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FOOT Page Colored Conic Section The Price of ThisTit>ei CARTER cents everywhere—Pay no more r PRESS Sporting News, Page CARTERET, N. J., Man Badly Injured In Motorcycle Crash AUGUST 19, 1927 Complainant Change* Story It Dismissed Joseph Nudge In Hospital With Broken Thigh and Fractured Jaw. Driver Had No License ' A motorcycle speeding along Roos- evelt avenue in ront of the Uebig plant enclosure, crashed into an ash conveyor Saturday about noon and 'injured two men, one seriously. Jo- seph Nudge, 19i of Thornal street, • is in the Perth Amboy City Hospital ' with a .broken right thigh bone, a fractured jaw and numerous bruises ' and abraisiona. Louis Kaupohak, of 80 John street, who was driving the motorcycle, escaped with a bruised heel and hip, Nudge was riding on the rear seat of the motorcycle. Nudge was taken to the office of Dr. Imra Kemeny where the injured thigh WM placed in splints and the other injuries attended to. He was then sent to' the hospital in an am- bulance. Kaupchak was given medical at- tention by Dr. i. J. Reason and was able to be about again soon after the accident. He was arrested Saturday, night for driving the motorcycle on a p«rmlt without being accompanied by a licensed driver. Kaupchak said that the conveyor •was in the road and that as he ap- proached it a truck of the Roosevelt Laundry Company approached on the opposite Ride and that he had no choice but to hit the truck or the conveyor. He did not say anything about the possibility of stopping and waiting until the truck went by. He had neither license or insurance and his motorcycle was demolished. He Peter Conrat, a former resident of Carteret and now a member of the Marine Corps, appeared at police headquarters Sunday and charged that he had been robbed of $210 in Schweitzer's saloon on the previous evening. He said that he had been in the aaloon drinking and that fi- nally he took a nap near the bar. 'When he awoke, he said, his pocket- book was gone. He blamed the bar- tender and one other person who was in the saloon at the time. At a hearing Wednesday he changed his story entirely and the fcase was dismissed. Conrat was in uniform on Monday but was in civil- ian attire when he made the com- plaint Sunday. "Hardworking" Woman Gives Police Battle Negress So Muscular That It Took Five Men To Place Her In Police Car Police Raid Home Defeat Improvement Get Stills and Liquor ft Main Highway Arrest Youth With Big Gun was fined $25. Expect Big Crowd Out For Third P. A. Game One of the largest crowds ever to leave Carteret for any eport event will desert this borough Sunday af- ternoon when Henry Stauibaeh'g Carteret Field Club invades Perth Amboy to make it three victories in a row over Jimmy Tizrano's Perth Amboys at the Raritan Copper Works Field. Rain kept the two teams from playing Sunday although a large attendance was on hand. The rain checks of the last game will be gonrf for the game this Sunday. Ace Samson, star Field Club hurl- er, of Elisabeth, wwa onjund. to hurt for Carteret Sunday and will be on the mound again this week. Sam- son is anxious to tally over the Am- boys once more. The Betaytown He- brew has a large following among the baseball fans. Prank Bruggy who has been given a few days leave before going to Rochester from the Chicago White Sox reported to catch for tStaubach and has assured the local manager that he will be on hand to guide the slants of Samson once more when the Amboys and Carteret teams meet for the third time. The remainder of the Carteret in- field will be made up of Captain Jug- gle Coplan, at first; Pete Burnett, on second; Moulton, at the short post; and Earny Sabo or Mickey D'- Zurilla,>Bt the hot corner. A pow- erful batting and fielding outfield will be had in "Blackie" Regan, Emil Krausche and Davy Landew, the hard hitting New Brunswick player. Tinano's battery will undoubted- ly be his strongest, namely, Tom McMillan and Dane. The former is growing impatient waiting for the opportunity to trim the borough rep- resentatives. In tlje event of nice weather it is possible that the local Yells and the sound of crashing (crockery coming from the house at '13 Mercer street, attracted the at- tention of three policemen late Sat- urday night. They entered the house and found much wreckage and a 'large negreas. There were blood 'stains and plenty of evidence of a battle. When the police attempted to arrest the woman they had their hands full. It took the efforts of the three and two mqre who came to their assistance to place the woman Jin the police car where she was (handcuffed in order to save the car. At headquarters-she described her- self as Josephine Howard and said she was a hardworking woman. She was locked up and tried mainly to break down the cell door. The po- •lice then went out to find who had lost the blood that made the stains in the woman's hou*e. They found Holly Street Man Had Nine Quarts and One Half Gal- lon on Hand—-One of Stills In Operation— Gets $25 Fine Two 6-gwllon stills, one in opera- tion, nine quart bottles full of alleg- ed liquor and a half gallon jug, also full were taken by the police Sat- urday morning in a raid upon the home of Louis Slsko, 34 Holly street. The bottles and jug were 'corked and ready for delivery. Lieu- tenant J. 3. Donovan, Sergeant ['Thomas McNally and Motorcycle Po- liceman Robert Shanley made the raid. iSisko's product is said to be a- bove the average hootch in quality because of being distilled twice. He was arraigned in police court Tues- day night and said that his wife 'made the liquor for his use. He denied making any sales and the Ipolice produced no evidence of sales. He was fined $25 and advised to etop 'malting booze. To the advice he re- plied that if he could not make it he would have to'buy it. Walks I i Roosevelt Avenue Opp«Mi|l Successfully By ^ Owners was worn out and that he had just purchased the one which was in oper- ation when the raid was made. Both stills were in excellent condition, ac- cording to the, police. The ordlftfcnep to construct side- walks and curlm in Roosevelt ave- nue between MiKinley avenue and the borongn line at Edwin itreet, was def««ttd Monday night at the meeting of the council. Councilman Frank An<W*;s was the only one to vote in fSvoJ of it on the final bal- lot. In tttt Wcussion which preceed- ed the ftna) ~»oto the Mayor indicat- '*d that he favored the improvement. The reasoHi for the improvement Frank Sica Locked Up* By Sergeant Dowling. Had M .Wf Revolver In Trous- er's Band. Bail Fixed At $2,000 Prank Sica, 20 years old, of ]>w- Gam* Planned For Local Teams If plans ar* completed between j.Henry Staubuch and Joe Elko over I the week end the Carteret Field Club and the AH Cartmts will clash In a winner take all content at Brady's Oval Sunday afternoon, August 28. The game would have been arranged ( for this Sunday but due to the Am- boy-Field Club go, this was impos- sible. j Elko Is convinced that he can ge- ls street, was arrested at 1.30 o'-jcure a team of all local men and an Mock this morning on a charge of outsider for the hurling activities to carrying concealed weapons. Desk I trim Staubach's nine. Of this some Sergeant Joseph J. Dowling, acting [of the fans are in doubt while others as rounds sergeant, made the ar- rest. Siea had a huge Colt revolv- er thrust into the band of his trous- are sure that the feat can be accom plished. Elko makes known, although he has not announced a name, that ers beneath his shirt. The weapon (he will have a former big league [was too large to CBrry in a potket. were nrftnj/ the street is the main Ut is a 32 calibre but uses cartridges thoroughfsii of the borough and is|much longer than the ordinary re- the approach from the Woodbridge 'side. T%$His much traffic of auto- Jmoblles thirt. The pedestrians have to walk la ihe street, especially in- wet wetthtf as the sidewalk, space is taken up With pools of water and mud The only, reason offered against 'the improvement was that a half doz- [en property owners did not want to pay the sidewalk assessment. There were sonw property owners in favor Sisko said that one of his stills M the Improvement these included [/George Johnson, a negro with a bed scalp wound. He was in a pool of blood and was using an entire bed sheet as a compress against wound. Johnson was taken to headquar- ters where he bled profusely white the police made efforts to secure a doctor. Several were reported out of town or out on cases. Finally Dr. J. J. Reason was reached and stitch- ed the wound. Johnson said that he boarded with the Howtrd wsmaa attdfctrfata., that they were playing when she struck him with a bottle and inflicted the scalp wound. In police court Tues- day night the woman was fined $10. Johnson failed to appear. The wo- man explained that she had attend- ed a birthday party and had consum- ed too much punch. fang will outnumber of the home team. the followers Death Claims Child Struck By Auto Ernest Misak, 4 Year Old Fords Boy Dies In Hospi- tal. W M On Handle- bars of Bicycle When Hit Ernest Misak, aged 4 years, of •Fords, N. J., died early 1 Saturday , 1morning jn the Perth Amboy City e ^ Hospital as a result of injuries re- ceived Thursday afternoon of last week when the bicycle upon which he and another toy were riding was struck by an auto, The other boy was Steve Sestaye, 14 years old, of ,35 Mercer street. He ia in the hos- pital with a broken right arm and dislocated shoulder. The Misak boy was riding on the hattdfe'Tiars'of'Sestaye's bicycle when (he bicycle was struck by an auto driven by Charles Comba, of Car- teret. Comba was rounded up by the Woodbridge police. After the death of the Misak boy a charge of man- slaughter was entered against Com- ba. The boy had a fractured skull, internal injuries and a broken leg. WohlgWnuth, Joseph Levy and the Canda Realty Company. As all of the property owners are business men and moat of them are members of the organization known \aa the Business Men's Association which fias sponsored a "booster" propaganda lately, Councilman An- dreas criticised them for their lack of interest In the borough's welfare. He said that the hazard to the public 9 great and that many accidents had 'happened there on account of the absence of walks. He was surprised, he said, that business men of their calibre should hold out against an improvement BO obviously necessary, Woodbridge, Andres pointed out, had had long ago seen the necessity for protecting the public and had con- structed a cinder sidewalk all along the stretch from Port Reading to the borough line. It was a black eye to the towri, Andres declared, to obstruct an im- provement so essential. The Mayor said it was an ugly, dangerous situ- ation. School Commissioners Frank fllrown and John Cselle; Max Green- wald, Sam Srulowitz and others of £he opposing property owners spoke volver. It is n six-shooter. Sica said that he had taken the gun to Perth Amboy to dispose of it to some one there who, he thought, Wight buy it. According to Sica the Perth Amboy man refused to accept the gun because it was too large. The arreat was made in Roosevelt avenue near Hudson street when Sica re- turned from Perth Amboy. ' 'Sica was locked up and his bond 'was fixed in the amount of $2,000 ,with the notation that it must be a property bond accompanied by a deed. Up to noon today no one had volunteered to go on Sica's bond. itar on the mound. p in protest the improvement Cardinal Players' Averages Compiled By Manager ; In a list compiled by the manager <tf the Carteret Cardinals several ex- cellent batting averages for the pres- ent diamond campaign can be seen. Five of the eleven players of the team are batting over the 300 mark up to but not including this week. To date the Cardinals have token part in about twtnty-two games and they h«ve lost but few of the starts. Medwick leads the junior nine with an average of .483 after taking the stand at bat 89 times. SmolertBky who bitted the same number of times runs second in the offensive race wHh thirty-five hits for an aye- rage of .393. Miglecz comes third With .801 and Comba trails the third •man by 'three points. Comba has been hitting the pill hard in the last -•atarta and as- a result has brought himself from the cellar group up to an aVerage of .358. The fifth bat- t«r who passed the triple century ntftrk IJJU B. Collie who has .play- «d but a few games with the Car- dinals. t h e Cardinals »re batting for an avwfge of .3081 »s a team. -Thte httoti * very commendable *nd only -hard hitting for the remainder of the very busy campaign will enable the locals to finish with the same rec- ord. » Ave. .393 .361 .858 .318 .29* .an .204 Gun Ctub Members Have Big Shoot The members of the Carteret Gun Club enjoye>i the advantage of hold- ng their shoots in the morning when they held a most successful contest Sunday morning before the rain brojce up several other sport events that were scheduled for the after- noon. The feature of the shoot Sun- day was the copping of first place in the Class '*€" shoot by Charles J. Brady with a 47 score. This was the highest score made on any of the class conteets. Two ties were mads in the first classes. Oscar Mundy and William Brke tied with 47 in the class "A" competition and' Hans Beckman and Johnny Schaefer tied in ClasB "B" with the same score. In the recruit •class John Perment won with a 37 'Score out of fifty attempts. A large crowd witnessed the shooting Sun- day. ' ' In two weeks the local gqn ergan- azation will hold a prize contest for the residents of Carteret who have hunted before but who have never shot at the clay birds, Evetyone is invited providing that he U a bor- ough resident. Anyone wishing to take part who is minus a rifle will be loaned one for the occasion by the club members. The contest will be a fifteen bird event. Cardinals Down Lincolns In Second Contest 11 to 4 For the present at least the ques- tion of superiority between the Lin- colns and Cardinals is settled. The Cardinals won L from tlhe Lincolns for the second time this season in a at Brady's Sunday by an 11 Hard hitting won" the When Woodhull waa pounded for seven runs on eight hits in the first nning the Lincolna put Patsy Pat- cni^ in the box. P*tocnig begfn hurling in the third. SI* hits were made from the offerings of Patsy during the seven frames that he hurl- Medwick in the fourth after blanking Medwiek in the fourth ater blanking the Lincolns and allowing two h,itB. The iLjncolns clouted Medwiek for four hits and three runs as a wel- come in the fourth, Medwiek strengthened as time went on and d bt Local Merchant Slashes Prices In Big Sale A sale that is attracting wide at- tention among local shoppers began this morning, at the Market Bargain Store, 326 ' Pershing avenue. A rowd of eager buyers w»s on hand the doors op v £f*d> The Btore H ab. Medwiek 89 Bmolenjky 89 MigUci •'•! 83 Comba 53 B. Colons 16 Kasha .„; ,.„... 77 Si.kiefta ? .......v. 70 iwm ~. n ?• 83 17 lit) 28 i 14 b. 43 36 30 19 6 23 19 19 If andlea ft complete nd clothing for worn dry goods " child- Occasionaliy sales are held and hese have come to be regwdtil an ictable events in .merchandising. By , purchase system that enables the oncern to. get goods in bulk ut rouk ;o 4 score. rame. the Lincolns scored but one more tally in the game. Of the fourteen hits of his team, Stanley Smolensky got the best |share. Smolensky collected three hits in live chances while the Colling Brothers, Miglecz and Galvanek each gathered two safeties. Overholt with Attorney Elmer E. Brown represent- ing the property owners, opened the discussion when the ordinance >,^ia» moved on for final reading. Browji said that some agreement might be reached if the council members and the property owners opposed to the improvement held' a conference in chambers before final action waa taken on the ordinance. The Mayor denied this request on the ground that he was opposed to any business conducted behind closed doors. There was opposition upon the part of several of the councilmen to a \ motion to read the ordinance as a; preliminary to adoption. The vote to read it resulted in a tie which was broken by the Mayor who voted in favor of reading it. In the final vote to adopt the ordinance on third reading the only favorable vote ws^s that of Councilman Andres.. An ordinance to place the walks and curbs on both sides of Irvine street was laid ove> as it was learn- ed that the property owners were making the improvement themselves without thi> necessity of legislation. The Mayor said that he had mads a personal investigation of the con- dition in l'assaic street where resi- dents had complained of poor drain- age, and had found that the condi- tion demanded immediate attention in the inkiest of health. The mat- ter waa placed in the hands of the road committee 1 and engineer with in- structions to take immediate action. The police committee reported-that the cl^g catcher had captured thirty- seven dogs and is still on the job. I Other committees reported progress A resolution Was adojpted to pro CHILD BELIEVED BITTEN BY SNAKE DIES IN HOSPITAL; FIND COPPERHEAD South Plainfield Incident First Reported as Happening in Iselin—Two Year Old Girl Was Victim—Deadly Rep- tiles In Old Well Near Home CAME FROM MOUNTAINS Bitten and poisoned by what waa believed to be a copperhead snake, a two year child died in Muhlenberg Hospital, Plainfield, Saturday night. The child was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Valentine Swiatek of Ma- ple avenue, South Plainfield, near what is known as Silver Lake. Ad- joining the home is a yacant field with an old well surrounded by lilac bushes. Although snakes were known to make their home in the well and around the bush persons in the neigh- borhood did not suspect the reptiles to be: dangerous until the child's death. The child was playing on the lawn Thursday evening when her mother, watching from a window, saw her fall to the ground with a cry of pBrn and clutch her foot. Thinking the youngster had stepped on a sharp one Mrs. Swiatek endeavored to mfort her and for a time succeed- . In the night the child developed high fever and next morning the mily took her to the hospital clin- Up until that time there had een no suspicion that the child's ndition waa due to snake bite and ie fever was not attributed to the ightly swollen heel. After being ken home the child developed con- ulaions which necessitated her re- rn to the hospital where she died aturday evening. Mr. Swiatek, a native of Poland, icognized the distinctive punctures •f the snake fangs on the bottom of he child's heel a few hours before he died. Then it was too late to pply anti-toxin. Swiatek's mother as bitten by a poisonous snake hen they lived in Poland and he ecognined in his child symptoms milar to those of his mother. 1 The lot on which the child waa bit. ;en is owned by ,a resident of Ho- oken, the Swiatek's say. For years t has been allowed to become over- grown with weeds and brush. In rder to secure town action toward Rons From Store Jitfy Track Little Girl Escapes With Slight . Injuries In Accident In Central Avenue Mary Selinsky, aged fi years, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. Selinsky of 73 Central'avenue, was slightly injured Saturday at noon when she was struck by a delivery truck of the New Jersey Tobacco Company, idriven by J, A. Newton, of New Brunswick. The accident happened in Central avenue. Newton said that the little girl ran out of a store and directly into the path of his truck. She was taken to the office of Dr. Kemeny who was busy at the time with an- other case, the victim of a motor- cycle accident. After the latter had been sent to a hospital, Dr. Kemeny made an X-ray examination of the little girl «nd found she has escaped with nothing more serious than con- tusions to the ankle and head. She was taken to her home. Newton reported "the case to Pa- trolman Michael Bradley and Motor- cycle Policeman Robert Shanley. PRICE THREE Drunk-Crazed Man Attempts! Edwte Street Man Hang* With B*Jt In Police C*U. Desk Sergeant Foils Attempt Using hi* heavy leather, belt n o w , Walter Slsnowskl, of street, attempted suicide by in a police cell Saturday after and failed through tho timely jjof Desk Sergeant Thomas McNa Sunnownky was arrested about : Saturday on complaint of hii who charged that he hid been dr ing and had beaten her. He was ' der the influence of liquor locked up. Soon after the man had been ; ed in a cell Sergeant McNally to look at him. The nergeant fo Susnowski hanging from the ban the top of the cell door. He o*4§ tied his belt around his neck fastened the end to the bars, officer freed him from the bars, summoned Dr. H. L. Susnowski was nearly urrconselo and the belt had made a deep «ion half way about his neck. The doctor and sergeant rtvlf the prisoner and he was given cine to quiet his nerve*. His att> is believed to be due to the of the liquor he had been drink After he had rested a few be appeared to be normal. Sus ski WM kept under observation day and was released on bail Mo three hits and Bartok with two ledf ce ; d with tne mle of bgnds, as au- thorized in a recent ordinance. Permission was granted to Jacob 'the Lincoln batters. The score: Lincoln! ab. r. Dubrick, If 3 0 Patocnig, 2b., p 5 0 Cromwell, 3b 3 X Overholt, as. 4 2 Karraanoaki, cf 3 Rube-1, lb 4 Wftod'hull, p., 2b a Bartok, c 3 Mudrak, rf 4 Cardinal* B. Collins, cf p 32 ab 6 5 g , p (J. Collins, c 5 "Medwick, 2b.,*p 3 Smolensky, ss 5 Siekierka, lb. - y. v - 8 Conrad, 9b. .- , 6 iottVmr prices, "ttttrttctivu mtudkma} CoraK rf .-'-,-- !> ,n prices are uffarded the retail CUB- [Galvanefc, If. .-- 4 - who, flock to the store, Fre-}; qutmtly competitors ru#h into print with circulars in an effort to profit sy the buying spirit stirred up by be Market Bargain concern. The sale continues today, tomor- row am' Monday, i'htreater the .store will he open on Wudii«sdaya, Saturdays and Mondays, but the price reductions advertised in the aale lit- erature will maintained fpr some time, 40 11 14 2 Score by irfningB: < Lincoln! 000 800 0 0 1 - 4 Cardinals - 261 002 10x-ll Summary Two base hits, Conrad, Karinanos- ki, SmolenBky. Three base hit, Ifedwick. Sacrifice hit, Kttrmanoski. Hit by pitcher, Medwiek, Galvajwk, WuodhulL Bases on balls, off Woodhull 1; Weiss to install an XAl tank in Persh- ing avenue to b$ iped in connection with, an oil heating system for his house. An invitation was received from the Slovak Gymnastic Union to attend the dedication of a hall on September 4. Fire Company No. 1 through Fire Chief Wilhelm, .asked permission to take the hook and ladder truck to Atlantic City to participate in a pa rade there in connection with the Firemen's Conventidn on September 23-24. The Mayor and Council were •invited to attend as guests of the firemen. Permission was given to take trie truck, and us many of the council men as can will attend the gather The police rscorttert report foi jjwo mouth* showed a long list o cases heard anJ.wasnccompanitd b; a check for $226 collected in fines, over and above expenses. 'Resolution* wete adopted tu advtr the for bids on »Id«walk work im ,provements on Higfh street, and Em erson street. off Patocnig 4; oil Migi«c» i\ Medwick 2. it, off Little Boy Uotent Screen Falls From Second Stotrj near L in M«qnd story, window, Alhert 'Tru tuta, aged 2 yjNH»^»on of Mrs. Ann; day. He failed to appear for "jj hearing Tuesday night. Sports Editor Reports Good News For Man Who Caused Disturbance Is Fined In Police) Court Louis Kotasko and hu wife, both of 20 Burlington street, were in po- lice court Tuesday night. The man WSB charged with having resisted an officer after having created a dis- turbance in a Union street store. He Good tidings reached the ap editor this week and when such j rolls around no time is lost \n It the sport fans know all aboal The good tidings are round none other than Barn; local third baseman of the Carttrtfl Field Club. Carteret ball fans are famil •with Frank Bruggy, Staubach's i er for the last two seasons, left the local lineup three weeks I | to return to the Chicago White of the American League and now is going to the Rochester nine •the International League. Dil stay with the White Sox, had an interview with the man of Reading, and after it' was was fined ?1B and locked up. La<fer*JTEarny S»bo was offered a in the night his wife and two men appeared and tried to get him out with $10. The woman did not want to give any money until her hus- band was released, apparently dis- trusting the police. When told that |10 was not e- nough, one of the men added %t to the amount and tried to obtain Ko- taako's freedom for |12. They final- ly secured tde full amount of the fine and the man was released. - Albert Such waa fined $25 and placed under probation for a year. He was charged by his wife and step- son with having struck the former 'and with having called her obscene names. The woman also charged that he often left her and went to Pennsylvania, for extended periods. Such was represented by Attorney Maxwell Sesin. with Reading of the Internation circuit. This news was most welcome the local boy and if it were possibl he would pack bag and baggage week and head for Reading but it is Earny will wait for several daj before leaving so that his throWin arm which has been pretty sore late will have a chance to heal. Reading manager was expecting too this week but will be content taijj wait a few days in this event. Bruggy who hus had many of experience in the leagues sees sure shot in iSabo and he has working in his behalf for the Is. few months, Along with Brug iarteret fans wish Earny the of luck in his try-out and they undoubtedly show up well anywhert| that Sabo might be in uniform this state. GO TO IT EARNY! Two Live Teams Slated To Play Benefit Game leaning up the lot and exterminat- ng the nest of snakes the Swiatek amity had Mayor William Hamilton xamine the spot Monday morning. Hamilton found a snake sunning it- self on the lilac bush and h* recog- lized it as a copperhead of A variety nee common on the Watchung fountains behind Plainfield. Before he snake could be killed it dropped !rom the bush and squirmed into the nderbrush. The town will take ac- ion to have the well filled in and he field cleared off in an effort to drive the snakes from the neighbor- hood. Neighbors say dogu and cuts have died in agony from what appeared to be snake bites. The reptiles seem to he more numerous this year than ever before, this fact being attribu « to. the drying up of an old pond thai) is believed to have forced the snakes to seek the aaiiotuary of the well tn the built-up neighborhood. Afl first It W.8B reported the inci dent happened in the outskirts oi Iselin. In tracking down the tumor the reporter eventually located th family in Maple ayumm, Smith Pliiia- field. tended by Dr. J. 3. Reason wh had an X-cuy picture made and found that the boy had two aligbj fractures on either tid« of the skull The screen hud been fastened wit hooks and they were thought to tk [too tight for the baby to looser thwn. For the love of the sport and aid a fr(end, two powerful nines will lash at Brady's Oval, Thursday ght when the. Carteret All Stars nd the Port Reading A. C. meet in full nine-inning twilight contest or the benefit of Joe Ginda, who was adly injured while playing with the >cal Stars last week. Ginda waa it in the hand by a pitched ball and s a result will be unable to use is right hand for at least a month. The game was arranged by the eadmg baseball men of 'Carteret at meeting following a twilight con eat Tuesday nigbt. Port Reading layers consented to offer their ser- ices free as well as the local play- rs since Ginda was hit by the Port leading pitcher in Port Reading. A arge following is expected to ac- ompany the Port combine to Car- eret for the important game, Tues- Much Interest Shown In Contest 1 For ChrysUt'; Interest is increasing in tde con-l test being held under the aU8picea>| of the Reformed Hungarian Chi fer a Chrysler sedan. The car on exhibition in the salesroom of Economy Chrysler Company, Roosevelt avenue, in the Chrome tion. The proceeds of the contest be used to help defray the cost a new steeple being built on church, and the prize will be a* ed on the occasion of the dedic. of the steeple. Tickets for share* | the contest have been on sale some time and the demand for is increasing as interest in the test grows. lay, The Carteret All Stars will be made up of the »ame men that rep- aaented the borough when the Red Stars, of Perth Amboy were beaten iere Tuesday, Port Reading will tae its regular -lineup which has lost ut four games in twenty-two starts Big Shots In Baaeball Idle Because of Both the Carteret Field Club' Carteret A. A. were forced to re idle last Sunday due to rain throu which it was impossible to play. Field Club was scheduled to take ; Perth Amboy at the Raritan Cop 'Works Field and the A. A. was under the management of Frankiehave met th» Staten Island Ca Tucker. | large crowds turned out for games and waited for the official •nouncements calling off tae The local fans ar eadvised to in to their stubs of lust week asr; Field Club will play the game; with the Perth Alrtboys and the | —Please mention; this paper when are good for admission, ueji buying from adveqtisen^-. day, ~ , "Tickets for the benefit game are on sale and can be obtained by call- ng at Charles Brady's confectionery tore or getting in touch with Ted Daniels of this paper. BARGAINS FOR QUICK BUYERS Six Lota in Lincoln Avenue — Four Lots in Haywood A\ Two Lots in Grant Avenue — Four Lota in Washington Ave f 100 in cash needed, balance may be made in small*| monthly payments . SIX-RQOM HOUSE with two lot's and garage, irnj menta. A corner property in a gool location. Twenty trees. SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE with }6 lots, garage and trees. In East Rahway. $8,000. Terms arranged to m DANlEt KASHA

