel

Old TimersIf you want good . ad-

vice on where to buy yourtackle for tli«- opening ofthe trout season April15th.—ask the old timers.On their list ot "pre-ferred" tackle Btores, •you'll, find LEVIN'S. Wedon't claim to be the onlytackle' store In the state,but "Old Timer" will tell •you that we've one of thebest. We have almosteverything the angler'Bheart desires. But Ifthere's anything we havenot got, we'll ^et it 'for,you—pronto, without | ex-tra charge.

L E V I N 'Sporting Goods

317 MftOi m Ave.P«rth Amboy s

fielder. Dimock, who has been in

National TreasureAfter his marriage we'll have to

give up calling him the Lone Eagle,shortstop poBt will probably be remarks at exchange. Well, after

shifted to second to give his arm tt let's call him the Double Eagle—which has suffered from the rigor-'Charlie Is pure gold.—Boston Tran- 'OIIH practice, a chance to loosen up.'script. '

The outfield w'lll have plenty o£| „ _ — .material. The quality remains to be , His Nose Knowproven but their Is. no- dearth1 of| Daughter — "Ohj papa, what Is-quantity. Mentor Rfce anticipates [ your birthstonet"nw difficulty in tilling the garden with Father, of Twerw—"My dear, I'mCaceiola, Kaslnsky, Kosic, Jandrlse-1 not sure, but I think It Is a grlnd-vits, Brennan and Sherman out for stone,"—Herald of Gospel Liberty.places. The boys are all shaping! . •up well, so well, In fact, that there Needs Practiceis still a little doubt as to who wflW Fh-Bt Stout Girl—"Madge lost tenland bertha on the varsity., . I pounds In two weeks.by wqrrytafs;."

The list of candidates who are| " "Second Ditto—"I tried that, butBtlll among the "poBBlbleB" for t h e ! eouldn't keep my mind on It."—-first clasli Includes tbe following:

First base: ClMk and Hawkins. 'Second base: Dimock,, Eullerton

and Lockie.Third base; Montague, Denman

and Parsons.Shortstop: Toth and Paulson.

Boston. Transcript,

Attractive Barffttn, FIRST LADY SBaBBTB

Heavy close women, soft finish andwell made, f 1.69.—Ad In an Altoona(Pa.) paper.

10,000,000 BOWLERS5,000,000 BILLIARD

players keep physicallya n d m e n t a l l y fitthroughout the UnitedStates thereby keepingIn perfect physical con-dition to wajfA.'.oJ Jin!grip, etc. Xour doctorwill point out the bene-fita of these two healthbuilders.

Special Afternoon Sessions for Ladbaand Instructions for Beginners

PERTH AMBOY RECREATION"WHHKB THE LADIBS..BOWL"

Market Strwt, Corn«r Madlion Avennt

We Supply Everythingfor the Fisherman

EXCEPT THE

and

if you want to SEETHEM, you'll get an eye-ful of speckled beautieson display in our windowtank

' • ' ' GET YOUR

FISHING & HUNTING' LICENSE HERE!

i

— FIHIIIIIA Tackle —Knives — KtiKeball and

TVnnta Supplies

Lieber's |Sporting Goods Store

205 Smith StreetPEHTH AMUOY

Now Is the T i m e . . . .When looking over the tackle displays in warch

of (it w angling outfits tor the coming aeaaon, don'toverlook UB.

We have a wonderful assortment of anglers' needi.in caae you dW not attend Our "Uh Annual Flsh-

«niu:)i a Party" la«t night, there U still time to ente*our i<iize contest (or (be biggest flsh, in tbe varlouiolasaes, ' ' •

All that 1B necessary Is th register, and brlug Inany trout, baas, plckwel, etc., which you think maywin the prl» , • >

.You are alwayB welcome to Inspect our line otand salt water tackl*.

PERTH AMBOY HARDWARE CO.313 Madison Avenue •

Page 8: CRAD THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 Per Copy - DigiFind-It · CRADE CROSSINGS, MUST GO ! 1 THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER* 2 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

KiKhtTHE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 192fl

DOW AT CHRISTENSEN'SSPRING SHIRTS & NECKWtARARE JEALOUOF EACfi OTHER

Call it professions* jealousy or jjwf*plaingreen envy, ' , • >. .' ' v

The beauty contest between Jthe ArrowShirts and the Ja.V N Kay Neckwear is neck

.softShirts with collars attachedorstarcHed *?.."..

