ion makes progress orders remove forty names …€¦ · post; rdward walsh, j m|£uu and batt. el...

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THF, OLDEST ?APER IN WOODBRIDGK TOWNSHIP AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP r-THIRD YUAR WOODBRIDGE, N. J., FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1932 THREE CENTS PER COPY ION MAKES PROGRESS IN FAULAN I rRUJtLI Lillian Doak, age six. of New . l Brunswick Avenue, Kurds, was —r—: r—— . I slightly. Injured Saturday' atter- PoiU Meet With Local Legion to Further Plant noon,, when she ran into a. light r «" For Big Bicentennial Celebration To Be Held In June FINANCIAL AID NEEDED ^ of five American Legion posts were at a meeting of the Woodbridge Post, No. 87,Am- Legion held Wednesday m$ht at the fire house on; m ; ed her taken t0 lhe Perth Am . truck going west on the avenue, owne4 and operated by ' Charles Schaffer, of, Mlddletowri,.. N. . J., according to a report made by' Schafter to Motorcycle Officer Carl Hchaffer said the little girl rah off the sidewalk into the right side of his truck. He took her to Dr. Gauzza'B office and the doctor ord- Btreet, to further plans for a ftttirye celebration for! iBhington Bi-centennial celebration to be held Sat- f»nd Sunday, J(ane 25 and 28. . thu |io«ts represented • ' ' ' rth Anihny, Woodnrldge, Metudien and Curteret. and Hlghlund Park have their lnH-ntlon ot cooper- 1th the loral Legion, but able to send their reproB- thU wwk. Only two "the County, Post 29 and of New Brunswick, Will to participate In the on account oi an inde- i celebra: Ion in the county hoy General Hospital where she was treated tor cuts on ttie lowei part of Iver stomack. Youths Sent To Jail For Hurling Stones At Train tlio In a campaign to stop throwing of missiles at \\ representatives, ap-!trains going through, the Town- their posts, to Confer i 8 ),ip, Edward Frey, 16, of Harold JiL 11 !?!""!?!™. b ^..!l!L a ! Avenue, and Francis Valllancourt. ^ ^ ProSfiect Avenue, both ot the Edgar Hill section, wtre ar- rested by Sergeant Utn Parsons, Friday and sentenced to 60 days J «.m. i u »* , In the workhouse by Juge B. W. and William J. «*™> ot vo^ul on the charge ot atrocious Post; rdward Walsh, j M| £ uU and batt . el and riiomasi U8l Thurs a B y , it was alleged, , nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu , throug t, Avenel '. i, o Cll A i 1and seriously Injured four passen- Four Arrested For Log Cabin Hold-up Sunday Youths Held For Grand Jury Without Bail Idge aro; Percy Quack- Harry Kaliluist, of Amboy Post No, 4 5; Ed- en, md Russell Park Post 88. Col- The charge pressed agalns-t ' the Lt }'-, Jo ] imo ?' ^! pt>r i n , tn ;'McNeil, of the Pennsylvania Rall- t t i e Union County School M N tld L t }'-,]? ^!i,;McN t i e Union County School nuu , y Captaln McNeU told I ^ ^ p , . , the court that the train In quea- problim pr.easnted to U o n w a g an . expre8a( the flrat atop pottts in the problem . fcel goutu Araboyi H e pointed the iia B eant It was a traln going, at that by a rock Inij;lu break (a O 8 the iia B eant. OUt in the had a It was that cele- Would cost tlioni a great than by co-operating In . The representatives r Lesion posts corn- local post for the celebration. out thai speed, hi a window .and kill a.passenger. Or again that,it might be possible that the rock would strike an en- gineer and the lives of the pass- engers would be in danger. Judge' Vogel said that any one Within a lew houre after they held up the Gray Log Cabin on Amboy avenue at ten. o'clock Sun day night and emptied the con- tents of the cash register, four Wodbrldge, youths were In the hands ot the local police and each confessed their part in the hold up.. The youths areated and he'd for the grand Jury without bai by Judge B. W. Vogel, Monday morning were: Alex Edward Deak, 19, 215 liamford avenue, Woodbridge. Joseph "Cowboy" Horvath, 27 of 21 Crampton avenue, Wood- bridge, In addition to the robbery charge Horvath is charged with carrying a concealed weapon. Michael John Shernok, 20, o 33 Garden