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FOOT Page ColoredConic Section

The Price of ThisTit>ei

CARTERcents everywhere—Pay no more

r PRESS Sporting News, Page

CARTERET, N. J.,

Man Badly InjuredIn Motorcycle Crash

AUGUST 19, 1927

Complainant Change* StoryIt Dismissed

Joseph Nudge In HospitalWith Broken Thigh and

Fractured Jaw. DriverHad No License '

A motorcycle speeding along Roos-evelt avenue in ront of the Uebigplant enclosure, crashed into an ashconveyor Saturday about noon and

'injured two men, one seriously. Jo-seph Nudge, 19i of Thornal street,

• is in the Perth Amboy City Hospital' with a .broken right thigh bone, a

fractured jaw and numerous bruises' and abraisiona. Louis Kaupohak, of

80 John street, who was driving themotorcycle, escaped with a bruisedheel and hip, Nudge was riding onthe rear seat of the motorcycle.

Nudge was taken to the office ofDr. Imra Kemeny where the injuredthigh WM placed in splints and theother injuries attended to. He wasthen sent to' the hospital in an am-bulance.

Kaupchak was given medical at-tention by Dr. i. J. Reason and wasable to be about again soon after theaccident. He was arrested Saturday,night for driving the motorcycle ona p«rmlt without being accompaniedby a licensed driver.

Kaupchak said that the conveyor•was in the road and that as he ap-proached it a truck of the RooseveltLaundry Company approached onthe opposite Ride and that he had nochoice but to hit the truck or theconveyor. He did not say anythingabout the possibility of stopping andwaiting until the truck went by. Hehad neither license or insurance andhis motorcycle was demolished. He

Peter Conrat, a former residentof Carteret and now a member ofthe Marine Corps, appeared at policeheadquarters Sunday and chargedthat he had been robbed of $210 inSchweitzer's saloon on the previousevening. He said that he had beenin the aaloon drinking and that fi-nally he took a nap near the bar.'When he awoke, he said, his pocket-book was gone. He blamed the bar-tender and one other person whowas in the saloon at the time.

At a hearing Wednesday hechanged his story entirely and thefcase was dismissed. Conrat was inuniform on Monday but was in civil-ian attire when he made the com-plaint Sunday.

"Hardworking" WomanGives Police Battle

Negress So Muscular That ItTook Five Men To Place

Her In Police Car

Police Raid Home Defeat ImprovementGet Stills and Liquor ft Main Highway

Arrest YouthWith Big Gun

was fined $25.

Expect Big Crowd OutFor Third P. A. Game

One of the largest crowds ever toleave Carteret for any eport eventwill desert this borough Sunday af-ternoon when Henry Stauibaeh'gCarteret Field Club invades PerthAmboy to make it three victories ina row over Jimmy Tizrano's PerthAmboys at the Raritan CopperWorks Field. Rain kept the twoteams from playing Sunday althougha large attendance was on hand. Therain checks of the last game will begonrf for the game this Sunday.

Ace Samson, star Field Club hurl-er, of Elisabeth, wwa onjund. to hurtfor Carteret Sunday and will be onthe mound again this week. Sam-son is anxious to tally over the Am-boys once more. The Betaytown He-brew has a large following amongthe baseball fans. Prank Bruggywho has been given a few days leavebefore going to Rochester from theChicago White Sox reported to catchfor tStaubach and has assured thelocal manager that he will be onhand to guide the slants of Samsononce more when the Amboys andCarteret teams meet for the thirdtime.

The remainder of the Carteret in-field will be made up of Captain Jug-gle Coplan, at first; Pete Burnett,on second; Moulton, at the shortpost; and Earny Sabo or Mickey D'-Zurilla,>Bt the hot corner. A pow-erful batting and fielding outfield willbe had in "Blackie" Regan, EmilKrausche and Davy Landew, thehard hitting New Brunswick player.

Tinano's battery will undoubted-ly be his strongest, namely, TomMcMillan and Dane. The former isgrowing impatient waiting for theopportunity to trim the borough rep-resentatives. In tlje event of niceweather it is possible that the local

Yells and the sound of crashing(crockery coming from the house at'13 Mercer street, attracted the at-tention of three policemen late Sat-urday night. They entered the houseand found much wreckage and a'large negreas. There were blood'stains and plenty of evidence of abattle. When the police attemptedto arrest the woman they had theirhands full. It took the efforts of thethree and two mqre who came totheir assistance to place the womanJin the police car where she was(handcuffed in order to save the car.

At headquarters-she described her-self as Josephine Howard and saidshe was a hardworking woman. Shewas locked up and tried mainly tobreak down the cell door. The po-•lice then went out to find who hadlost the blood that made the stainsin the woman's hou*e. They found

Holly Street Man Had NineQuarts and One Half Gal-

lon on Hand—-One ofStills In Operation—

Gets $25 Fine

Two 6-gwllon stills, one in opera-tion, nine quart bottles full of alleg-ed liquor and a half gallon jug, alsofull were taken by the police Sat-urday morning in a raid upon thehome of Louis Slsko, 34 Hollystreet. The bottles and jug were'corked and ready for delivery. Lieu-tenant J. 3. Donovan, Sergeant

['Thomas McNally and Motorcycle Po-liceman Robert Shanley made theraid.

iSisko's product is said to be a-bove the average hootch in qualitybecause of being distilled twice. Hewas arraigned in police court Tues-day night and said that his wife'made the liquor for his use. Hedenied making any sales and theIpolice produced no evidence of sales.He was fined $25 and advised to etop'malting booze. To the advice he re-plied that if he could not make ithe would have to'buy it.

Walks I i Roosevelt AvenueOpp«Mi|l Successfully By

^ Owners

was worn out and that he had justpurchased the one which was in oper-ation when the raid was made. Bothstills were in excellent condition, ac-cording to the, police.

The ordlftfcnep to construct side-walks and curlm in Roosevelt ave-nue between MiKinley avenue andthe borongn line at Edwin itreet,was def««ttd Monday night at themeeting of the council. CouncilmanFrank An<W*;s was the only one tovote in fSvoJ of it on the final bal-lot. In tttt Wcussion which preceed-ed the ftna) ~»oto the Mayor indicat-'*d that he favored the improvement.The reasoHi for the improvement

Frank Sica Locked Up* BySergeant Dowling. Had

M .Wf Revolver In Trous-er's Band. Bail Fixed

At $2,000

Prank Sica, 20 years old, of ]>w-

Gam* PlannedFor Local Teams

If plans ar* completed betweenj.Henry Staubuch and Joe Elko overI the week end the Carteret Field Cluband the AH Cartmts will clash Ina winner take all content at Brady'sOval Sunday afternoon, August 28.The game would have been arranged•(for this Sunday but due to the Am-boy-Field Club go, this was impos-sible.

j Elko Is convinced that he can ge-ls street, was arrested at 1.30 o'-jcure a team of all local men and anMock this morning on a charge of outsider for the hurling activities tocarrying concealed weapons. Desk I trim Staubach's nine. Of this someSergeant Joseph J. Dowling, acting [of the fans are in doubt while othersas rounds sergeant, made the ar-rest. Siea had a huge Colt revolv-er thrust into the band of his trous-

are sure that the feat can be accomplished. Elko makes known, althoughhe has not announced a name, that

ers beneath his shirt. The weapon (he will have a former big league[was too large to CBrry in a potket.

were nrftnj/ the street is the main Ut is a 32 calibre but uses cartridgesthoroughfsii of the borough and is|much longer than the ordinary re-the approach from the Woodbridge'side. T%$H is much traffic of auto-Jmoblles thirt. The pedestrians haveto walk la ihe street, especially in-wet wetthtf as the sidewalk, space istaken up With pools of water andmud

The only, reason offered against'the improvement was that a half doz-[en property owners did not want topay the sidewalk assessment. Therewere sonw property owners in favor

Sisko said that one of his stills M the Improvement these included

[/George Johnson, a negro with a bedscalp wound. He was in a pool ofblood and was using an entire bedsheet as a compress againstwound.