Neckwear .four-in-handsor J)ats „*

$1.65 and upfluttery silks . . •

. 50c. to $2,00KBOX HATS BERG HATS

"FtORSHElM" and "WAlKOVEir SHOES

C. CHRISTENSEN & BRO.96 Main Street Woodbridge, N. J.

.;.. . "A Safe Place to

BOSCH"RADIO

, '"THIS richly carved* console* type cab-

inet encloiei a new1928 Bosch til-electricRadio Receiver anai Bosch Speaker^ Ahandsome piece el fur-niture for any fioB|»e— •

* and a Bosch Radio that•-•;• tithe final *r«rf4&*lm-

plified operation tndperfected reception.To hear the new Botchb to ent&uie orer ttitplendid performance.Let ui demQpatraWBotch Radio (or you,

. price of RecerferfllM-trated »197.5O leu

bei. With DynamicSpeaker #237.50

lento!*;

Trautwein's Garage

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

GREAT FUTUREPREDICTED FOR

N E W JERSEYCivic and Industrial Leaden

j Speak 3*rState-widf Din-! ner of * t t TeTeptene Co.! A stirring "pvt'fpntatton of the'natural and man made resource ofNew Jersey, * vision of a greaterNew Jers«y of thVtiii'uret'and a prac-tical demdnstrStlon of a man's roe-chanical trjjiniflt. " v e r *V*<$ *™ijn>«\ weredjeiVTb approximately2,o'oTcTvTc and industrial leaders oftin- state last night at the «tate-wldef,renter Nirw Jersey Dlh»*rA $.the

a"OT

IIIXIIXIIIXXIIXXXIIXXXXIXXIIIXXXXXXXXXivM• <

M

state phaniber »f Commerce

(iroup dinner meetings Bimullan-1-OHBI.V held In Newark',- Trenton, At-l.intlc City, CariuWn. Patewn andJersey City became one great gath-ering by means <il telephdne wirespresided over. b>" Wlllard I. Hamil-ton-, president of the 3Ute Chamber,

'listening to the, ?ame (Speeches and jthe same song* traveling at the

1 speed of light from speaker and ar |t tat to diners' at all the aiieetings,,and !>y radlfr-broadcast to the state

E!• * . - * » * , ,Saturday

SET OF TUBES•r-,— Q**-Ytttt)

i The voice\ttt AmbassadorI W. Morrow apoke to the greater'dinner from MeMi-ci City as thoughlie were present currying the' mes-sages ot a Jersejuuui far from home

i to" his native Ei;it.-. hy,means of|:t,l50 miles of't. I'-phone circuit be-tween Mexico City undoNAwark, and

I 2.0U0 miles b f viie interconnecting!ilie sroup meetings.I Out 6I1 thr t t r thousands of feel! above Morrlstown, ajiother voiceI reached the djnn>.-r from an airplane,| banlghlBg the QUUUJM olhetebt ftft!I vift-changing motion to link airlund land In two-way conversation,In one of the nrf t liublic demonstra-tions ever given <>f this developmentof telephony upon which the futureof air ' transportation depends forfull success. •

Other voices si>oke from Washing-ton, D. C, and from each of themeetings comprising the .gxaaler

c.iffnrdf president

Given Free with Any Radio• • L '

e

purchased Saturday, April 6at Concanrton's Music Store

FACTORY AGENTS FOR

MAJESTIC CROSLEY R. C. A

r

AMRAD ZENITH

of the American"Telejtone alril Tele-graph Company, dedicated a tabletin the auditorium »f the new stateTelephone Headquarters in Newark,scene of the »-:• ' meeting of thedinner, to Theodme N, Vail, Jersey-man and termed by Mr. Gifford"foremost pWneei•" of the Bell Tele-phone System, %

The speakers from Washingtonwere Wdltam Uutterworth. presi-dent of the Chamber of Commerceot the United States, testifying ton e "tietaenfla^jachlevements ofscientific *genWW^°8.fit>Hed to °UT

work-a-day tasks and everyday con-venience", and Ftepres e n t a t i v eFranklin Peri, ji^.akingjor th*JerBey delegation in Congress"