avenue, Woodbridge. Steve Slpos, 20, of 75 Cramp ton avenue, Woodbridge. According to the confeslon? signed by the youths, they wen to the Gray Log Cabin with the the celebration. j D) - Olls i,t before him on that charge i intention of holding up the place. |hn of the local legion bl ; ould no t.fxpect any mercy from j They went inside, sat down at one faifalr a'strictly Legion jlble, but If thij, finan^ should not ht> forth- Ill tw neces«ary to ask, ih amunlty and county ^« 1 take purt in the affair. Imls for cos- received. One firm York bid $3.SO rent- ionl.il costutnf, $2.50 costumes and $1.00 tigs. Thu 'proposition Tver's seemed iable. • They suggested the costumes. Their J00 costumes Intruding i00. No bid has been yet for the Legion . . . . They .... him. The Jail sentence . imposed i O f lhe tables and ordered a meal, upon the two youths should serve letter they, got through eating they us a warning, ho said, to anV| We nt up to the counter as if tc youngster who thinks It fun to use ^ H y their check. Instead, accord ft fast moving train as a> target. i | u g to their own statements, Hor- Chief of Police Walah said that yath pulled a gun from his over- he snid his men would do every- coat pocket and told Miss Eileen ttilng.tn their power to check Hits, Craig, who was In charge, to keep practice,"but that he hoped that]still ajid no harm, would come t he would have co-operation f»om her. " Horvath then ordere< lho ftarcnts. He expects Hie par- ents to keep an eye on their boys any troubla of that kind. t0 DAVID BABBKTT Kunmal services for David Mc Kride liarrrtt, 13, son nt Dr. and ' h Mrs. William' Barrett, .who di-e<l Wednesday morning at the ll b »get bids from all over )am n v ], o m e a t Stelton will be L " " "' — ''"" K1 held ' tomorrow morning at. the llaptlst church, Stelton. The boy tiled twin pneumonia, ' 'David..Is..survived bv fou . r sl9 ~ ters and five brothers, Mrs. Ida TIK^n, of Payette, Idaho,' Mrs. Charles Rellly, of i\lodmneld, Mrs. Betty Brown and Mice Bajretfiof Stelton; 'Herbert of Rahway,. Ffled of Wondbrldgc "Manning. James . bidilor will no doubt contract. will bo h«'d week at ,whtch •r plaris will be made. Violates Piwflt' Eethy, 47, nf Rye, U. Y., of Woodbrldgo, was to Detective McDer-- the pro3ec.utor'H mofnins by the offlce[und Bertram, of Stelton. local the chai'Re.of violating Rethy waB recently A daughter, Reva Louise, was born Wednesday night to Mr. and on the promise to support; Mrs. Rene A.'de Russy, of Van- The, complaint was iderblty place', WoodbridRe. Detdctlvtv John Kinder. Mrs. John Gorton, of tisdale CROW'S NEST ORDERS TRANSFERS IN POLICE FORCE Sixteen Men Shifted for •'Good of the De- partment" A polite "shake-up," Cor" the good of the department".was or- ered into effect Tuesday by Chief >f Police James A. WalBh. Chief Walsh believes that It is the duty of, each man on the force to kn'ow the Township thoroughly.and will Kalheme Everltli aud |tors. ransfer men from time to time. "Our Township," said the chief, 'is over 27 square miles In area. If a man Is continuously on one beat and has to be placed on an- other In an emergency he would be absolutely useless, for he would be unfamiliar with the territory." The transfers ordered were as follows: Traffic division: William Drown from Post No. 1, Main stret, Wood bridge to Post No, 3, lselin:, John Cholar from Traffic Post No, 3 in UClln, to Traffic Post No. 1, Main street, Woodbridge. Motorcycle . division: Daniel Gibson, from Green street, Wood- bridge territory, to Port Reading beat; Rudolph Slmonsen, from Avenel, superhighway to Green atreet, Woodbridge; Meyer Lar- Tt\e Installation of officers of Pine Grove, No, 10, Woodmen 1 * Circle, was held Friday night nt the.Cra,ftBmen's Club, the of- ficers Installed for the. ensuing year were: . v ,, Mrs. Ella Olbrlch, guardian; Mrs. Anna Meslck, past guardian; Miss Helen Lorch, advisor; Mrs, M. »F. Boos, financial secretary; Mrs. Anna McDonald, banker; Mrs. May Coupland,,' chaplain; Mrs. Clara Murdoch, attendant; Mrs. Emma Peterson, nsatlant at-, lendant; Mrs. Agnes