Johnson was taken to headquar-ters where he bled profusely whitethe police made efforts to secure adoctor. Several were reported outof town or out on cases. Finally Dr.J. J. Reason was reached and stitch-ed the wound.

Johnson said that he boarded withthe Howtrd wsmaa attdfctrfata., thatthey were playing when she struckhim with a bottle and inflicted thescalp wound. In police court Tues-day night the woman was fined $10.Johnson failed to appear. The wo-man explained that she had attend-ed a birthday party and had consum-ed too much punch.

fang will outnumberof the home team.

the followers

Death Claims ChildStruck By Auto

Ernest Misak, 4 Year OldFords Boy Dies In Hospi-

tal. W M On Handle-bars of Bicycle

When Hit

Ernest Misak, aged 4 years, of•Fords, N. J., died early1 Saturday

, 1 morning jn the Perth Amboy Citye ^ Hospital as a result of injuries re-

ceived Thursday afternoon of lastweek when the bicycle upon whichhe and another toy were riding wasstruck by an auto, The other boywas Steve Sestaye, 14 years old, of,35 Mercer street. He ia in the hos-pital with a broken right arm anddislocated shoulder.

The Misak boy was riding on thehattdfe'Tiars'of'Sestaye's bicycle when(he bicycle was struck by an autodriven by Charles Comba, of Car-teret. Comba was rounded up by theWoodbridge police. After the deathof the Misak boy a charge of man-slaughter was entered against Com-ba. The boy had a fractured skull,internal injuries and a broken leg.

WohlgWnuth, Joseph Levy andthe Canda Realty Company.

As all of the property owners arebusiness men and moat of them aremembers of the organization known

\aa the Business Men's Associationwhich fias sponsored a "booster"propaganda lately, Councilman An-dreas criticised them for their lackof interest In the borough's welfare.He said that the hazard to the public9 great and that many accidents had

'happened there on account of theabsence of walks. He was surprised,he said, that business men of theircalibre should hold out against animprovement BO obviously necessary,Woodbridge, Andres pointed out, hadhad long ago seen the necessity forprotecting the public and had con-structed a cinder sidewalk all alongthe stretch from Port Reading tothe borough line.

It was a black eye to the towri,Andres declared, to obstruct an im-provement so essential. The Mayorsaid it was an ugly, dangerous situ-ation.

School Commissioners Frankfllrown and John Cselle; Max Green-wald, Sam Srulowitz and others of£he opposing property owners spoke

volver. It is n six-shooter.Sica said that he had taken the

gun to Perth Amboy to dispose ofit to some one there who, he thought,

Wight buy it. According to Sica thePerth Amboy man refused to acceptthe gun because it was too large. Thearreat was made in Roosevelt avenuenear Hudson street when Sica re-turned from Perth Amboy. '

'Sica was locked up and his bond'was fixed in the amount of $2,000,with the notation that it must be aproperty bond accompanied by adeed. Up to noon today no one hadvolunteered to go on Sica's bond.

itar on the mound.

pin protest the improvement

Cardinal Players' AveragesCompiled By Manager

; In a list compiled by the manager<tf the Carteret Cardinals several ex-cellent batting averages for the pres-ent diamond campaign can be seen.Five of the eleven players of theteam are batting over the 300 markup to but not including this week.To date the Cardinals have tokenpart in about twtnty-two games andthey h«ve lost but few of the starts.

Medwick leads the junior nine withan average of .483 after taking thestand at bat 89 times. SmolertBkywho bitted the same number oftimes runs second in the offensiverace wHh thirty-five hits for an aye-rage of .393. Miglecz comes thirdWith .801 and Comba trails the third

•man by 'three points. Comba hasbeen hitting the pill hard in the last

-•atarta and as- a result has broughthimself from the cellar group upto an aVerage of .358. The fifth bat-t«r who passed the triple centuryntftrk IJJU B. Collie who has .play-«d but a few games with the Car-dinals.

the Cardinals »re batting for anavwfge of .3081 »s a team. -Thte

httoti * very commendable *nd only-hard hitting for the remainder ofthe very busy campaign will enablethe locals to finish with the same rec-ord. »

Ave.

.393

.361

.858

.318

.29*

.an

.204

Gun Ctub MembersHave Big Shoot

The members of the Carteret GunClub enjoye>i the advantage of hold-ng their shoots in the morning when

they held a most successful contestSunday morning before the rainbrojce up several other sport eventsthat were scheduled for the after-noon. The feature of the shoot Sun-day was the copping of first placein the Class '*€" shoot by CharlesJ. Brady with a 47 score. This wasthe highest score made on any ofthe class conteets.

Two ties were mads in the firstclasses. Oscar Mundy and WilliamBrke tied with 47 in the class "A"competition and' Hans Beckman andJohnny Schaefer tied in ClasB "B"with the same score. In the recruit•class John Perment won with a 37'Score out of fifty attempts. A largecrowd witnessed the shooting Sun-day. ' '

In two weeks the local gqn ergan-azation will hold a prize contest forthe residents of Carteret who havehunted before but who have nevershot at the clay birds, Evetyone isinvited providing that he U a bor-ough resident. Anyone wishing totake part who is minus a rifle willbe loaned one for the occasion bythe club members. The contest willbe a fifteen bird event.

Cardinals Down LincolnsIn Second Contest 11 to 4

For the present at least the ques-tion of superiority between the Lin-colns and Cardinals is settled. TheCardinals won L from tlhe Lincolnsfor the second time this season in a

at Brady's Sunday by an 11Hard hitting won" the

When Woodhull waa pounded forseven runs on eight hits in the firstnning the Lincolna put Patsy Pat-cni^ in the box. P*tocnig begfn

hurling in the third. SI* hits weremade from the offerings of Patsyduring the seven frames that he hurl-Medwick in the fourth after blankingMedwiek in the fourth ater blankingthe Lincolns and allowing two h,itB.

The iLjncolns clouted Medwiek forfour hits and three runs as a wel-come in the fourth, Medwiekstrengthened as time went on and

d b t

Local Merchant SlashesPrices In Big Sale

A sale that is attracting wide at-tention among local shoppers beganthis morning, at the Market BargainStore, 326 ' Pershing avenue. Arowd of eager buyers w»s on hand

the doors opv£f*d> The Btore

H ab.Medwiek 89Bmolenjky 89MigUci •'•! 83Comba 53B. Colons 16Kasha .„; ,.„... 77Si.kiefta ?.......v. 70

iwm ~. n

?•8317lit)28

i14

b.43363019

6231919If

andlea ft completend clothing for worn

dry goods" child-

Occasionaliy sales are held andhese have come to be regwdtil anictable events in .merchandising. By, purchase system that enables theoncern to. get goods in bulk ut rouk

;o 4 score.rame.

the Lincolns scored but one moretally in the game.

Of the fourteen hits of his team,Stanley Smolensky got the best|share. Smolensky collected three hitsin live chances while the CollingBrothers, Miglecz and Galvanek eachgathered two safeties. Overholt with

Attorney Elmer E. Brown represent-ing the property owners, opened thediscussion when the ordinance >, ia»moved on for final reading. Browjisaid that some agreement might bereached if the council members andthe property owners opposed to theimprovement held' a conference inchambers before final action waataken on the ordinance. The Mayordenied this request on the groundthat he was opposed to any businessconducted behind closed doors.

There was opposition upon the partof several of the councilmen to a \motion to read the ordinance as a;preliminary to adoption. The voteto read it resulted in a tie which wasbroken by the Mayor who voted infavor of reading it. In the finalvote to adopt the ordinance on thirdreading the only favorable vote ws sthat of Councilman Andres..

An ordinance to place the walksand curbs on both sides of Irvinestreet was laid ove> as it was learn-ed that the property owners weremaking the improvement themselveswithout thi> necessity of legislation.

The Mayor said that he had madsa personal investigation of the con-dition in l'assaic street where resi-dents had complained of poor drain-age, and had found that the condi-tion demanded immediate attentionin the inkiest of health. The mat-ter waa placed in the hands of theroad committee1 and engineer with in-structions to take immediate action.

The police committee reported-thatthe cl g catcher had captured thirty-seven dogs and is still on the job.

I Other committees reported progressA resolution Was adojpted to pro

CHILD BELIEVEDBITTEN BY SNAKE

DIES IN HOSPITAL;FIND COPPERHEAD

South Plainfield Incident FirstReported as Happening inIselin—Two Year Old GirlWas Victim—Deadly Rep-tiles In Old Well Near Home

CAME FROM MOUNTAINS

Bitten and poisoned by what waabelieved to be a copperhead snake,a two year child died in MuhlenbergHospital, Plainfield, Saturday night.The child was the daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Valentine Swiatek of Ma-ple avenue, South Plainfield, nearwhat is known as Silver Lake. Ad-joining the home is a yacant fieldwith an old well surrounded by lilacbushes. Although snakes were knownto make their home in the well andaround the bush persons in the neigh-borhood did not suspect the reptilesto be: dangerous until the child'sdeath.

The child was playing on the lawnThursday evening when her mother,watching from a window, saw herfall to the ground with a cry of pBrnand clutch her foot. Thinking theyoungster had stepped on a sharp

one Mrs. Swiatek endeavored tomfort her and for a time succeed-. In the night the child developedhigh fever and next morning themily took her to the hospital clin-

Up until that time there hadeen no suspicion that the child'sndition waa due to snake bite andie fever was not attributed to theightly swollen heel. After beingken home the child developed con-

ulaions which necessitated her re-rn to the hospital where she died

aturday evening.Mr. Swiatek, a native of Poland,

icognized the distinctive punctures•f the snake fangs on the bottom ofhe child's heel a few hours beforehe died. Then it was too late topply anti-toxin. Swiatek's motheras bitten by a poisonous snakehen they lived in Poland and heecognined in his child symptomsmilar to those of his mother.1 The lot on which the child waa bit.

;en is owned by ,a resident of Ho-oken, the Swiatek's say. For yearst has been allowed to become over-

grown with weeds and brush. Inrder to secure town action toward

Rons From StoreJitfy Track

Little Girl Escapes With Slight. Injuries In Accident In

Central Avenue

Mary Selinsky, aged fi years,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. Selinskyof 73 Central'avenue, was slightlyinjured Saturday at noon when shewas struck by a delivery truck ofthe New Jersey Tobacco Company,idriven by J, A. Newton, of NewBrunswick. The accident happenedin Central avenue.

Newton said that the little girlran out of a store and directly intothe path of his truck. She wastaken to the office of Dr. Kemenywho was busy at the time with an-other case, the victim of a motor-cycle accident. After the latter hadbeen sent to a hospital, Dr. Kemenymade an X-ray examination of thelittle girl «nd found she has escapedwith nothing more serious than con-tusions to the ankle and head. Shewas taken to her home.

Newton reported "the case to Pa-trolman Michael Bradley and Motor-cycle Policeman Robert Shanley.

PRICE THREE

Drunk-Crazed ManAttempts!

Edwte Street Man Hang*With B*Jt In Police C*U.

Desk Sergeant FoilsA t t e m p t

Using hi* heavy leather, beltnow, Walter Slsnowskl, ofstreet, attempted suicide byin a police cell Saturday afterand failed through tho timely

jjof Desk Sergeant Thomas McNaSunnownky was arrested about :Saturday on complaint of hiiwho charged that he hid been dring and had beaten her. He was 'der the influence of liquorlocked up.

Soon after the man had been ;ed in a cell Sergeant McNallyto look at him. The nergeant foSusnowski hanging from the banthe top of the cell door. He o*4§tied his belt around his neckfastened the end to the bars,officer freed him from the bars,summoned Dr. H. L.Susnowski was nearly urrconseloand the belt had made a deep«ion half way about his neck.

The doctor and sergeant rtvlfthe prisoner and he was givencine to quiet his nerve*. His att>is believed to be due to theof the liquor he had been drinkAfter he had rested a fewbe appeared to be normal. Susski WM kept under observationday and was released on bail Mo

three hits and Bartok with two ledf c e;d w i t h tne mle o f bgnds, as au-thorized in a recent ordinance.

Permission was granted to Jacob'the Lincoln batters.

The score:Lincoln! ab. r.Dubrick, If 3 0Patocnig, 2b., p 5 0Cromwell, 3b 3 XOverholt, as. 4 2Karraanoaki, cf 3Rube-1, lb 4Wftod'hull, p., 2b aBartok, c 3Mudrak, rf 4

Cardinal*B. Collins, cf

p

32ab65g , p

(J. Collins, c 5"Medwick, 2b.,*p 3Smolensky, ss 5Siekierka, lb. - y . v - 8Conrad, 9b. .- , 6

iottVmr prices, "ttttrttctivu mtudkma} CoraK rf .-'-,-- !>,n prices are uffarded the retail CUB- [Galvanefc, If. .-- 4

-who, flock to the store, Fre-};

qutmtly competitors ru#h into printwith circulars in an effort to profitsy the buying spirit stirred up bybe Market Bargain concern.

The sale continues today, tomor-row am' Monday, i'htreater the.store will he open on Wudii«sdaya,Saturdays and Mondays, but the pricereductions advertised in the aale lit-erature will b« maintained fpr sometime,

40 11 14 2Score by irfningB: <

Lincoln! 000 800 0 0 1 - 4Cardinals - 261 002 1 0 x - l l

SummaryTwo base hits, Conrad, Karinanos-

ki, SmolenBky.Three base hit, Ifedwick.Sacrifice hit, Kttrmanoski.Hit by pitcher, Medwiek, Galvajwk,

WuodhulLBases on balls, off Woodhull 1;

Weiss to install an XAl tank in Persh-ing avenue to b$ iped in connectionwith, an oil heating system for hishouse. An invitation was receivedfrom the Slovak Gymnastic Unionto attend the dedication of a hall onSeptember 4.

Fire Company No. 1 through FireChief Wilhelm, .asked permission totake the hook and ladder truck toAtlantic City to participate in a parade there in connection with theFiremen's Conventidn on September23-24. The Mayor and Council were•invited to attend as guests of thefiremen. •

Permission was given to take trietruck, and us many of the councilmen as can will attend the gather

The police rscorttert report foijjwo mouth* showed a long list ocases heard anJ.wasnccompanitd b;a check for $226 collected in fines,over and above expenses.

'Resolution* wete adopted tu advtrthe for bids on »Id«walk work im,provements on Higfh street, and Emerson street.

off Patocnig 4; oil Migi«c» i\Medwick 2.

it,

off

Little Boy Uotent ScreenFalls From Second Stotrj

nearL inM«qnd story, window, Alhert 'Tru

tuta, aged 2 yjNH»^»on of Mrs. Ann;

day. He failed to appear for "jjhearing Tuesday night.

Sports Editor ReportsGood News For

Man Who Caused DisturbanceIs Fined In Police) Court

Louis Kotasko and hu wife, bothof 20 Burlington street, were in po-lice court Tuesday night. The manWSB charged with having resisted anofficer after having created a dis-turbance in a Union street store. He

Good tidings reached the apeditor this week and when such jrolls around no time is lost \n Itthe sport fans know all aboalThe good tidings areround none other than Barn;local third baseman of the CarttrtflField Club.

Carteret ball fans are famil•with Frank Bruggy, Staubach's ier for the last two seasons,left the local lineup three weeks I

| to return to the Chicago Whiteof the American League and nowis going to the Rochester nine•the International League. Dil

stay with the White Sox,had an interview with the manof Reading, and after it' was

was fined ?1B and locked up. La<fer*JTEarny S»bo was offered ain the night his wife and two menappeared and tried to get him outwith $10. The woman did not wantto give any money until her hus-band was released, apparently dis-trusting the police.

When told that |10 was not e-nough, one of the men added %t tothe amount and tried to obtain Ko-taako's freedom for |12. They final-ly secured tde full amount of thefine and the man was released.- Albert Such waa fined $25 andplaced under probation for a year.He was charged by his wife and step-son with having struck the former'and with having called her obscenenames. The woman also chargedthat he often left her and went toPennsylvania, for extended periods.Such was represented by AttorneyMaxwell Sesin.

with Reading of the Internationcircuit.

This news was most welcomethe local boy and if it were possiblhe would pack bag and baggageweek and head for Reading butit is Earny will wait for several dajbefore leaving so that his throWinarm which has been pretty sorelate will have a chance to heal.Reading manager was expectingtoo this week but will be content taijjwait a few days in this event.

Bruggy who hus had manyof experience in the leagues seessure shot in iSabo and he hasworking in his behalf for the Is.few months, Along with Brug

iarteret fans wish Earny theof luck in his try-out and theyundoubtedly show up well anywhert|that Sabo might be in uniformthis state. GO TO IT EARNY!