The baste richr•.•ss of>New Jersey iill road, rail, anil air transportation,:

I communication, rrnvtr and agricul-|Ture tad induct; aad business, were ,emphasised by (jvernor Morgan F. iLarson, Chester 1. Barnard, presi- |dent of the New Jersey Bell Telephone Company; William, B. Duryte,,secretary of'agriculture of Kew Jer-1sey; Koy B. ,White, president, Cen-

sMusic Store

76 Main Street TELEPHONE

"8a.Woodbridgt

MMHMMMHMMMHMMMHHHHMHMMMHMHMHMMHMMMMM

MMMMMHMMHMHMMMMMMMMM

(continued from nage seven)

N. Langan was high for a single string with a 140. Nick

Plumbing Permits-Granted Last Month

Twenty-five plumbic ji-:.were granted by the Boahi u( !!•

j during March, according to <port of Health Inspector !'»'• >

I son. £ees collected totalledtral Railroad of New Jersey; Waller also earned off the honors for three strings With a 140, a 119 Those receiving permits w<i.Kidde teriuei'SUW Highway C o m - • Rntart Rrmi for E. H..I

a

tral Ra yKidde, teriuei'SUW Highway Comnjiss^on} EdmVind W. Wolluiulh, ex- ^ , . . \ •ecutive vice1 president. Newark j Tlie bojrs will roll on Monday evenings in the future but

?rSd^ rCKubKerVte : .*e regular tournament sessibns-will not be resumed until fall.Corporation and Charles L. Law j The scores:

Robert E^nat lor E. K.ci:Woodbrldge road, WnmiJames McPhle (or W. Winqui--

l C !

INSTRUCTIONIndividual violin instruction for beginners

and advanced pupils will be given under niypersonal direcflon'at the studio established in"The Manor House", Port Reading — trolleycrossing, Sewaren.

Every student accepted will be given per-sonar attention throughout thle "entire course.Years of experience in musical instruction withhundreds of pupils assure a most successfulperiod of study. ' .ili1^ References and terms upon application.For appointment, telephone Woodbridge 521,on Saturday afternoons.

rence, president, -Wrigst Aeronauli-; w m i n gcal Corporation. | . G e i s _""

Mr. Barnard dedicated the newi," N dTelephone Building as an e d l f l c eischubert " Hembracing "tlie policy of the Com- J ^ l u jpany not merely lo-do Ha work well, .p a y ^) j ^ ^but to take its proper part In the i j ' N e ( J e r Jimprovement of the State." * Schubert

Mr. Duryee epoke lor Uie farmers!, KJHof the State, assuring ol their par-|jjV l i e gtlcipation in the Greater New Jersey -

10280

108101

8396949094

10594

TO69

115105

8 610.X'

92134131

83109

6J|I>unlgnn — _ 8868]J. Killeen •> 98

il6;Hynea ._.. 99105 E. Etnhorn .„.„ 12!|•., :Dunigan . : S3..._|M: Killeen .:..... 86

N. Langan 83'Dunham — _ 102

83|M ; Killeen I l l109^1*' Langan - 140

7,4 Dunham _ -_' . ._ 120

78104

9196588274

132126119

85

way avenue, Avenel; Chat !«•-for W. Schwed, Marlon s t r fnun. Heights; Felix Klug !•njeth^ Oakland avenue, l

jCart Cbellng for F. <•„1_|Moore ave*ue, Woodbrid-

" , J « n d Rodner for R. Liilili^"lOeorge road, Fords; Jei;105 Rodper for A. Trulsen.107 street, Woodbridge; Jen^yi •119!ner for Fred Beisler, liuiin103'Woodbrldfeej Jensen and !;•

h K l h F d J138115

MRS. TRAINER ROLLS 145

h- Klrsch, Fords; Jensenner ton James Wight, l.ii.'.-nue, Wck>dbrldge; Jensen ;nner for C. Rodner, Sr., H,avenue, .Fords; Arthur ll•:

tlcipation in the Greater New Jerseymovement, and testifying to "thecourage and spirit of progress of thefirst settlers still livinfc on the 2,-oooooo acres ot farm land m New] M r g f M trainer copped honors for high and second high