Oaumann, Inner sentinel; Mrs. Matilda Plr- rong/buter Bentlnal; Mrs. Cecelia illuth, Miss Anna Petto and Miss Katherthe Everltt; auditors. Tlie officers were installed by Mrs. M. F. BOOR, a member of the national legislative committee. Choir To Sing At High School i Concert Tonight I Miss Fraser To Present Students In Annual Re- cital Dancing To Be Held In Gym. REMOVE FORTY NAMES FROM VOTING UST County fto»rd of EUctipns Order* Nnme» Stricken / Township P«rm«n«nt Regiatr*- tr«tion Binders, POST CARDS RETURNED Close to ,40.nnmeS, residents of Fords, Hopelawn and Sewawih, will be runvovecl trom Uic yermtinent. registra- tion ^in^ers of the Township of Woouonuge, mu«fw \ne voters personally appear beiore the County tfoaru oi fcliec- ti 313 A b p y tiona, at 313 American blag., 117 Smim si., m t n i y March 15, ana prove to the satisfaction 01 the Boaiu tna. Uiey are still residents of the Township of Wooabriujje anu entitled to vote. highway, Avenel; Carl Sundquist trom Fords, Hopelawn and Keaa- hey to Woodbridge nvoper, Ce'es- tine Romond from Woodbridge have all to make the annual concert of the Wood- bridge High School orchestra un- der the direction ol Miss Anna proper to Fords, Hopelawn and Fraser, to be given tonight at the Keasbey. ' . High School auditorium on Bar- ron Avenue, the beat concert pre- sented so far. The choir of Night patrolmen: Closindo Zuc- caro, from Isolln to Sewaren; John GovellU from Sewaren to Iaelin; Joseph tinhorn from Itahway avenue and territory surrounding the White Church to Go'.onla; Karney Romano from Colonia to Ford avenue and Fords' to Rahway White church area, Main street, nvenue and Woodbridge; J. Mokflnaky from Port Reading lo Rahway avenue, Avenel; Thom- as Bishop from Rahway avenue, Avenel to Port Rending. Make Plans For (Fords Church Annual Easterly Off ers Large Sunrise Service Third l'reabyterian Church the ot Elizabeth, will sing the vocal part of "The Heavens are Telling", from the oratorio, "The Creation" byHayden. Miss RuthErb wtll play two piano selections, concert dancing will After the be held In the High School gymnasium with music by Hurry Browns orchestra. The complete program will be as follows: * ^continued on page five) NEW TAX RATE IS $5.77;-29 POINTS LOWER A reduction of 29 po.nts in Woodbridge Township's tux rau >vaB announced tlilti week. Tlit aew tax rate la $6.77 per $100 .iseeBsed valuutlun , as couipiueu with $6.06 of 1U31. Although t >art ot the Veduction was made Ui, account of the increased valu- ations of Shore property, It wa. recently pointed out that evei. with the Increased valuation ot the shore properties in Woou- bridge, the Township valuation U uot as high afi tlvat imposed oi, similar properties in Perth Am- boy and Carteret. The largest Item on the 1932 tax bills will be for the operation of the t OWUKIUP schools and for that purpbse $551,45!).58 Will bi appropriated. The amount to be l&lsod by taxation will be $352,- 379,02. The county tax. aaseBa against Woodbildue UIIB yeur wll, be $195,150. State school lax wll amount,to $57,635.28, slate road tax, $21,114,22 and soldiers bonus tax, $2,891.22. It has been felt for some time that the shore property has been undervalued and the township committee Should be commended on its attitude \n revaluing thin valuable land. The industries are getting a "fair break" and In the mean time-srtuftl 1 norne owners are benefltting by a reduced tax rate. Deak to take the money out oi th taBh register. The youths clalmei they cot $26 but JJlss Craig say! that there was $67 In the cas' register at the time. After the hold-up the youth said" they made their get-a-wa; through the nacei track. They wen as far as the fast line at Avenel where they divided their money from the "Job" an* then returned to their homes. Patro'man Frank Miller, Jos- ph Einhorn and William Ro- ,mond were assigned to the. ease. The pnly description that Miss Cralp could give them was that the four were all dressed in light overcoats, two wore soft hats and two wore capB. .She Said that the msin with the gun had a light moustache. Shortly a^ter one o'clock the three officers had Shor- nak in custody and an hour and a ,hal.f later Slpos was under ar- rest Dealc-and Horvath were pick- ed up at three* o'clock. The -gun, that was used in the" holdup, a .38, was found in Horvath'a pocjtet.