Two Live Teams SlatedTo Play Benefit Game

leaning up the lot and exterminat-ng the nest of snakes the Swiatekamity had Mayor William Hamiltonxamine the spot Monday morning.

Hamilton found a snake sunning it-self on the lilac bush and h* recog-lized it as a copperhead of A varietynee common on the Watchung

fountains behind Plainfield. Beforehe snake could be killed it dropped!rom the bush and squirmed into thenderbrush. The town will take ac-ion to have the well filled in andhe field cleared off in an effort to

drive the snakes from the neighbor-hood.

Neighbors say dogu and cuts havedied in agony from what appeared tobe snake bites. The reptiles seemto he more numerous this year thanever before, this fact being attribu« to. the drying up of an old pond

thai) is believed to have forced thesnakes to seek the aaiiotuary of thewell tn the built-up neighborhood.

Afl first It W.8B reported the incident happened in the outskirts oiIselin. In tracking down the tumorthe reporter eventually located thfamily in Maple ayumm, Smith Pliiia-field.

tended by Dr. J. 3. Reason whhad an X-cuy picture made andfound that the boy had two aligbjfractures on either tid« of the skull

The screen hud been fastened withooks and they were thought to tk[too tight for the baby to looserthwn.

For the love of the sport and aida fr(end, two powerful nines will

lash at Brady's Oval, Thursdayght when the. Carteret All Stars

nd the Port Reading A. C. meet infull nine-inning twilight contest

or the benefit of Joe Ginda, who wasadly injured while playing with the>cal Stars last week. Ginda waait in the hand by a pitched ball ands a result will be unable to useis right hand for at least a month.

The game was arranged by theeadmg baseball men of 'Carteret at

meeting following a twilight coneat Tuesday nigbt. Port Readinglayers consented to offer their ser-ices free as well as the local play-rs since Ginda was hit by the Portleading pitcher in Port Reading. Aarge following is expected to ac-ompany the Port combine to Car-eret for the important game, Tues-

Much Interest ShownIn Contest1 For ChrysUt';

Interest is increasing in tde con-ltest being held under the aU8picea>|of the Reformed Hungarian Chifer a Chrysler sedan. The caron exhibition in the salesroom ofEconomy Chrysler Company,Roosevelt avenue, in the Chrometion.

The proceeds of the contestbe used to help defray the costa new steeple being built onchurch, and the prize will be a*ed on the occasion of the dedic.of the steeple. Tickets for share* |the contest have been on salesome time and the demand foris increasing as interest in thetest grows.

lay,The Carteret All Stars will be

made up of the »ame men that rep-aaented the borough when the Red

Stars, of Perth Amboy were beateniere Tuesday, Port Reading willtae its regular -lineup which has lostut four games in twenty-two starts

Big Shots In BaaeballIdle Because of

Both the Carteret Field Club'Carteret A. A. were forced to reidle last Sunday due to rain throuwhich it was impossible to play.Field Club was scheduled to take ;Perth Amboy at the Raritan Cop

'Works Field and the A. A. wasunder the management of Frankiehave met th» Staten Island CaTucker. | large crowds turned out for

games and waited for the official•nouncements calling off taeThe local fans ar eadvised toin to their stubs of lust week asr;Field Club will play the game;with the Perth Alrtboys and the |

—Please mention; this paper when are good for admission, uejibuying from adveqtisen^-. day, ~ ,

"Tickets for the benefit game areon sale and can be obtained by call-ng at Charles Brady's confectionerytore or getting in touch with Ted

Daniels of this paper.

BARGAINS FOR QUICK BUYERSSix Lota in Lincoln Avenue — Four Lots in Haywood A\Two Lots in Grant Avenue — Four Lota in Washington Ave

f 100 in cash needed, balance may be made in small*|monthly payments

. SIX-RQOM HOUSE with two lot's and garage, irnjmenta. A corner property in a gool location. Twentytrees.

SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE with }6 lots, garage andtrees. In East Rahway. $8,000. Terms arranged to m

DANlEt KASHA

PAGE TWO

UNITED STATES SURVEYOF RUTGERS UNIVERSITY

Tlint lintjrori I'nivcrnity or theState I'diversity nf NVw Jerwy willh»vp nn enrollment of 0,000 resi-dent "itudpntB, Imlh men and women,by J!*17 is prrdipted in the report of'A survpy of the institution by the U.

YOUR investment in plateglftRs is opt>n to instant andcomplete Ions unlfss it is pro-tected by insurance. TheraU's arc right and our com-pany is one of the strongest.

WILLIAM J.OftOHMANN

A 59PHOgt

666it a prescription for

Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,Bilious Fever and Malaria.

It kill* the gertnt.

S. Diii'fiiii "f Ivhirntion, mnde pub-lic this ui-cl The rppnrf, Which cov-ers every pbnie of university acti-vity, iiistiiins President John M.Thomns1 nnnoimred policy of the. expansiorl of Rutgers an the State Uni-versity whose chief purpose flhall beservice to the people of the State.

That the univenity hs« Alreadymnde Inrjro contributions to the lifeof the State is pointed out by thecommittee, which mentions particu-larly the college* of agriculture andengineering, and the New Jersey Col-lege for Women which "has single-handed removed from the State thecharge that New Jersey provided nohigher educational opportunities forits young women." The committeealso cites the services of the Col-lege of Art* and Sciences, and theaccomplishments of th> Rutgersnlurnni, more than 80 per cent, ofwhom reside in this State.

In order that the State Universitymay he of still furter service to thecommonwealth, the committee makesa number of recommendations, a-mong them the reorganisation of thecurriculum of the college of artsand pciencei into junior and seniorcolleges, the eBtablishment'of coursesin administrative engineer!nf and in-dustrial management, the develop-ment of the school of education asa two-year co-vducational senior col-lege; and the eventual establishmentof a graduate school and of a lawschool.

Several of the recommendationsin the report have already been a-dopted, including the appointment ofa university comptroller, the open-ing of the agricultural college to wo-men, the appointment, to additionalstate officials to the board of trus-tees, and the establishment of a Bu-reau of Economic and Business Re-search.

The survey committee was appoint-ed by U. S. Commissioner of Educa-tion John J. Tiegert upon the re-quest of the trustees of the univer-sity, with the approval of GovernorA, Harry Moore and State Commis-sioner of Education John H. Logan.

NAME OF OPERATOR TO BE DISPLAYEDIN EVERY TROLLEY GAR AND BUS

Section of but showing •nnme-platf at top to left of register. Insertat lower If ft shoun enlargement nf name-plate.

As another Btep toward promot-ing closer co-operation betweentheir operators and patrons, PublicService transportation companiesplan to equip every trolley car andbus operator In their system witha name-plate, giving the name andbadge number of the operator.

Tha name-plate l« of aluminumwith the opera,tcr's name In em-bossed letters on a blue back-ground and the .holder Is of. hlghly-

pollshed brass. Oil the holder isthe Public ServJce emblem and thewords, "This Car Operated By."Each trailer car and bus will beequipped with hooks on which tbeoperator will hanf the name-plateholder.

The companies' Hudson Divisionhas been equipped with the name-plates and holders. Other divisionswill be similarly equipped as soonas an adequate supply Is received.

Don't Try to Clean HouseWithout the New HOOVER

Get the new Hoover now. Have it in timefor the fall cleaning. Let it keep your homethoroughly clean all through the year Youhave no idea, until you see its swift and thor'ough cleaning methods, what a difference itwill make.

It not only removes the surface dirt, butgoes after—and gets—the deep buried, cuttinggrit that ruins floor coverings. Ordinary dean'ing methods cannot reach this dirt. Only"Positive Agitation," an exclusive Hooverprinciple, cah^remove it.

YoA'll be delighted to see how efficiently theHoover dusting tools clean upholstered fumi'ture, draperies and mattresses.

Our divided payment plan makes it easy foryou to own the Hoover.

$ 5 Down a Month

Your old wornout elec-tric cleaner can still giveyou service It can helpto pay for your newHoover. We will makean appraisal of it withoutcharge or obligation andgive you a Tiberal allow-ance for it on the pur-chase price of the newHoover.

Telephone or write fora frte demonstration,

there is noobligation.

/ Public .y ' Service

, Electric and'/ Gn Company

/ Please demonstrate the' new Hoover on my rugs.

Name

, ' Street 8C (4a.

* City

A Sale With a Purpose-To Save You Big Moijey

DRUMMER BOY

HOSE

Reg. 25c

All Sizes

On Sale Only

19c

During the ComingSCHOOL DAYS and COOL DAYS

MARKET BARGAIN STORENear Fitch Street

326 Perching Avenue Carteret, N. J.

CHILDREN'S

% SILK SOCKS

Boys and Girls

Regular 39c

On Sale Only

25c

IAnnounces to its jnany customers and friends that in order to enable them to save much money on their purchasesduring the coming school days and for the coming colder seasons, big cuts have been made in all prices.

ALL PRICES SLASHED TO ENABLE OUR CUSTOMERS TO MAKE BIG SAVINGS ON ALL THEIR PURCHASES.NEW SCALE OF SALE PRICES GOEB INTO EFFECT AT

Schooland

Cool Days Sale

- Uncle Eben"A man kin be good on Sunday,"

Bald Uncle Eben, " 'cause most folksIs stayln' home.. De other tix days Isde one* dat tests his Tegulaj rlfht-eouanesB."—Washington Star.

Farmer>$ Love LetterMy "Sweet Potato"—Do jon "car-

rot" all for me? My heart "l>eetg"for you. You are the "upple" nf myeye. If we "enntulope." "lettuce"marry. We will be n hnppy "pear."

•""•""•'" 11ik Sale Starts at 9 O'clock Friday Morning-August 19HERE ARE A FEW OF THE SPECIALS: YOU CAN JUDGE BY THESE HOW MUCH YOU CAN SAVE BY BUY-ING YOUR YARD AND DRY GOODS FROM US.

MADRASFor Boy's School Blouses

in RemnantyRegular 35c

Only 15cPRINTS

For Your Girls SchoolDresses

Regular 29c

)nly . . . . 23cSILK TISSUE GINGHAM

Real Class••i Regular 39c

On Sale . 28cORGANDY

In All ColorsRegular 39c

Now Only29c a Yard

FLAXTON PRINTSLatest Patterns

Regular 39c

Only. 31c40-Inch FRENCH VOILES

All ColorsRegular 29c

21c

RAYON DRESS GOODSAll Colors

Regular 49c

Now Only37cLatest Patterns

Big Flowered RAYONSRegular 65c

Only....49C

Big Lot Of •GINGHAMS and

CHAMBRAYFor Best Serviceable'

School Dresses.

Only 17c per yard

UNBLEACHED MUSLINGood Heavy Quality

1 v l C a yard

BLEACHED MUSLINExtra Fine

Regular 19c

12kOn Sale_ — f _

Yard

CHILDREN'S SOCKSRegular 19c

Only 12k

CHILDREN'S STOCKINGSAll Colors

Regular S9c

Only . . . . 19cCHILDREN'S VESTS

Regular 19c

Only 12kMen's plue WORK SHIRTS

Regular 65c

Only 49cBOY'S BLOUSES

Regular 59c

Only 39cBOYS' UNION SUITS

Sizes 2 to 12Regular 49c

O n l y . . . 33c

Only.

Boys' BalbrigganUNION SUITS

Regular 59c

39 c

Only

LADIES SILK HOSERegular 59c

35c

' Heavy GreyDOUBLE BLANKETS

Large1 SizeRegular $2.50

$1.892 in 1 ESMOND BLANKETS

Regular $3.50 •

e Finish That Stays NewHave Your Car Painted Now and Receive Our

Special Season PricesRotdtten Touring Coupe*

FORD *30.00 $40.00 $55.00 $65.00Chevrolet, Docjge, Essex, Durant,Star, Ov«rland I 40.00Buick 4, Cleveland, Nash 4, Stude-baker Light 6, Oldsmobile 4, Jewett 50.00Buick 6 Studebakeer 6, Chandler,Hudson, Moon, N&sh 6, Hupmobile,Auburn,Reo.Oakland, Jordan, Paige 55.00Cadillac, Harmon, Mercer, Peerless

5E.00

65.00

65.00

75.00

75.00f

85.00

Franklin, Stute, Packard 6 65.00Lincoln, Packard 8, Locomobile,

65.00

75.00

85.00

76.00 95.00

90.00 -00.00

95.00 110.00Pieree-Arrow .'. - 75.00

G. T. D. AUTO PAINTING721 St. George A venae

Ag«ntt for Mood and Diana CanTelephone 196

Woodbridge, N. J.

When You NeedFeed, Coal

andMASON MATERIALS

PHONE

Woodbridge

55Our Motto:QUALITY

HONEST WEIGHTREASONABLE PRICES

WOODBRIDGEFEED & COAL CO

Office and Warehouse

HMain St. Woodhrjdf*

• All Wool • ,LUMBER JACKETS

All SizesRegular $2.75

BOYS' KNEE PANTSRegular $1.00

79c

No other motor oil meets theford* car's two-fold lubrication{needs so completely and efficient-ly as does "Standard" Motor Oil

BOYS' CRASH PANTSRegular 59c

49c

a pair

Extra Good QualityBOYS' PANTSRegular $1.25

98c

MEN'S HANKIES

Reg, 10c Seller

During this

Sale only

4c

REMEMBER THE TIME AND PLACEStpre Open Only on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays

SALE STARTS 9 A. M. FRL MORNING, AM. 19MARKET BARGAIN STORE

Next Poor to Gross' Furniture Store

326 Pershing Ave., , Carteret. N. J.Cpr. FHcK Street

LADIES' HANKIES

Reg. 10c

On Sale Onry

2c

The smoothest motor operation is possible only with

"Standard " Motor Oil for Fords. It splashes freely

to every moving part, clings to beaming surfaces, does

a thorough job of lubrication. With "Standard" in

your crankcase you can actually feel the difference.

"STANDARD"

MOTOR OILThe Measure of Oil Value

u. >

STANDARD

can't expect theto win without

But youhorn* teameupport.

And—The more enthusiastic the

support— — the more effortthey- make to win.

BuW them a home. Thatwill ihow that you've putyour money on them andyour faith in them.

It's a safe bet; a bet withodd* in your favor.

Let ua act aa yonr book-maker.

WOODBRIDGELUMBER COMPANYBUILDING MATERIAL STOREWOODBRIDGE - NEW JERSEY

Owners of P. S. StockGet Privilege to Buy

Additional 6's at ParTreliminnry to the popular owner-

ship enmpaijjn which Public ServiceCorporation of New Jprwy will un-dertake starting October 1, directorsof the Corporation have authorisedthe isRiinnce of st leant 171,5(58 ad-(iitinnsl shares of six per cent, cum-ulative preferred stock. The newstock will he offered to holders ofthe present eight, seven and six perrent, preferred stocks now outstand-ing on the bftRis of one share ofnew preferred for each four shares

f any rlass of preferred stock heldas nf July 7, 1927. The stock notubscrihed for by present stockhold-

ers will he offered to the generalpublic under the popular ownershipcampaign.

Holders of outstanding preferredstork are given the privilege to Bub-scribe for the additional six per centsimulative preferred stock at $100per share, payable in full with sub-scription on or before September 1,1927, or in ten installments of |10per share monthly, the first pay-ment to be made with subscriptionon September 1, 1927. Interest atthe rate of six per cent, will becredited on installments if paidwhen due.

Subscriptions will be received forfull share* only, but arrangementswill be made with other stockhold-ers by T. W. Van Middleworth,treasurer for the acquisition of ad-ditional fractional rights in the eventthat stockholders entitled to sub-scribe for fractional shares wish toevereise their option. Such frac-tional rights may be assigned, »ndwhen combined with other fraction-al rights making whole shares, willbe accepted as subscriptions.

The additional six per cent, cum-ulative preferred stock, about to beoffered, has full voting power andis entitled to monthly dividends atthe rate of six per cent, annually,from Septemberl.

Pity Poor Goldfith,Give Them a Cattle

Senttle, Wflnh.—Poorswimming lailly, no debts, no John,clothes nor onto* to worry about—have their troubles Jimt the same, ac-cording to Charles M. Farrnr, presi-dent nf the Klnn County Humane noclety, who ftppoals In their behalf.

Having no lids to their eyes theycan't stand tbn constant glare In alldirections coming Into their aquarium,says Ferrer, who recommends a statelaw to protect the pet* by requiringkeepers to provide castles, waterplant* or wooilen floats for hidingplaces.

The u « of n sodn straw or syringeto blow air bubbles Into the waterregularly is another piece of legist*tlon favoring the flsbbowl captive*.

H E A T R E S i n M r y o*.A Mth«m battle" »r>ol<1 to •

r»ltof to tht mind If th*r«•nnninr? that a real btttlfefollow th* pattern It lay* downany degree of r«ap*rt.—WaStar.

STRANDTHIHTRI

Uft Her 38 Timei;Now He It Alone

New York.—William M. U Comtewag married to Mrs. Sadie M. LeCourts for nine year*. They left eachother 88 times during those ninestormy years,

Mr*. Sadie didn't even want anyalimony from Mm when she won adivorce.

Mrs. Rose Le Comte In the court-room was Just looking on.