Mr. White announced that cob-[string totals yhjSfl Court Mercedes^C. D. Of A. rolled On the« Grqve road, Keasbey; FrWtemplated exi«endilures durtog~ttefw--^ ta-;p..hi" A I ^ K n » n « n «r^fr.^.Tg^i>"^o<^>vlM;r - W ^ I ^ TT^«t»«> £• Ktttcache, Greenbrooknext five year*, by the railroads. Of ^iniv»««"« »New Jersey alone will approximate

thepace

state's s:iwing needs, and will; was right behind her with a 129.

will approximate: chalked up a 145 and a 140 in her third and fourth 'games. Hansea, "Lewis street, K»H

t a m S K & M n . a-EWttBLfeK>H 131 in hersecon^ string and Hii. J. Dunn ^ X ^ J ^ ^ng ; as g t b e i n d h a

transportation require-; ' TheJadiea turned in quite a few "century" scores. Five

W5TRUGT10N WILL SIARTJATHRDAY; APRll 6tk

PapiU May Join at Any Time

fi/ Graduate Institute of Musical Art

DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL CONSERVATORY OF MUSICof Perth Atnboy

59131100

8581'9991"

98"476'

meet railnients. , i • •

Mr. woiimuth declared that state, of the seven bowlers hit the hundred mark in the .last game.consciousness has awakened to thej ( rr- s r f t ~ u | . , • 'usual combination of resources pos-; ^ I l e «-«"»•• • * .

liessed' by New Jersey which con-: >ire. J. Duh»# :_ 119! tribute so hus:t-ly tb the wealth of its Mrs. J. Einhorn ~ 6*ipeople, and Mr, ^arsons stated that)Mrs. J. B. Levi _ it] "New Jersey is so located and en-'Mrs. M. Pitipa|r(ek Wjdowed that its future cannot be sep-'sir s j p Gertty _ 85arated from that of the United'Mrs. >!. t ra iner - 9SStates as a whole . . . . it must par-;Mr*. F. Withertdge 93'tibipate in ,our country's rapid ad-|vance andpinat from most ot the]

Mrs,. J. Dunn LMrs, j ' Blnhorn _

105 I Mrs. J. B. Uvl ..... 101—80 Mrs. H, MwputrUk a i

J. P. Oerlty .. 91f145 Mrs. M, Trainer 140

91'Mrs. F:WHheridne 44

10093

1001U2107101

,"74

This Mr 1 aribns, stated, cansaid ot few states.

iBS S-C H M A N GUUJp .CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY

and

JRMl

etPMt, FerdajtJames MclliMurddck, Main street: FoilMcPhte Tor V. Martin, KonlForda; James McPhle for ttlDassen, Clum avenu>.James MePhie for J. Zboyj•veojie, ^flwaren; Humtlw9ya,a for" J. Glaeollon--.street, Woodbrldse; Humph iRyan for J. Bach,ltk, Si u< '

-BLUI:,- W^odhjliUfl; • Humphi •• ' — Ryan for Chris

Jroad, Woodbridge;ll^yan Tor J. Fredericks,avenue, Woodbrldge. two !••

27 SEWER PERMITS SCOUT EXECUTIVES MEETISSUED IN MARCH MONTHLY AT RUTGERS

^ | Harriet Breckenrldgeworkshop in the western world," he | Miss Winifred Brennan. were theJKranted by the Hoard ot Health dur-

i declared. "Her prosperity U not be- hostejsses to tfie Buschman Guild of ing March, according to the monthly

Twenty-sev,n Bewer permits were,th

ling built upon Exhaustible resources

TELEPHONE PERTH AMBOY

L

'{thai give a transient, success, bot up*jttneeUi«eon scientific developments and per-manent natural advantages that willbe here to serve our children's chil-dren."

The airplanev conversation anddemonstration, between George W.McRae, vi*e president "Jand general

of Hit) Telephone Company,Ulkiqg in the Telephone Building,and W, C. Huns, ot U»e Bell Labora-tories, lac , in the alrplaqe, was rep-resentative of one of the scientific de-velopments mentioned by Mr. Par-sons. New Jersey is rapidly becom-ing; a great center In the develop-ment and use of radio telephony.The alMo-land communication sys-tem used In the demonstration Is oneexample of the experimental work «tWhippajiy Station Of the Ben Labor-atories. Example of the use pf radiotelephony are the receiving fendtransmitting stations ot the Ameri-can Telephone and Telegraph Com-pany at Deal Beach, Lawrencevilleand Netcong, which together KlveNew Jersey threeMiuartera of theradio telephone'termini in America.