- Shornak told the poljce tiiat he did not get any money, that lie was to- receive his share trom Deo,W later. All four made their confessions without, much questioning. ' . Chief ol BoUea James A', Walsh praised the three officers for the manner In which they conducted the Investigation and made the ar- rests. ' • t Fox Ernest NAVIGATOR Committeeman from the second ward is reputed second Caruso—He sang at the banquet given in jf Chief Walsh in Amboy rast week.. .. : ivigator kfiows of a certain young prominent man B his breakfast on Valentine Place practically every t Dti M f Amboy That Detective Murray.from Hefoverheard the Navigator t'other And 1 was only talking in a whisper. . And the worst part of it was that I was asking Una who he was : : Actually believe he ron the back of his head no wonder detective And 'tis rumored that a eS young man from the Township treasurer's a certain lawyer with offices near the Memorial building may be seen running around the race mornings, if you should care to get up around And Pefce sent some amusing post ,.. Florida ..Wonder whothe "meany 1 sent "Joe" formerly of Rahway, avenue and now lift, a pair of golf hose Two guesses don't count : Rubbing it in, 1 calls it tcooiluued oa pAgft slltt) SASSOS CELEBRATE 10TH ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs, Michael S&sso, of Port Reading, celebrated their tenth wpddlng anniversary Satur- day night at their hquie. The rooms were decorated, in * color Kcheme of blue and pink, Cards were played and a supper served at midnight. Among the guests were: Mr, and Mrs. Sabadlne Zullo, of Rah- way; Mrs, Mary Sllllto, of St: George, Staten Island; Percy Cun- ingham and Thomas Sorners of Woodbridge; Miss Cecelia Casey of Sewaren; Joseph Sabo and Jos- eph Kilmurray, .of Perth Amboy; Mr, and Mrs. Carmen Zu}lo, Mr. und Mrs. Sabatlna Martlno, Mr. and Mrs. Benjaminl CyBkowskl, Miss Rose Richardson, Miss Anna Belmonte, Mlssea Clementina and Antoinette Martlno,' Miss Agnes QelB, Tout Martlno and Mr. and Mrs.. Michael Saseo and QUUdren, Michael,' Raymond and Mae., for the annual Union Eas- ter Sunrise services were made at a meeting of live representa- tives from tlu< Young; People's Societies of the Methodist, Con- iiregatlonal and Kirst Pruubyter- iun churches held Sunday after- noon at the home of Mrs, John Strome, of Wedgwood Avenue. . The following chairmen were appointed: William H. Voorhees, jr general chairman; Miss Claire Pfeiffer, program chali- man; Walter. Levl, music; MISL Bvelyn Fox, puhlicity. . • , Those present were- Miss Clair Phelffer,- Miss Jeaa Decker, Mtos Edna Geigel, Miss May Reid, Margoret EleU, Miss Evelyn Mra>John Stromo, Rev. E Abbott. WlUiaoi H. Voorhees, Jr., James Reid'and Walter Levl. Former Stage Stars To typen Dancing School f'Opening of a 6taS<J dancing school in Craftsman's Hall. Grpen street' Was announced this week ty Vlv&n Seed and herder Babe Sheppard, formerly ot New York\clty, but now of Rahway and Keansburg, N. i- The school to ha known as the Babe atd Vivbn DanctnK School, is the tjiird class To be Inaugurated within the past i Irish Mother of Mine" t h S weeffa class already organ E«an: "Home-. Adolnl Improvements 2nd class R. R. property Personal Household exemptions Net Appeals Minstrel Show "Jack" EgaTTo Act As Master Oi Ceremonies On March 7th and 8th. The seventh annual mindtrel under the auspices of the ^os^ii-y, Sodality, Parent-Teachers und Holy Nome Societies of Our'Lady of I*eace (jburch, Fords, wilf be ,_,„„,„„.,„„ aeld March 7 and8 at the auditor- j Motor°vahi<:ies iura of'the church. The show is 1 Total exemp. The names have been P;moved irom the voting Hat for ttie reason that post cards which were ma.iwu to them »t the.r Laet knowu au- dress have been returned by ine postal