An attorney called her as a witnessand she said she was married to Wil-liam legally, or ao she thought

And then she found In the back ofhit watch the picture of a little girl.

She accused him of being the fatherof the child, and therefore alreadymarried »nd she left

PERTH AM BOY Aw 1593Evening at 8 •.30. Matineea Wednesday, Thnrsday and Saturday at2:80. AH Rents Reserved, Box Office Open ^0 a, m. to 10 p, m.

Summer Prices: Mat. 50c .. 3Oc;' Eve. 76c, 50c ft 30c., Telephone Perth Amboy 1593

TODAY AND TOMORROW-

BIG DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

THE COOLER

TWO PERFECT PICTURES DAILY

Gloria Swanson in

—Mention this paper to advertisers.it help* you, it helps them, it helps*anr

Canal* ComparedThe Suez canal is the largest rannl

In the length of mllen. Us length liplnK 90 miles. The Panama ennal,however. Is the deepest and widestcanal with a depth of 4S feet ami nwidth of 300 feet.

THATCHERBOILERS-FURNACES-RANGESw*—^

Snug and WarmUf KUKE cock-robin who had to' put

bis head under his wing" to keepwarm, you can enjoy perfect comforton the coldest days by Installing aThatcher Round Boiler.

There is acor-roct boiler tomeet your in-dividual re»quirement.Your r dealerwill tell youthe size youneed.

Mill opu|wn for littictur« ittcrihing th<

llMa

THE THATCHER COMPANY173

TWur t>t«lw:u. I N e t

} dJJr.n

THE

Paulus DairyMain Office: 189-195 New St., New Brunswick, N. J.

Phone 2400 Established 1890

DONT BE MISLED—BE SURE IT IS PAULUS' MILK

U S E.AULUS'JOSITIVELYERFECTLYASTEURIZED

MILK

V RAB1N0WITZ HARDWARE"If It's Hardware, We Have It!"

Lino ofHARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, VAR-NISHES, HOUSE FUWHSHINOS.

iW BO0SBVBL/T A-VJ2. CARTERBT, N. J.

Chin— War Chariot*of BOO B. C. Fonhd

Washington.—While Chinese armiesare engaged in ctvll warfare with mod-era weapons, American archeotogistahave brought to llgtit two Chinesewar chariot*, two thousand Ove hun-dred years old.

The chariots, which were excavatedby Smithsonian Institution scientistsnear Cheng Chow, Honan province,Indicate that the ancient Chinese civ-ilization antedated the western civil-ization In the use of wheeled vehicles.The Chinese chariots, the archeolo-gists assert, date back to 500 B. O.,the latter part of the Chou dynasty,while the earliest wheeled vehiclesfound In the western section of theworld date back only to 400 B 0.

Ship Matches in Coffintfor Sake of Economy

London.—A striking example ofeconomy was disclosed at Londondock* when a. cargo of Swedish coffinswere unloaded.

Each coffin was packed with Swed-ish matches I

These coffins, which cost little moreto make than the ordinary packingctineg for matches, were afterwardbought by British undertakers whoprovide cheap funerals.

"The Love of Sonya"and

Charlie Chaplin in a Burlesque on"CARMEN"

7 Days Beginning Sunday,

The Mightiest of AD Sea Dramas

THE BLOOD SHIPWith Hobart Bosworth

„ Jacqueline Logan and Richard ArlenThe Screen Sensation of the Year

COMING—Sid Chaplin in "The Better Ole"

THE SUPREME COMMITMENT OF LIFECK—That's It. A short word, hut

oh, how much it means in tho successful oper-ation of a theatre. Time was when a theatreflashed on its screen offering and "let 'er ride."But not today.

A theatre must, of necessity, become apart of the community in which it operates.It must grow into a mighty institution. It mustconcern itself in the financial, social and com-mercial progres sof the community. To besure, it must help in its measure, to make thecommunity a happier place in which to live.

TOAY and TOMORROW31 ;1

Pola NegraIn a great emotional matter-piece

"Hotel Imperial"also

Buck Jonesi n

GOOD AS GOLDA thrilling western

Blood in Human BodyExperiments have shown that the

total blood volume of a series ofhealthy men averaged 4.9 per cent, orapproximately one-twentieth of thebody weight There were Individualvariations of from 4.2 per cent to 5.9per opnt.

Paulut' Pasteurized Meet Milk

Walker-Gordon Certified Milk

Wendmese Farms Raw Golden Guernsey M»k

Suydam'B and Rutger's Special Raw Tuberculin

Tested Milk

DISTRIBUTION COVERS

N.w Brunswick, Highland Park, South River, SayreviUe,

Parlin, South Amboy, Perth Amboy,

Woodbridge, Ford* and Mfchichen, N. J.

SHERIFFS SALEIN CHANCERY OF. NEW JERSEY

—Between Abraham U. Harr andSamuel Meiselman, Complainants,a,nd Flora Davis, et ala., Defend-ants. Fi Fa for sale of mortgagedpremises dated Jaly 22, 1927.By virtue of the Above stated writ

to me directed atfd delivered, I willexpose to sale at public vendue on

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBERSEVENTH, NINETEEN HUN-

DRED AND TWENTY-SEVENat two o'clock in the afternoon ofthe said day at the sheriff's officein the City of New Brunswick, N. J.:

All theBe pieces, tracts or parcelBof land situate, lying and being inthe Township of Woodbridge, Coun-ty of Middlesex and State of NewJersey, contained within the boundsof property described in a deed fromJohn Brennan and Elizabeth Bren-nan and Edwin G. Frazer to ThomasL. Shea, dated June 14th, 1921, andrecorded in the Middlesex CountyClerk's Office on the 21st day ofJune, 1921, in Liber 697, page 621,being more particularly described asfollows: Beginning at the southeastcorner of Parcel No. 17 as d«scribedin deed from Home Guardian Com-pany of New York to Bermar RealtyCorporation, dated February 3rd,1925, and running thence north 81degrees 16 min. 30 sec. west, 408.27feet to a poinlt- thence north 8 deg.43 min. 30 sec. east 100 feet; thencesouth 81 deg, 16 min. 30 sec. east300 feet; thence north 8 deg. 43 min.80 sec. east, 199.20 feet; thencenorth 70 deg. 39 min. 40 sec. «a&t,30 feet to a point, of tangency witha curve having a radius of 55 feet;thence along said curve, curving tothe southeast 114.22 feet to a pointof tangency; thence south 7 deg. 57min. 50 sec. west 260 feet to theplace of beginning; said line to bedistant 160* feet westerly at rightangles from the property line of theMiddlesex Finance Company. •

Decrees amounting to approxi-mately $5,800.00.

Together with all and singular,the rights, privileges, hereditamentsand appurtenances thereunto belong-ing or in anywise appertaining.

WILLIAM S. HANNAH,. Sheriff.

HENRY ST. C. LAVIN,$20.04. Solicitor.8-12, IV, 26; 9-2.

NEW JERSEY'S FINEST PLAY HOUSE

READE'S NEW

MAJESTICTHEATRE PERTH AMBOY

ONE OF NEW'JERSEY'S FINEST THEATRES

CONTINUOUS 1:30 to 11:00 P. M.

SUNDAY—CONTINUOUS ALL DAY ^

IVASTEDLIVES'^i i

TODAY and TOMORROW—

With an AH-Star Cast including

Elliot Dexter Edith Roberts andCullen Landis

also

FRED HUMESin

"Prowlers of the NightMONDAY and TUESDAY

"THE OVERLAND STAGE"With Ken Maynard and Kathleen Collins

SUNDAY—

"THEOEAT DECEPTION'.' <With Afleen PringJe and Bin Lyon

MONDAY, TUESDAY and Wednesday—

"WOMEN LOVE DIAMONDS"With Pauline Starke and Owen Moore

THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY—

Esther Ralston and Neil Hamilton inTEN MODERN COMMANDMENTS"

KETH-ALBEE VAUDEVILLEI - Every Day Except Sunday

"THE PERFECT SAP"Starring

BEN LYONalso

'QUARANTINED RIVALS'Starring

Robert AgnewWEDNESDAY and THURSDAY

Clara BowThe "IT" Girl in

your husband,t17, 1916, to the complainant, cov-

ering premises in the Township ofWoodbridge in tta County of Mid-dlesex, State of New Jersey, ImiiigLot 567 on a Map J>r Plan of "HomeCanienB" dated Srttember 24, 11)12,made by A. C. ElHot, Civil Engineer,and filed in the Office of the Clerkof Middlesex Courttjr, October- It,

on April 11)12; and you are made defendantbecauae you are the wife of the swid

Nagy, and joined ia the saidmortgage.

Dated July 29, 1927.MARTIN & X

Solicitors for Complainant,927 Prudential Building,

Newark, New Jersey.8-5, 12, 18, 25.

WOODBRIDGE

IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEYTo M»ri» Najry:—

By virtue of an order of th«Court of Chancery of New Jersey,ma*i« on July 27, 1027, in a causewherein John J. Neary is complain-ant, and you and others are defend-ants, you are required to appear andaiLSwer to the bill of the said com-plainant on or before the 28th dayof September, neMt, or sueh decreemay be made agajn»t you a* theOhauwllor eh»U think aquit*bl« and

NEW YORKCANDY KITCHEN

MamifttcturerB and Dealer* inStrictly Furo

CANDIES AND ICE CREAM7U Mum St., Woodbridgs. Tel. 4»

Painting - Paper HangingDecorating

V.S. HALLPrice* Very R*#ionabUGood Work CurtQtaedTel. 683-H Woodbridge

Rough House Rosiealso

"LADIES AT PLAY"Starring

DORIS KENYON

Crescent TheatrePERTH AMBOY, N. J.

GUSTAV BLAUM

CroceriM and Provisionst? |IAlrt 87.

TODAY and TOMORROW—PaUy Ruth Miller in "PAINTING THE TOWN"

Also Short Subject!

SUNDAY and MONDAY—Jack Perrin with "Starlight" and 'Vex" in

"THE LAFFIN' FOOL"

TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY—Paulin« Garoo in "EAGER LIPS"

alsoLillian Rich in "GOD'S GREAT WILDERNESS1'

THURSDAY—Cullen UndU and Kathryn McGuire in

••WITH DAVY CROCKETT AT THE

sAGl - * ; * ! • * * .

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, $1.80 P<r Y«»r

Published Every Frtdiy Hy

C. H. BYRNE, 4 3 Chrome A v e . , CARTERET, N. J.

T e l e p h o n e Cartfirct HI:? < f ^

C II B Y R N E Editor and M a n a g e r .Enured u second clan matter Jure 5, 1924, at Cartemt, N. <J.(

Post Office, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

Foreign Advertising RepresentativesNew Jersey Neighborhood Newspapers, Int.

A MATTER OF JUSTICE

Considerable criticism of the council, more or less just,has been aroused by the action of that body Monday nightin regard to the walks and curbs in Roosevelt avenue betweenMcKinley avenue and the borough line at Edwin street. Thesection involved is known to the police as a sort of "death

t. avenue", because it is one of the most dangerous points in theI borough. There have been numerous accidents there and in-f numerable narrow escapes.j!. Roosevelt avenue and Woodbridge avenue comprise onei of the busy highways from New York to the shore resorts.£ Each year the ferry traffic has become heavier. The drivers| go reasonably slow while within the conjested portions of thej? borough but once beyond the lines at the Economy Garage,| they step on it. Traveling in the opposite direction, that is re-| turning to New York, they do not slow down until they areI at the line of buildings ending with the synagpgue on the one£ side and the garage on the other.i The long block from Edwin street to this slowing down•• point ia very dangerous to pedestrians. In wet weather the

space that should be occupied by sidewalks is instead, full ofwater and mud. There is no lace for folks to walk except onthe street. There is continual confusion also among the driv-ers. The space adjoining the synagogue has been designatedas ft turning point for the Rahway-Carteret buses. Other carssometimes find it necessary to swing sharply to one side toclear the buses. Therfc is also more or less cross traffic andpulling in to the side at the garage.

All of these things make it the more dangerous for thepersons on foot who must walk in the street. Another thingto be considered is that it is always harder for a driver te geein wet weather, and it is also risky for drivers to apply brakessuddenly when pavements are wet. All these are elementsthat combine to make the block one of extreme danger.

It has been said that there is little foot traffic in the block«—little need of sidewalks. As a matter of fact there is agreat deal of traffic. When school opens the children fromEdwin street must use the block. The folks who go to the newcolored church use it. The Edwin street housewives use itwhen they enter the business section of the borough to shop.

The property owners who oppose the improvement objectto the cost because the walk will not benefit them. They havelittle occasion to walk there. Property owners should beshielded from unnecessary expense as much as possible but

,, there are times when other considerations outweigh expense.S| !The protection of human life, it ought to be admitted, is a

greater consideration than a sidewalk assessment.If the interests of the property owners must be consider-

ed—if it is clearyly an injustice to ask them to pave the side-walks in this dangerous block, then let the walks be paidfor out of the general appropriation. This sidewalk is a great-er and more urgent necessity than many other things that areadocated. Let our council protect the lives of our citizens.

AS 1 SI •BY HarveyRecently I knve heon devoting a gttod deal of

mrnput study I" the psychology of hus driverR. IthaR not bcpti n hit or miss affair with me. 1 havemade mnny tent? and observed Tnnny specimens. Ihiive studied tone Hml short bus drivers nnd driverson long and short routes. After ail of t'nis effort,made with a spirit of the utmost fairnew, I canbut come to one conclusion: As I see it, the bundriver has, by all odds (he (nost positive, affirmativecase of syperiority complex of any creature living.. .Thii does not apply to individual cases. It is generaland applies to the whole trade, profession or cuty of -bus driven.

Still I wanted to be right beyond' an; questionof doubt. I thought of taking it up with some great 'public character such as Herbert Hoover or WilfHave*. But they were too tnmy. I went all overthe ground again. I made comparisons, studyingtruck drivers, Sunday drlv«rV/$»M driven. Someof these showed up pretty well but they lack the

glittering ego of the meanest of the bus wranglers.One angle of the bus driver complex is his

utter conviction that he always has the right of way.I have ridden in several kinds, of vehicles in orderto demonstrate this to my satisfaction. I foundthat whether the bus approached on my right orleft, from above or below, the driver assumed thathe had the right of way and noted me out in orderto get ahead. There was only one instance whereit did not work out; that was the time I rode on asteam roller that was towing a concrete mixer. Onthat occasion the bus driver showed a little con-'sideration and courtesy. In fact he gave the steamroller and tow the right of way.

As for speed regulations and ethics against"hogging" the road and the provision requiring thatdrivers signal their intention to Btop their vehicles—these things simply do not exist for bus driver*.

High power salesmen, elastic credit terms andthe national sport of keeping up with the Jones,ire all contributing factors in cluttering up theroads with more and more pleasure cars. Manu-facturers and jobbers are swinging more and njoreto the motor truck as a means of conveying freight.The passing of the trolley car (both on account ofits unpopularity and the fact that it does not pay),is increasing the number of buses by taaj»' andbounds. As I see it the day is not far distant whentraffic regulations will have to be radically revised.When that day comes some effective rules govern-ing'biues should be put into force for the protec-tion of the motoring public and the bus passengersas well.

THE SPOKESMAN, a five cent weekly publish-ed Thursdays, at 475 Fifth Avenue, New York, isdescribed as the "Only Independent Irish Newspaperin America," Its platform consists of eight planksthe first of which is: "To Evidence the Irish Race'sLove of America, Attested in a Glorious Record ofValor, Sacrifice and Service." Twenty issues haveappeared. The paper promises to 'become a leaderof Irish-American thought in certain lines. It hasstarted a commendable campaign to discouragemovies that belittle the Irish character.

As I se> it, there is a growing tendency uponthe part of the picture producers to hold national-ities up to ridicule in so-called film comedies. Someoffensive line of conduct is fastened upon a givenrace as a characteristic of the nation. The spectatorsin the picture house are supposed to get a "kick"out of seeing the alleged characteristic pictured ingreat extravagance. One of the films attacked byThe Spokesman is "The Callahans and the Muttphys". In this picture fighting and drinkang arerepresented to be the chief pursuits of the Irish.

Th i picnic scene in which two Jrtsh womenCnnsnnn' :i kre; "f Iwer. The picnic ends in R free-for-all Infill- "Irish Hearts," another film attackedhy Tl" Simkcs-mnn is offensive because it pictureslaiim' ". IhiiffRpry nnd immodesty us Irish charac-

terislic«.ili' Spnkesmnn gets off the track a bit by

brand in); these pictures as anti-Irish. As I see it,the producers do not wish to belittle any race forthe. Bake of hurting the race. The whole object ofthe producers is money, box office returns. Butthis business of picturing a whole people as absurd inMi injustice that ought to be chetked. \_

If 1 ever go to the Legislature, which Godforbid, I fhall try to make some ntw laws regard-Ing doctors. We need, I think, legislation that willIncrease the probability of getting medical serviceat night. The first clause of this law should setforth that it would be mandatory for small towns toadopt the act at once and strictly enforce it for itit in '-mall townis that medical men are least dis-posed to venture forth late at night. In the bigcities where the competition is keener, the con-dition is not so acute.