The spirit of the 0 raster NewJersey pinner was symbolised at itsclose by the staging of a aew songtor New Jersey written by Kara

Andrews, of Moptolair. Anna Case,Concert soprano, sang the snog,Toeal march c*Uad7"'8lng Me* Jer-sey's Praise".

the First Presbyterian church at a; r e p o r t o ( H l l h i B 8 p e c t 0 r ; p e t e r

held in the Breckenrldice , . . .home on Green street Monday'eve-1™'*0 1 1- ^ ™ ' i « «er« granted »onlng. The Guild celebrated its tenth!the following:birthday with an impromptu party' Mr Johnson of Highland avenue,followed by the usurl program. I Keasbey, (two permits); Steve KV

•The Oldpre-Paa-

"enue, Ke*sbey; Mr,

Boyparts of New Jersey aiv • 'the series of monthly s>-mi >Ing held at Rutgers l'niv.i rder the auspices of the l>Extension WVUlon.

An entire day Is devoteil iferences and lectures beuni.-ly upon Scout executives, >q •for service to the oommunit

Talks have been given•"> of"" "•• . , i. iours Janes H. Rellty and ><<Presbyterian, bey: B. Z. Lambertson, Crow's Hill |silvers, and Colonel John i

• : Jrogd,'Fords; Steve Nemeth, Oakland, i University ePAPlain.Mejba avenue, Keesebey; J. Andtlal, Hlgb There Vre two more im1

service,

May 3, in the Firstchurch rooms.

»»«w»m, I ftQ tt|n iiitiv^tuii»i sava live. . , __ _

and Miss Florence Baldwin read t h e U n d » v e n u e ' Kessebey;last chapter of the Mission Study Peterson, Crowa Mill ro*d\ Fords;Book, "Africa". Miss Irene Wallhtg Michael'Litus, Daniel street, Haga-was in charge of Ike entertslnmcnt man Heights; Iagsard Jensen, ilsryprogram. • . avenue, Fords; G. Toth, Oreenbrook

present.«au.J«ia*M Me)j» av«mje. Keasbey, Home Owners' As- vigorous meai i

i Un to "the 'Keck1 t h e teacher said to l<et"Words endlu* lrf 'OUB1 nof; as Joyous means full "' '

and Myrtle Howard, Florence Bald-.delation, Church street, Woodwin, Florence MeAuslan, Florence bridge; J. N.yler, Oreenbrook'ave-Beam. Grace Beam. Grwe Rankin. nue, Keaebey; J. W, Smth. Q«*n-Graee C. Huber, KUaabeth Donnelly., brook a*onue>; Keasbey: 8 Skspln-Irene Walling. Dorothy Leonard, ets. Cramntoo avenue. WOodbrldae:Louise Morris. Adele Warter. M. L. Charles BsJlss, QreenbrookWosrdell, Georgia Beam. Mrs. Ernest Keasbey. - 'Abbott, Mis J. £. Breckenridge,

full ofgive an example of such a ••

i Tommy raised-his hand aiis ho l Gospel

Julia MedoB, Crsinpton »Tenue.Woodbrtdge; Mr». Z tk^OwfrlUie,

„ . , . , . . J ,,* • Highlapd- avenue, Keasbey; TheresaRufe JUIIUMK'S pet hoand dtaap- Balls. Spruce KreVt Haiaman

peajed. Hufe put the following .ad height** L. H. Johnson, ^ "In the p«per: avenue, Kesskey, two. per

"Lost or run aws»—one llver-eol- Kesso, Oakland avenueored btrd dog ealM Jim. Witt show (}«**> ^ ^ *

"Pious.11

Joat t * *PoUtielan — 'Wan you

friend a Job |tt your railraUmagtr—'Tbut he.can

U l ""'"

al f « ol In about

Keasbey •

ll .

job cJUUdf out trains.

i.uii

, I""