Just how to fix up a law that would cover thesituation adequately might be * little difficult. Aplan thilt occurs to me is for each municipality toset aside a retainer in the annual budget. Thisretainer to be paid to a given doctor who in turnmust £ive bond that he will answer all sick callsthat come to him at night. If it could be arrangedt think the doctor receiving the retainer ought tobe an Irishman or, at least of Irish extraction. TheIrish, I believe, have more natural and warm urgeto give aid in time of trouble than almost any otherraee.

There are not many laws relating to doctorsexcept those that the doctors themselves have hada hard in making and such laws are mainly for thepriU'ition of the doctors and their interests. Myidea is a law that would help the interests of thelayman at night. The trouble with the laymen isthat they are moral cowards when it comes to op-posing professional men.' Three or four Fundament-alist ministers can get together and take away fromhundreds of laymen some such precious but innocentamusement as a ball game on Sunday and the lay-men will only complain and cuss a little when noneof the ministers is within ear shot. In fact very

few laymen have S»aete*ed the knack of cussingwith proper spirit and abandon in the presence ofministers.

tie it said in fairness that the doctors do notmeddle with people's amusements or probe intotheir private lives except for the purpose of giv-ing good advice regarding health, But the doctorsdo unquestionably have things pretty much theirown way in a great many respects: They fix theirBwn working hours and groups of them get togeth-er and fix a scale for their services, often jackingup the rate 100 per cent or more at a clip, If abuncli of day laborers got together and demanded afive per cent, increase they would find themselvesout of a job and probably in jail.

Still I have no complaint regarding the renu-meration the doctors receive. A6 I see it, they spendmore time in hard study and hard work in prepar-ing themseltes to enter their profession than do oth-er professional men. And once they have startedout to practice they keep up their studies in orderto keep abreast of the times. They are about the,best friends we have. But there ought to be area&mably sure way to get them out at night.When I get this proposed law of mine fixed^ up soas to make it workable I think I will call it themidnight alarm'act. •*•

lock Vendors AnActive Here Is Report

Chamber of Commerce Ready

To A d v i s e Prospect ive In-

vestors in This District

Due to the fact thnt from time toimp highly speculnlive stock is at-rmpted to be sold in this neetion by

rapid-fire salesmen representing wellorganized promotion schemes, and ashe public is more or less gullible

when'big profits are promised forsmajl investments, and therpforebuys such character of stock, the

erth Amboy Chamber of Commerceconsider* it a matter of duty tostress the necessity for fully inves-tigating the value of the stock be-fore actually making an investment.

The Chamber of Commerce is nowmaking a comprehensive investiga-tion of certain stocks which are be-ing offered for sale at the.presenttime and will be glad to assistanyone seeking information in thisregard as soon as it is in receipt ofauthentic information concerning thestocks in question.

The Chamber recommends thatpotential stock subscribers seek anopinion from their bankers beforeinvesting their money in any stocks/or bonds.

Oaulflad wttttnitent • wows mlnitmim

* LOST~

A PAYING POSITION OPEr7~to representatives of character. Tnkeorders, shoes-hosiery, direct to wearer. Good Income. PermanentWrite now. 0 . L. Gonzales, 71Fourth avenue, East Orange N I8-6; 12, 19, 26; 0-2, 9, 16, 26, Yo!

FOR RENTG A R A G E for rent at 44 Green

street, Woodbridge, N. J. 3.5»

ROOMS FOR RENT

THREE rooms and bath with all Im-provements at 18 Wheeler ave-

nue. Apply Joseph Woinak, Tele-phone Cartaret 1088.

FIVE ROOMSprovements,

and bath, all im-newly decorated,

beautiful location at 97 Green streetWoodbridge, rent reasonable, tele!phone 102-R. <

FOR SALE

ISELIN House for sale «• rent, 5rooms, all improvement*. Easy

terms. On Lincoln Highway. Applyto M Hallinan 6 Fitch s t t Cto M. Hallinan,teret.

y ppy6 Fitch street, Car-

•. 8-^2*

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORSSealed bids will be received at the

ouncil Chamber, Borough Hall,Carteret, New Jersey, on Tuesdayevening, September 6, 1927, at 8o'clock P. M., Daylight Saving Time,by the Mayor and Council of theBorough of Carteret, for the con-struction of concrete pavement onHigh Street, between WashingtonAvenjie and Romanowski Street, inthe Bordugh of Carteret, accordingto plans and specifications preparedby Oliver F. Mitchell, Borough Engi-neer. Plans and specifications andform of bid may be had at the of-fice of the Borough Engineer, Room401, RariUn Building, Perth Amboy,New Jersey, or from Harvey VO.Platt, Borough Clerk, on deposit ofFive (%h) Dollars.

Bids must be made out on thestandard proposal form in the man-ner designated therein and requiredby* the specifications, must be ac-companied by a statement from asurety company stating that theywUl furnish the contractor, should hebe successful, with a bond in theamount of one hundred per centumof the bid; also with a certified checkof not less than ten percentum ofthe amount bid, drawn to the orderof Charles A. .Brady, Borough Col-lector, and be delivered at the placeand hour above mentioned.

The Borough Council reserve,*the right to reject any or all bid*should they deem it for the best in-terests of the Borough of Carteretso to do.

By Order of the Mayor and Coun-fcil of the Borough of Carteret.

HARVEY VO. PLATT,8-19, 26. Borough Clerk.

FURNITURE, two parlor suites andcouch,( also sewing machine. 12

Freeman street, Woodbridge. Tile-phone 868-W. . 8.19

ONE heating plant complete, steamboiler, 5 radiators, piping and

valves and 1 Richardson and Boyn-ton combination coal and gas rangefor sale. Telephone Woodbridge594, Charles Farr, Linden avenue,Woodbridge, N. J.7-29 t.f.

DODGE, 1»22, screen delivery. Ex-cellent condition, Fred W. Huff,

74 Sewaren road. Tel. Wood-bridge 166.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALEHOUSE, corner Grove avenue and

Tisdale place, six large rooms, al}improvements, lot 60 x 132, garage.M. Logan, 109 Grove avenue, Wood-bridge. Tel. 547-W.

FIREWOOD for sale, pine or oak, inany lengths desired. Phone Wood-

bridge 193. John Thomas, Oaklandavenue, Sewaren.

WANTEDCLEAN RAGS wanted, itze of hand-

kerchief or larger, 6c a pound.Middlesex Press, 20 Green street,Woodbridge.

~ CARPENTERQDD JOBS done promptly. Joe D"r-

ish, 680 Watson avenue, Wood-bridge, N. J. . • •

1st—MORTGAGES—2ndConstruction Loans

Ready Money!! Quick' Action!1Call 216-iR Woodbridge or

344 New Brunswick

RADIO AND BATTERIESBatteries recharged and repairedAll makes of radio repaired and

brought up to dateAll work called for and deliver,.il

Drop a card toRadio and Battery S*rri««

2 Charles StrettCarteret, or caii Carteret 357-W ortf. Woodbridge 778-J

Self-Respect the "Pearl of Great Price" ThatAmerica Has to Offer

THE CONFERENCE CLOSES

The Geneva Conference is closed and it has closed withfriendly feeling between the conferees, on the surface at

| . least. The difficulties from the American standpoint have been$;' well summed up by Ambassador Gibson in his statement on| the difficulties of the Geneva conference, and he ..certainly! 'made a good case for himself and his'fellow Americans at

Geneva. Mr. Gibson points to the fact that while the Britishtalked about tutting down the size of guns and the size ofcruisers she was insistent on increasing the actual tonnage of

i 'the cruisers to be maintained by each nation.,t... The British idea is of course easy to grasp. They have!<naval bases in all parts of the world, m'any of them near Amer-I/tea. From these bases they can replenish 6,OOoUon cruisers andj|'keep them effective. But for Uncle Sam, who does not possessa these bases, (5,000-ton cruisers are inadequate, and if we wereI'to agree to build them no larger'our cruiser strength would be| infinitely less than that of the British even if we ha'd the sameI'j.number of ships of the class.

What Uncle Sam needs, if he is to keep any cruisers atis to have them of 10,000 tons burden with eight-inch guns

|To say 6,000-ton cruisers with six-inch guns ai*e defensive and10,000-ton cruisers with eight-inch guns are offensive war-

ships is simply subterfuge. Either type can be used offensively| lw defensively. If two squadrons of smaller cruisers should get | of great price."

igether, they would be quite as capable of destroying one an-other, or helpless merchant ships as the larger variety. The|xeal point is that 6,000-ton cruisers are all.right fbr John Bull

ti his supply stations all over the world, but not so goodUncle Sam.The, British assert this doesn't matter aince there is no

anger of our cruisers fighting the British cruisers anyhows war between the two nations is impossible. But this argu-ient is as good for one side as another. As Mr. Gibson wellid: '

"We find it difficult to reconcile the British conviction thatis already outlawed between us with their present un-

Hingness to recognize our right to build a limited number ofhe type of ships which we would desire, or with their- willing-16B& \o risk the success of this conference, because they fearle problematical possession by us during the life of this

of a Bmall number of eight-inch 8UUiCtuisers."i' '.e sound American has real reaffcm for BBtlsfaction trtt

Amefican'tlelegates stood-so firmly a^Geiwva.a^kis^ig American security and that they>w&rVsk Wundly

cxrted in this course by the American governn/jejit, ;.,

By WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE, Editor and Scholar.

HAT ia the difference between an American workman BCurrj-ing about the debris of an excavation, busy with a dozenkinds of t&sks, and an Egyptian laborer grubbing np debrisacross the ocean, watching his cursing foreman with aflakeifte

cunning, doing as little clawing in the earth as possible, filling as fewleaky baskets as possible, and groaning with ever; load deposited?

The western man has self-respect That is the "pearl of great price."Because men in America may be self-respecting, millions hare* come(locking to oar shores from all over the globe.

Our faults may be many. Granted 4hat our politics ma; be corrupt.Granted that much of our standardization is ugl;. Granted that indistributing the products oi 'commerce and industry we hava quicklyelevated millions into living standards which the; do not appreciateand cannot evaluate1 wisely. Granted that democracy makes a god ofthe mediocre. Granted all that—still America does allow evejy bjimanbeing who voyagea to our shores the right to look squarely info the faceof his peers, to live bis own life, and offers more than anywhere else-the opportunity to achieve and do.

America has the "peajl of great price"—flelf-respect--to, offer. Thatis ^hat is turning to our shores the millions from all over the world.That is why the; come trooping—read; to lay down their IJvea, theirtraditions, eager even to give over that dearest of all inheritanceer—theirown nationalities—that they ma; seek and find in America *tb* pearl

—Mention this paper to wSrntimn,It helps 7M. it h e l M then. Ityour p;

Your Ad in This PaperIs Read in the Home

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A Pittsburgh woman, visiting in Washington lost her $3,-) -diamond bracelet on the street when she atopfted to^pank.^ •bt-year-old boy. Another case where the pranking hurt

worse than it did the son.

Theof

the Standard Oi! press agent*!liter his firm «ot a good-

Why? Because the Home Town Paperis an institution—a regular visitor thatevery member of the family looks forand treads from front tq back. Wehave Cuts arid Copy to h«lp you buildyour.advertisement. '

Others at $27.50, $30, $35Fit Guaranteed 01 Money Refunded

All Wool SweatersWell knitted, extra tine all-wo^l quality

in all the newest and Hniiirtest spring and'summer patterns ami colors.Some in Jacquard Patterns.

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X X X SPECIALBegular $1.50 Check Golf Hose;A pair , 95cPAJAMASAt .'

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ter in pajamas that are fresh and newTheae pajamas, include a fine assortment

A Real Old FashionedTROUSER SALE

At Prices That Save You MoneyWORK PANTS, DRESS TROUSERS,GREY FLANNELS, BLUE MERGES,

WORSTED STRIPES

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itarsTran mboy Team In Hard Battle["THAT LITTLE CAME1' <.t.~.m-.rw.(»,».i. By B. Link

AtU I UJANT OOYOP H.00 BifUss

b is"To

CHAINSFofl. (AH A U T O .

"DOUJMEASY-

US HE MEANSD CHAINS.

CHR0NIGWINNER.

HEUUOV

BANDIT WAS WET,BUT KN£W HIS JOB

OH, »'wuE

IN LINE with the SPORTSMENBy the Sports Editoi ;

Pofice Take Victim BackHU Spar* Pant$.

McLOUGHLIN PUTSPEED IN TENNIS

Chicago.—On to* hc« of it thefact that H r«lD«d copiously the nlghlbefore Is co reason why Anton Schl«tler ihonld havo ridden hnm* in a parol wflftnn, yet Anton hlmnelf admlti

that the geqnencc Of facts which wonhim the free transportation was log!cal enough, albeit ontmgeoua.

Having called on a ynnng woman,be was putting Mi sedan in the gi-rage at hlR home, 1024 North Lowellavenne, when tbi bandit appeared.The handlt WM1 all wet, which, con-ttderlng the weattM, WHS excnimble.

"Get In the e s V he ordered, dis-playing a gun.' ',

'What hav« I dotiet" queried An-ton, "that you ihonld take me for aride!"

"I'm not taking yp» for a ride," hewas told; "yoTf>» taking me."

With a goh In his rihs, Antoasptashed ortr to 4800 Drummnndplace.

"My feet are wet," the robber toldhim, plaintively. "Bo are my pants'*

"Am I supposed to cry 7" qneriedAnton.

"That's np. to you," snld the gentle-man with the gun. "Glmrae yours."

Anton yielded trousers, shoes and*10. The robber i«ve him back hiswatch, then forettfjilm from the car.

"Here," said thVtandit. tossing hima laprobe, "cover' your legs beforesomebody takes ydB.for Ann Pennlng-ton."

Clad In laprobe, underwear and•ocks, Anton aroused a householder,who promptly tailed the Crngln po-Itce. The; took him uark t» ' spar*pants.

The Pint LanguageSome suppose Hebrew to hnve heen

spoken by Adam; others say that theHebrew, Chaldee and Arabic are onlydialects of the original tongue.

Tflden'8 Slyle Causes Manyto Credit Hint

Red Stars of Neighboring TownDimmed By Locals in Five Innings

J. P. Allen say« that there hatso much dtscusRlon about nig mil Til-den's employment of speed, a weaponhe appear* to hnv« been using un-stintedly in Europe, that an Impressiontin* grown np that Tllden Is respon-sible for putting the lightning stroke*In the gurnet That Invention cannotbe credited to the tall Pennsylvanlnn.

The amnilnK speed In l»*n ten-nis, speed whlrb has made It neces-sary to chnngp completely the methodof racket conat ruction, was entirelydu« to the ndvent of the Calftornlans.chiefly of Mnurke E. Mcl/ooghlln inthe ' national olinmplonnhlp tournn-ment on Hie turf of the Casino atNewport. IL I., In August, 1000.

•fhe entry lint wns as stale as dish-water, And as for Csllfornlnus,there was a little group af four plny-ers—Md-oiiRhUn, Thomas 0. Hundy,Melvelle & Long and Simpson Slnan-bnugh.

With a somewhat drab tourna-ment forecast, there was no end ofamazement when McLougblln letloose his devastating speed. New ashe was to grass, the red-hairedyouth, who was afterward! to winthe name of "the California Comet"In Australia, literally cut opponentsto pieces. Bight at the beginning therewere two elements that carried MeLoughlln along as If on the crest ofa tidal wave. First, his terrific serv-ice—a service which Tllden as ayouth watched and studied andwhich he now employs most ably—and the wonderful ability to get upto the net to smash the return.

Th» Cnrtrret 'All'-Starn trimmedthe Red, Star A. C. of Penh ATnWyto the tune of 6 to 2 at Rmdy'nOvpl Tuesflnr evening. The fanswere treated to an, txctiing tu»«kfor the five innings of play. FelixMack pitched good ball in the firstframe of his comeback, allowing buti two hits.

The Red Stars got off to a good

>n*t peg to iho initial nark while tothe air.

The ncore:CarWrct

Commercial HintBusiness failure la not always the

result of too.much overhead or under-head, bat often of excessive dunder-head. •

start. Rhuhack, the first man to faceMack, clouted a long triple to leftcenter, Hutfra got on through anerror, scoring the first man. Hutlrascored on another error by the Car-teret first base man. The Stars hadto be content with but two morehits and no score for the remainderof the game. Cu/ly Sullivan wentin to pitch the fifth frame and per-formed in good shape.

The locals lost no time in even-ing matters and by the end of thefirst the two teams were deadlock-ed. With Leshick on ,via a hit andKaracewski on through a walk, andtwo ouii, Chippy Cutter took theentire visiting Infield off their feetwh«n Leshick attempted a squeezeplay. Cutter placed a neat singleto right scoring the men on. Lesh-ick again tallied in the tljird on Cur-ly Sullivan'g single. A three-run ral-ly was staged by the locals in thefourth. Cutter again singled, D'Zu-rilla got on by an error of an at-tempted sacrifice hit and Jess Sulli-van scored the two with a doubleto left and then scored himself onFelix Mack's sacrifice fly.

Another sensational feature thatkept the fans content waB CharleyBrady's work behind the batters.Charley grabbed several difficult highpops in the foul territory, going in-to the stands for one, Earny !9ahomade a startling catch of Hilferty'sfast bouncing liner to third .and[threw the runner out with an amaz-

ib. r.Leshick, ss 2 1H. Sullivan, lb., p 8 0Karacewski, cf 3 1Sabo, 3b 3 rjCutter, rf., lb 8 1D'Zurilla, 2b 2 1J. Sullivan, !f. 2 1Br iy, c. a 0F. Mack, p l oMasculin, rf 0 0

21 fiR«4 Stan ab. r.Shuback, rf. 8 1Hutlra, 3b 8 1O'Berc, lb 2Hilferty, 2b 2Fimiani, 1Placiek, If 2Molly, cf 2Gadotnskl, c 2Kfsgard, p 2

h.1110t01000

6h.200001000

000

J9

Score by innings:19 2 3 2

Perth Amboy 200 00—2Carteret 201 30 «

SummaryTwo base hit, Jess Sullivan.Three base hit, Shuback.Sacrifice fly, F. Hack.Hit by pitchar, Fimiani.Bases on balls, off Kisgard 2.Struck out, by Mack 3; by H. Sul-

livan 2; by Kisgard 4.

Btad$ tor RotarieiThe mime "8t Outhberfs Beads"

WHS given to the single Joints of thearticulated stems of enrronltea. Thecentral perforation permitted them tobe Btrnnf? as bends, and they wereused for rosaries nnd associated withthe name of St. futhhert.

A New LuminaryNot since the early days of Vincent

Richards has the United States seen a ris-ing young tennis player with the latent prom-ise of John Doeg, the bronzed eighteen-year-old giant from Santa Monica, California. Doegseems to be of the stuff of which great cham-pions are made. He may be another LindleyMurray, a McLaughlin or even a Tilden be-fore two more seasons are past. At the cur-rent writing he stands out above the otheryoung players by a wide margin and there isreason to believe that when Tilden and John-ston slip from the picture he will be one ofthe mainstays on which the United States mustcount in Davis Cup competition.

George Lott and Cranston Holman areother young players of extraordinary ability,the former recently gaining a victory over La-coste, but neither possess the possibilities fordevelopment that are apparent in Doeg.

Speaking of tennis players and their de-velopment, Frank Hunter put about 25 percent, onto his game by means of his junketthrough Europe. Right now he is playing thebest game of his career and there are only afew players in the country capable of beat-ing him. This in spite of the fact he was rat-ed out of the first ten last year. He is makinga powerful bid for a position on the Davis Cupteam and may get it on his ability as a dou-bles player.

fighter but he was far too good for Maloneywhose chief fault is he can't "take it."

A few months ago Maloney and JackSharkey were rated on a par, Sharkey won in& battle to settle, supremacy but later hismarch upward was checked by Dempsey. ButSharkey is a comer in spite of his defeat andhe may yet scale the pugilistic heights andwear the crown now held by Gene Tunney. Onthe other hand Maloney's upward progressseems to be arrested; he has reached and pass-ed the high point in his career. From nowon it will be only a step or two down to thegrade of a preliminary boxer—a pork andbeaner. *

Into the DiscardRated far above his ability on the

strength of a victory over Jack Delaney, Bos-ton Jim Matyney just about finished himselfas a heavyweight attraction Monday night byallowing himself to be knocked cold by GeorgeGodfrey, WiW successor as negro heavy-weight king. Godfrey is no great shakeri as a

Next to cricket the Englishman likes hispolo best. For that reason it has been a thornin England's side to have the United Statesholding the polo championship these severalyears. On September 5 a team of picked Brit--ishers will ride out against the best we canproduce in an attempt to lift the cup. The in-vaders have a strong squad and the UnitedStates has made several changes in its old in-ternational team in an effort to bring it up to.the strength required for successful defenseof the cup.

-•An outstanding figure on the Americanteam is Devereux Milburn, who is 46 years ojdand has been rated as the best back in thegame for fifteen years or longer. He is a mvelous player whom age does hot seem to both-er. Tommy Hitchcock, although a youth ofonly twenty-seven, is the other internationalveteran on the team, both Malcolm Stevensonand Robert Strawbrldge having been demotedto make room for Cuest and Cowdin, the latter a thirty-oine year old player who only recently began to stand out above the pack.

A Sale With a Purpose-To Save You Big Money

. DRUMMER BOY

HOSE

Reg. 25c

All Sizes

On Sale Only

19c

During the ComingSCHOOL DAYS and COOL DAYS

MARKET BARGAIN STORENear Fiteh Street

326 Pershing Avenue Carteret, N. J.

CHILDREN'S

% SILK SOCKS

Boys and Girls

Regular 39c

On Sale Only

25c. pai

Announces to its many customers and friends that in order to enable them to save much money on their purchasesduring the coming school daya and for the coming colder seasons, big cuts have been made in all prices.

ALL PRICES SLASHED TO ENABLE OUR CUSTOMERS TO MAKE BIG SAVINGS ON ALL THEIR PURCHASES.NEW SCALE OF SALE PRICES GOES INTO EFFECT AT

Schooland

Cool Days Sale"la

Stanford High Jumper Drive Off Road to Fix?. Warns Urbanski

**"• Sale Starts at 9 O'clock Friday Morning-August 19HERE ARE A FEW OF THE SPECIALSi YOU CAN JUDGE BY THESE HOW MUCH YOU CAN SAVE BY BUY-ING YOUR YARD AND DRY GOODS FROM US.

Although be Looks more Ut9 ft.flier hfro, Bub King of Stanford uU

•J jTersltfj It) obowu trying tu gut uVfeT tli?(high Jiaip bar- at 6 feet '2 Inches. H«

U 1 this time. / ' :

Port Reading to PlayShore Team Sunday

Sunday the Port Heading A. C.will cross baU with the Stroii* Law-rence Harbor toam at th« l'ort IUad-ing oval, The Lttwrmice Hari>ornine has a winning streak uf 12

1 P«Jt team W»"t

ield Cluti and thecomWne ha«

Amboy Safety Head Urges Mo-torist to Safeguard Selves

A« Well As Others

One form of road-hogging that iscoming in for considerable condem-nation at the present time is that ofutilizing the highway as a repair shop 'when something goes wrong with thecar. It is a type of eelfuhness whichpresents a very definite hazard andis one that every motorigt shouldmake an especial effort to avoid,saya Dr. Matthew Urbanski, Direc-tor of Public Safety of the City ofPerth Amboy, and a member of theRaritan Automobile Club.

"With millions of motorists on theroad this summer, it is obvious thatconverting the highway into a tem-porary repair shop in ease any minortrouble develops In Ihe ear is ft haz-ardous prtKiti.ce," says Dr. Urban-tiki. "The greater volume of traffic,together with the fact! that manys t e s rained the speed Broit for au-tomo.lii.lcs, makfip .this 4ai»Ber ,»venjjreater than in the paek,,' ' ,i

"M"»y motorists, however, appar-ently are oblivious of this danger.When a tire goes flat, instead of pull-Ing entirely off the road they arecontent to atop on bhe highway andmake the change. In the case of acurbiinHur adjustment or other minorrepair to the «ngine this is dangersoua enougl», Wit when fi tire ii to hichanged it is doubly hazardous be-cauae the operation requires con-siderable moving around und the useoi several extra . devices auch as aJaoK and • lag' wrenflh. Bv«n. If*thecar itself ia over on the edge of

McFarland Likes RacesPacky McFarland, once the light-

weight boxing Idol of the Chicagostockya^rds district, la trying to provethat priie ring lieroe* can be BUC-cessful horse owners. Young Cor-bett, Terry McGovern, Johnny Dun-dee aDd others tried It, but wound upowing themselves money. Packy iscampaigning ruces under the name ofthe Jollet Stables. One of his thor-oughbreds Is Captain Dolan. KentuckyDerby candidate In 1925. McFarlandquit the ring years ago with a neatfortune and bus since added to It.

MADRASFor Boy's School Blouses

in Remnants

Only . . . .

Regular 35c

15c

Poor Man's SportTrack athletics, especially distance

running, Is the poor man's sport. Heneeds only his shoes, tils cheap run-ning suit, and a place to stretch aleg. Most distance men have no train-era, and must prepare themselves un-til they can make a reputation. Theyusually work hard all day, either Inshops or at desks, and must perforceuse their leisure hours for traluing.—Bertbert Heed In the Outlook.

Flights of Fancy^ of tyipcy axe guud for the

soul If ,Jhey ap^.not nonstopHudson Star.,

motorist will be working out in theline of travel.

"With traffic bearing down uponhim Horn both directions, naturallyhis position is dangerous to himselfand tS other motorists.

"Many accidents caused by thispractice have been reported to theAme'rU.'ah Automobile Associationwith which this club is affiliated, andthese reports are responsible for theterse warning issued by the A. A. A.

r' 'Drive the cw entirely off theroad before *tt*mptinj( tp ro*U sny

PRINTSFor Your Gir\s School

DressesRegular 29c

>nly . . . . 23c' SILK TISSUE GINGHAM

Real 0assRegular 39c

On Sale . 28cORGANDY

In All ColorsRegular 39c

Now Only Yard

FLAXTON PRINTSL PM*>n.

O n l y . . . .

Latest Pgul«fr

31C40-Inch FRENCH VOILES

All Colors

Regular 29^

Only.... 2 1

RAYON DRESS GOODSAll Colors

Regular 49c

Now Only37cLatest Patterns

Big Flowered RAYONSRegular 65c

Only

Big Lot OfGINGHAMS and

CHAMBRAYFor Best Serviceable

School Dresses

Only 17c per yard

UNBLEACHED MUSLINGood Heavy Quality

10c a yard

BLEACHED MUSLINExtra Fine

Regular 19c

12kOn Sale Yard

Only

CHILDREN'S SOCKS'•' Regular 19c

12k. ' * : > , •

CHILDREN'S STOCKINGSAll Colors

Regular 29c

Only.... 1 9 C

Only

CHILDREN'S VESTSRegular 19c

12kMen's Blue WORK SHIRTS

Regular 65c

Only . . . . 49cBOY'S BLOUSES

Regular 59c

Only 39cBOYS' UNION SUITS

Sizes 2 to 12Regular 49c

O n l y . . , . 33 cBoys' BalbrigKanUNION SUITS

Regular 69c

Only. 39c

Onjy

LADIES SILK HOSERegular 59c

35c

Heavy GreyDOUBLE BLANKETS

Large SizeRegular $2.50

$1.892 in 1 ESMOND BLANKETS

Regular $3.50

$2.79All Wool

LUMBER JACKETSAll Sizes

Regular 52.75

BOYS' KNEE PANTSRegular $1.00

79cBOYS' CRASH PANTS

Regular 59c

49c

a pair

Extra Good QualityBOYS' PANTSRegular $1.25

98c

MEN'S HANKIES

Keg. 10c Seller

Duriny this

Sale only

4c each

REMEMBER THE TIME AND PLACEStore Open Onjly on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays

SALE STARTS 9 A. ML FR1. MORNING, AUG. 1 9MARKET BARGAIN STORE

Next Door tu Gross' Furniture Store

326 Pershing Ave., Carteret, N. J.C w * F i t c h . S t r e e t • . . . , „ . . . .

LADIES' HANKIES

Reg. 10c

On Sale Only

2c each

CARTERET PRESS- , . • * { >

.S

• • ' . ' • ' •

r'••K »'•

/

" ' * *

* :J •<: •

1 'AVI f f 3 J^'Ma.^ r.^ - v •

••W

; , U , ' * - • • ; • •• • , . . • • • * ! ,

'.• jt•V- ';:

(";.'•'""

IN v ':' '

• . . , ' , • • . i '

GENERAL NEWS» • • • ' • / '

§:•

•t?

* , . , »

SPORTSMICS

•-..>

••*• ' •• y>;v

,> ;^"

I r -i-

* ,

^ ^•*. •-' • " '

! * i \

yumi

• • . ' o . ' * . • • • * . - •

GIRCUIiATI • • \ 1 '

I " - - •i .i*'

.1-

ADVERTISING«'•''.•':• -Ji!'1,.

i * v

. I f- '•'

• • * • • ' • • • »

,. i / , .

•>.^i.

*'(, , cS-

,-:,. V

•:...»., .v <M->V,

THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPEN

•l 1— * » • pr ^r -v ^ ^r T * 1 • V I ^ B a • •

To HE, I HflTE t oS E P Yoo WORK3 0 HARD. kEt MHEt-p V<*

Pflffli AMBOY CUYOFtETTER VALUES

eyno'Department Store Of Dependable Merchandise

PERTH AMBOYn

CQ.rt.Y.

Unproductive AreaThe area In the United States where

trees once grew but whore nothingnow grows Is* as lnrge KS the statesof New York, Pennsylvnnla, New Jer-sey, Delaware and Maryland com-bined. It IB larger than the combinedforest lands of Germany, Helghim.Denmark, Holland, France, Switzer-land, Spain and Portugal.

PotUhing Surface*"Grinding" Is <a general term. "Lnp-

plng*' le a method of grinding Inte-rior and exterior mrfneej tn a latheby friction of lead cylinders^- clumpssupplied with oil and a fine abrasivepowder. The method U used whereIt In nerewary to obtain an exceed-ingly mnuotli and polished surface, asIn the manufacture of ordnance.

A M B O Y C O T T O N S T O R EI k Best and Most Popular Store

in Town for Shoppers201 Smith St. Perth Amboy, N. J. 97-105 Smith St. Perth Amboy

206 SMITH STREET

j THE PERTH AMBOY Ij . GAS LIGHT COMPANY j

I

II

jiii

i

B Haatbn and Cooking AppUanct

I tbmA Automatic and Storaf Watay Haalara

Raritan Auto Chib IsPraised for HelpingNap Out Tour Routes

. Interest in the development of theRaritan Automobile Club is becom-ng more and more manifest as itsmrpose becomes more widely known.

The demand for special informa-tion covering tourist trips during' theummer vacation period has grown:o considerable proportions.

One party of four youngr ladieswas supplied with detailed maps

N«w Pfoc—• G M RangM

Con-Den-RH Radiant Logi

I Telephone 143 Perth Amboy

logging every mile of a trip to thePacific coast and return via differentroutes going and coming. At notime in their journey of nearly 8,000miles will they be out of touch ofA, A. A. clubs.

Another family ' was routedthrough to Chicago, thence via Oma-ha and Kansas City to San Antonio,Texas, returning through the South-em States via Washington home toRed Bank.

Concrete evidence of the esteemin which this practical service isheld by the leading citizens of theRarrtan Bay District is contained inthe following letter:"William C. Wilson , President,

Middlesex County's "BIG STORE'"Quality and Tnw Worth"

The above heading is our guarantee of fairtreatment, quality and value—it is your assur-

( ance that what you buy here will satisfy you—

We make no misleading statements to per-suade you to trade with us.

Smokeless Soft CoalIs Good Fuel „We Have Ity . A Call 13 1 3 Perth Amboy

RYMSHA & CO., Inc.9|0 State St ' MAURER.N.J.

• i s

i

"Raritan Automobile Club,"291 High Street,"Perth Amboy, N. J.

"My Dear Mr, Wilson:'Permit me to thank you for the

prompt and efficient service yourclub rendered me this week,

"I had occasion to require infor-mation regarding an automobiletrip through Virginia and much \pmy delight I received a map Bhow-ing in detajl all detours and suggest-ing alternate trips going and return-ing, together with complete hotel in-formation.

"I feel that you rendered me asplendid service in this respect andthat I have been amply repaid formy membership fee. I believe thatyour club is a decided asset to theRaritan Bay District.

"Yours very truly,

"(Signed)"THOMAS L. HAMI90N.

Mr. Hanson is one of th/leadingmembers of the bar of /Middlesex

ounty, a member of thy State Leg-slature and the Republican leader>f the State Assembly/at Trenton.

Mr. I. Knowttt By Thornton risKerf"*tfj+m*rt >~4t> <3tr V SotAirtatir *+rS+( compto'Ptta?5 J 7 V « I K K » N TO 1MB

AMOwa.WkSHY c a n t *

Modern and AntiqueF U R N I T U R E

Repaired, RefinUhyl and UphoUtered

Slip Covers Made to OrderFremj |20 Up

Box SpringJ and MattrettetMade Ir Remade

Carpenter Work, Screens,Garages and Porches

Painting and Paper Hanging

CHARLES SERMAYAN1 Fifth Avenue, AvenelTel. Woodbridge 1217

MACHINE SHOPA. H. BOWER MACHINE SHOP

No job too large or too smallFreeman Street, at P. R. R.

Tel. Woodbridge S65WOODBRIDGE, N. J. EST. 1915

Babies Love ItFor all stomach and intestinaltroubles and*disturbance* dueto teething, there is nothingbetter than a safe Infanta1 andChildren's Laxative.

Exprw "Bleuing"The word '.'RHmi-a," Is from th*

Hebrew "liprunih," meaning "bless-ing." It occurs In II Chronicles, 22:M, and In I Chronicles, \?:,\,

MRS. WINSLOWSSYRUP

here's it travel tip — you

auto stop at

AfD£#S PHONE 265i

r lS supply "hop willg i v e you tome

(r!«ndly advice »• towhat extra tupplie* and•cceMoriei to t a k ealong. _ Improve yourtrip by lutening to ouradviee.

"S«yd«r's Is always a

good auto suggestion"

SNYDER'SGARAGE

AUTO SUNDRIESREPAIRSAND REPAIRS

3 5 4 AMBOY AVE.

A New Gag,By Charte* SushnxVMICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL

VJeu, "TWCT VJW GOOD

ADVICE, aur wvw SHOULDABE VOUSfTTUJft

HOW OID -owsecows aer w -wop.

•Please mention this paper whe»

purchasing from our advertisers.—.

—Mention this paper to advertisers—.'

For Cats and Wound!Prevent infection [ Treatevery cut, wound orscratch with this power-ful non-poisonous anti-septic. Zonite actuallykills germs. Helps toheal, too.

THE FEATHERHEADSByfMxffM

HSMBlMAM ./• WOO U. EMTOV— sons

Tbok UPUMIQS

Well, Anyway, They're Good Picture*DOES

MIND IF IA PEEK AT TWBSE / V

FUlENOLVIMTBSfcSTtt)

Eagle Brand has raised morehealthy babies than allother Infant food* combined.

llftANDCONl>KNStLI MILK

fr A. HIRNERFuural Birvclor aadl <Evpart Embalmcr ti it

The only fully equipped and up-fe 'date Undertaking BHtabliahnant itown. ' -

PAGE EIGHT

f'T ^GUST 19, 1927

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORSSi-nlorl link will lip rpceived nt t!io

{'miiwil I'lKimlur, [lornujfh Hull,CnrU'rcl , New J e r s e y , on TiiPsdiiy<>vpninir. Si'pliTiiber (1, 1927, at K<I'I l.uk I' M., Daylight Saving Tim<\liy HIP Mnyivr and Council of thoHonnijjh "f I'arternt, for thp runulriKiimi (if rnncrete pavement »nKmerson Street, between Washing-ton Avenup nnd Noe'g Creek, in theHortnijrri of (arteret, according toplntiB nn<l_ specifications preparpcl byOliver K" Mitchell, Borough Engi-nppr. PlnnH and specification!* andform of hid may he had at the of-(irp of tho liornuirh Engineer, Room401, Raritnti Buildinjf, Perth Amhoy,NPW Jersey, or from Harv%y VO.Platt, Borough Clerk, on deposit ofFive ($S) Dollars.

Bids mint be made out on thentandard proposal form in the man-ner designated therein and requiredt>y the specifications, must be ac-companied by a statement from asurety company stating that they•will furniflh the contractor, should hebe successful, with a bond in theamount of one hundred per centumof the bid; also with a certified checkof not less than ten percentum ofthe amount bid, drawn to the orderof Charles A. Brady, Borough Col-lector, and be delivered at the placeand hour above mentioned.

The Borough Council reserves

the right to reject any or all bidsshould they deem it for the heat intiTpilt of thp Borough of C-nrteret« o l i i d o ,

Hy Older of the Mayor nnd Coun-cil of ihr Borough of CartPret.

HARVEY VO. PLATT,K Id, 2fi. . Borough Clerk.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORSSealed bi(Ji,will,o<i cawived nt the

Council Chamber,' ' BoWM»« Hall,'Oarteret, New Jersey, on Tuesday 'evening, September 0, 1927, at 81

o'clock P. J*.rD«j"light Saving Time,*by the Mayor and Council of theBorough of Carteret, for the con-struction of sidewalks and curbs onboth sides of Longfellow Street, be-tween Washington Avenue andBlanchard Street, in the Borough ofCarteret, according to plans and spe-cifications prepared by Oliver F.Mitchell, Borough Engineer. Plansand specification* and form of bidmay be had at ^he office of the Bor-ough E/igineer, Room 401, RaritanBuilding, Perth Amhoy, New Jersey,or from Harvey VO. Platt, BoroughClerk, on deposit of Five ($5) Dol-lars.

Bids must be made out on thestandard proposal form in the man-'ner designated therein and requiredby the specifications, must be ac-companied by a statement from asurety company stating that they

AUGUST

S A L ESILK DRESSES

Regular $10, $12.75 and $15 Grade

At ,

Other Silk DreMes at $1.00 and up

A Few Left—New Style Two-Piece Suit*

Striped Jacket* and White Skirt* at $2.99

Full Fashioned Hosiery, high grade, 85c a pair

Spring Coat*, to cloae out stock, $4.95

Sold formerly at $10, $12 and $15

CTOLLMAN'C^ STYLE SHOPPE ^

75

138 Main St:Open Evening*

Rahway, N. J.

ANDERSON'S MARKETNew Brunswick Ave. Fords, N. J.

Telephone Perth Amhoy 3185

FREE-DELIVERY

SPECIAL SALE FORFRIDAY - SATURDAY - MONDAY

FRESHPORKLOINSNot Frozen

WHOLEOR

HALFAND

SMALLPORK

29cA POUND

Fresh Cali Hams I f t p

S w i f t ' s Premium orA r m o u r Star H a mWhole or half O l ) .lb OZC

Prime Rib Roast O f sThe best, lb. . . LtUC

Lard Snow-White 1 [ JCompound, lb. . I O C

it*.1!1'"".... 4 9 cPotatoes Q Q «15 J b s for . . . . OV C

f

Chuck Roast, the besj; 18cFresh Chopped "| f j —Meat IOC

fresh Beef Liver 1 r*1 ib I O C

Fresh Selected 38c a Dozen

Roasting Lamblb . . 29c Salt Pork

Fat 18c\

Chicken Feed, all kinds5 pounds for 19c

Swift's Combination1 large Washing PowderI large Nat-Flake FREE3 cans of Cleanser 1 17 * D3 cakes o/ Soap 1 Trying r a n1 Hand Soap

99c

Stores and Officer for. RentFour desirable stores and live offices for rent

in New State Theatre building, Main street,

Woodbridge. Heat furnished.

Many Attend Card PartyOf Women'* Democratic Club

A l*r|rr crowd attended tho cardparty held last nisrlil in Urn HouseNo. 2 under the nu*plee« of tho Wo-msn's Demwratir Club. Thert wereseveral tnhlpa in piny nrul. manyprizes were awarded to the winners.The party wan held under the newplan whereby someone of the districtleaders of the Democratic partyis chairman for the evening. Mrs.F. X, Keppler was chairman lastnight.

Leader Joseph A. Hermann andseveral other prominent DemocratsIwere. present at the party.

Carteret Man FinedAlso Injured Hand

Peter Micklo, of oosevelt avenue;was fined $10 in police court last

ht on a charge of being drunk anddisorderly. Mieklo had an injured•land which, he said, was the resultof driving his fist through a window.Stanley Darden, charged with takingcoal from cars standing on tracksnear the plants, was dismissed.

SPARK PLUG ISTROUBLEMAKER

They Are So Well Con-structed They Require

Little Attention.

The lowly spark plug, seeminglysuch an Innocent part of your car'smechanism, maj sometimes be a trou-ble maker, even though spark plugsare so well constructed nowadays thatthey require little or no attention Inthousands of miles of driving.

Because of their efficiency, sparkplugs are not likely to be suspectedat first, when something goes wrongwith the engine.

How a Spark Plug Worki.

The function of &• spark plug Issimply to Introduce Into the combus-tion chamber of the cylinder two wireswith a gap between them, acrosswhlc,h gap an electrical spark Jumps.This spark Ignites the gas mixture Inthe cylinder to furnish the drivingpower of the car. If the current de-livered to tlie spark ping does nothave high enough voltage, of courseno spark will Jump across the gap ofthe two wires, and the mixture willnot be lgnnlted.

H the plug itself Is defective, thisIs easily detected. All that Is neces-sary Is to lay the plug, with cable at-tached, on the cylinder head, and tostart the engine. If a spark Is seenJumping the gap between the wires,the plug Is functioning, provided thespark Is of sufficient Intensity.

In this connection It Is well to knowhow to set the gap between the wires..According to usual practice, this gapIs .025 to ,03 Inches wide, but thissometimes varies with the kind ofengine. To set the gap, a.thicknessgauge may be used, but If not avail-able, a worn dime or a pasteboardcard is used. Find the gap measure-ment that gives best results and setthe gap to that distance.

Attacking Carbon.

Carbon often accumulates on plugs,causing a short circuit, which meansthat the current does not Jump thegap and "that no spark results. Toremove carbon, take out the plug andsoak It In gasoline for an hour andthen scrape off the carbon.

Be sure, that spark plugs arescrewed tightly Intu the cylinder boles—otherwise, the plugs will becameoverheated because of the "compres-sion leak" around them. A worn gas-ket may also cause such a leak, evenit tlie plugs are screwed down tightly.To find out If there Is leakage aroundthe plug, squirt some oil around theJoint, and if bubbles appear when theengine is running, the plug Ik leakingcompression.

Cracks In the porcelain Insulationof a plug will m«ke it refuse to Ureut the proper point. To discover acrocked plug, run the «nglue In a darkgarage, and the cracked place will ap-pear as a luminous line on the plug.

Mad Ddg Bites TwoIn Rampage at Avenel

Report This Morning ConfirmsHealth Inspector's Judg-ment; Start Treatment

Another positive case of rabieswas confirmed'this morning in n rp-port received from on Elizaibeth lab-oratory by Health Inspector PeterPeterson who submitted for analysisthe head of a dog that ran amuck inAvenel on W.ednpsday, bit twelve-year-old Sylvia Clancy of Avene!street and scratched its mistress,Mrs. Elizabeth.Eiii-nhfiucr. Both theClancy girl and Mrs. Eisenhauer arebeing given the Pa.steur treatment.

The dor went on a rampage Wed-nesday noon, biting Miss Clancy andtrying to bite two workmen engagedin laying sidewalks, The njen suc-ceeded in beating the dog off withshovels and it made for the yard ofJoseph Kayser, there to bite two ofthe latter's pedigreed poodles. Chasedaway the animal made for the woodswhere it tore viciously at the barkof trees.

Peterson was notified and succeed-ed in locating the dog shortly after-ward. He found the dog wearing amuzzle but the restraining device had•been torn loose in the animal's fren-zied struggles. At first Mrs. Eisen-bauer refused to consent to thedeath of her dog but on the adviceof a veterinarian she was persuadedto accept Peterson's edict. The Kay-ser family is endeavoring to savetheir animals by having them giventhe Pasteur treatment.

Cultivate SinceritySincerity la like (raveling In a plain

beaten road, whleli commonly bringsa man sooner to Ms journey's endthan bywajrs in which men often losethemselves.—Tlllnlsmi

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORSScnled hids will he received at the

rpunc-il Chamber. Boronffh Hull,Oarteret, New Jerney, on Tuojidnyevening, September 6, 1027, nt 8o'clock P. M., Daylight SavingTime, by the Mayor and Council ofthe Borough of Carteret, for theconstruction of a arwtjr system to heknown an "The East Rahwny Sew-er," in the Rorough of Carteret, ac-cording to plans and specificationsprepared by Oliver F. Mitchell, Bor-ough Engineer, Plans nnd specifi-cations and form of bid may be hadat the office of the Rorough Engineer,Room 401, Raritan Building, PerthAmboy, N. J., or from Hnrvey VO.Platt, Borough Clerk, on deposit ofTen (|10) Hollars.

Bids must be made out on the[standard proposal form in the man-ner designated therein and requiredby the specifications, must be en-closed in sealed envelopes, must beaccompanied by a certificate from a

. surety company authorized to dobusiness in this State stating thatthey will furnish the contractor,should he be successful, with a bondin the amount of one hundred percentum of the bid; also with a cer-tified check of not less than ten percentum of the amount of the bid,said check shall not be less than $500nor more than $20,000, drawn to

the order of Charles A. Brady, Bor-ough Collector, nnd be delivered atthe place, and hour above mention-ed.

Tho Borough Council -»serveR theright to reject any or all bids shouldthey deem it for the best interests

of th* Borough of Cwteret ,,,, ,do.

By Order of the Mayor ami r,Mlcil of the Borough of Carteret

Dated August 1, 1927HARVEY VO. PLATT

Borough n',.r).

DON'T FORGETUS

When you need any*thing in the line ofneat and attractivePrinting.

AugustFurniture Sale

THREE-PIECE

SUN PARLOR SUITESRegular $60.00 Seller

Reduced to00

AD Regular Parlor Suites ReducedIn Like Proportion

FREE A Bridge LampGiven Free With Each

Parlor Suite

One Week Only—BeginningSATURDAY, AUGUST 20

FREEMany Bargains In All Lines of Furniture

During This Sale

B. KAHN.•* Grand Rapids Furniture

Atlantic St. and Washington Ave. Carteret, N. J.

$i$i$i$i$i$r$i$i$s!$l$i$i$i$isi$i$i$

I HARRIS DEFT STORE I£ — $

SUCCESSORS TO ENGLEMAN'S *2A$ 128 Main Street, Rahway, N. J. TeL 545 $

"Rahway's Most Popular Store"

Bureau Discovers Planto Eliminate Car Noises

From experiments with the aouud-proofing qualities of partitions, to theHeld of automobile construction, wouldMem at first thought a far cry. Nev-ertheless, Investigations at the UnitedStates bureau of stuuilurds huve de-veloped a fact which may prove oftremendous interest to automobllists,and In particular to that large propor-tion of autouiobtltsts who now ride IDolosed cars.

The greater extent to which motoruid chassis oolsivs are observablewithin closed cars of certain makes,iften referred to us the "soundingtoard effect," seems to Have a very;«Hnlte explanation.

It was found nt the bureau that pur-itlona made with wood fruiuiug andovered with lath and plaster trans-

mit less than one-hundredtu a* -muchsound as those of tath ami plaster oniiietul framing. The motorist's deduc-•ttuu from tills Is <iult« obvious.

Tlie more rigid the connection' be-tween (lie chassis and the materialwhich for DIB the Interior QIIIMII of tli»cur the more easily sound la trans-mitted. 7

—Mention this paper to advertisers—

will furnish the contractor, should liebe successful, with a bond in tin'

i amount of one hundred per centum• of the hid; alao with a certified chuckof apt leaa than ten percentum ofthe amount bid, drawn to the urrierof Charles A. 5rui'y> Boruugh Co|-

i lector, and be delivered at the placeand hour above mentioned.

* The Borough , Council reservesth« right to reject any or all bidsshould they de,em it for the bust in-terests of the Borough pf Oartuiet

; U, Marcus, phone W«

I

$$

SALE STARTS

THURSDAY,

AUGUST 18.

DOORS' WILL

BE OPENED

AT 9 O'CLOCK

WILL CONTINUE

FOR 10 DAYS

HARDINGUNBLEACHED

MUSLIN3ein. wide

10yds. (or $1.00I LARGESUITCASES

$1.00

The Harris Store Offers ItsFirst Sensational

$ DOLLAR SALE $BOY'S SMART

WASH SUITS

Reg. Price $2.00

While They Last

$1.00

FINE QUALITY

CRINKLED

BED SPREADS

Full Size

Reg. Price $1.98

While They Last

$1.00

LADIES' FULLFASHIONEDPURE SILKHOSIERYAll Colors

Our Orient BrandReg. Price $1.59While They Last

$1.00

The Harris'Store WillShow The

$

Honest

HEAVY OUTINGFLANNEL

10 yds, for $1.00ANY LADIES' HAT

IN STOCK

$1.00'

$$

it—<

$

$

$

5

Boy's White and ColoredSPORT BLOUSES

Reg. price $1.00 ea.

2 (or $1.00LENOX PILLOWCASES

34x46 Keg. 39c

4 for $1.00Ladies' Silk Brocaded

CORSETS

Reg. $1.50

Men's All-Silk TIES

79c 2 for $1.00Ladies' PORCH DRESSES

L tor Jpl.UU$i.oo

Ladies' Hand EmbroideredCREPE GOWNS

i Children's High GradeCREEPERS

i'g. $1.00 2 for $1.00$$

Full SizeMATTRESS COVER?

Fine Quality BEDSHEETS81x90

Reg. $1.39. $1.00Infants' Wool SWEATERS

Reg. $1.98 $1.1)1)

Children Panty DRESSES

Reg. $1.98 <pl.UU

Children's FancyRAYON SOX

Reg. 59c. 3 pr. for «pl.UU

Ladies' Silk and RayonENVELOPE CHEMISE

Reg. $1.50

All Our Pretty and Sea-sonable VOILES

Reg. 49c yd.

4 yds. for $1.00Potted Swiss Ruffled

CURTAINS

$Men's Fancy SOX

Reg. 39c 4 for $1.00Extra Large

TURKISH TOWELS

Reg. 59c 3 for $1.00Children's Khaki

KNICKERS

2 for $1.00Reg. $1.00

Ladies' CORSELETTESAbdominal Support

Reg. $1.50 $1.00Men's Pure Silk HOSE

Ries' Make

Ladies' Munsing WearSILK VESTS

Reg. $1.49

Ladies' STREET DRESSES

Reg. $1.29 Jl .UUAll Charmeuse* and Silks

and CrepesReg. 69c yd.

Ladies' SleevelessBLOUSES

Reg. $1.98

£ •*. •

Cretonne Storage BAGS

Reg. $1.29 sWashable BATH MATS

Reg. $1.25 f l.Uw

Pure Linen TABLE SETS

Reg. $1.29 JLUv

Infants Maderia DRESSES

Reg. $1.50 f 1.0U

Men's Fine QualityPAJAMAS

Reg. $1.50

Ladies' Shadow-ProofPRINCESS SLIPS

Reg. $1.00 2 for $1.00Pur* Linen SCARFS

VANITY

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