authorities Indicating t lia i they no longer reside there. The names to be removed ac- cording to Chester It. Ho nun president of. the county Herd of Elections and Walter J, R| e ,iy secretary and Commission or the registration are as lollows' vim' bert J Ander "n, Jr., ' Crows Mills road, Hope.awn. • Qustav Bodner, Jersey avenue, Hopelawn. Oliver kray, 71 Dougiai street, HopelaWn. Wallace Bloomfle'.d, Menlo ave- :iuo, Forda. James Dias, Oakland avenue newaren. Charles 'Drost, Main mreet, Fords John Dunham, 18 Do ug , aB "tr<?et, Hopelawn. William Fisher, 22 Doug'ag st Hopelawn. William Grey, William street, Hopelawn. George Orlffner, William nt Hopelawn. Joseph Hllbrecht, William st. Hopelawn. Mrs. Mary Hilbrycht, William Btreat, Hope!aw&. I Continued on Page 1932 Land ,...5 6.080,065 ANTON STKNOElt Funeral services for A. Sten- ger, 52 years old, of St. George's Avenuft Woodbridg h ,9,210,875 1,980,181 2,478,505 11,610 20,479,516. 1931 • 9,083,2931 , of Woodbridge, who died Saturday mornln* at the Pertn Amboy Hospital after a long ill- ness, were held Monday niorn.n« at 9:30 o'clock trnfo E ,V Finn's funeral parlors an Amboy a'veenue und 10 o'clock from 'Mt. Carinel ^f I In St. cemetery. 1,962.770 2.393.J73 alii Utll ed 01,895 eg 696.600, y valuation I ible ....... 21,1W,2Z1\ i:\EMPT10NB '• Public BchyaU '.., .$ 2,lC2.fl5 Other schools . HuOUc property .1 118,6 . 1,031.060 . 225,678 7U.815 200,000 3,798,038 15,21') 200,000 Rate 5.77 341.975.79 1,399.54 6.0U Many Win Prizes At ^Legion Party The American Legion auxiliary li.eld a successful card party Wednesday night at the Memorial Municipal buiding. tweaty-four tables Thero were of 1 playei' three ized li Sedan Breaks dates sedan, traveling north on West avenue, Sewaren around 5:30 o'clock Tuesday night crash- ed ,into the gates of the Central railroad crossing and kept on go- ing, according to a report made to Patrolman Closlndo Zuccaio by by Mr. KUmurray, the gatemaii. class already organ Keansburg and another j'd of Elisabeth, Rahway and Crark Township pupils. Several .Woodbridge residents have requested the. opening of a claBS in Woodbridge ,so that their children might nave the opportun- ity to learn tap dicing and other 6tage routines. Babe and Vivian formerly the Lawrence Sisters of Musical com- edy and vaudeville apearlng In the Greenwich Village FoUles, The Gingham Girl, productions of the late Sam Bernard, the Winter Garden and on leading vaudev 1U e circuits In dancing specialties^ They are assisted in their class-1 e. W Mjm Anne O'Nell, pianist and instructor ot Elizabeth, N. J. a^d In addition to the regu'ar schedule of lessons plan to stage performances In Woadbrldge from time to time so that mothers arid others may appreciate ihfi..Mfilffl?*. being made by members of the M Classes for glrla Beven ; to four- teen years ot age are held FVlday at 4 p. m. sharp and tor girls trora four to six on Saturday »t 10 a.m. Mrs. F. Valentine aijd Mrs. J. B. Breckenrldge were guests yes-; terday at a Wncheon given by the Westae,ld t). A, R. Chapter at che Shackamaxon club. \ under the direction of "Joe" Mty-I AVPI»JW'K1NMBST OF TAX.KS unaer tne auetuon or jqe n u - gtate road $21,114.22 " gerald and promises to go over 1 state school 57,635.28 blgg.er.and better than ever. The: Soldiers , music will be funiisTied by Ernest I- bohua ioc'?En"on Chrlstopherson and his orchestra. I §££& achooi' WmS 'Sergeant "Jack" Eg'an, well' Municipal tax ..,.352,379.02 known for his. pact In m.nstrels,' Bank Stock 225,90 will not only bo an eudnian but will act as master of ceremonies during the vaudeville acts. A sure hit will be Joe Hurko and lua dance revue, introducing two youngsters, Ryan and Hawkins, Dancing will follow each evening's performance. The oomplete program wi)l be as follows: Part 1., Interlocutor Adolpn Quadti "Now's the Time to'Fail in Love", Dick Krauss; 'fWho'b Your Little Who-zls", Tom \agoi "I fleed Lovin'", Leonard ' Fischef; "D»rk TOWB Prank Meaney; Andy Shee- hy; "River Stuy Way From My Door", Ed\Grimm; ."Between the Devil and the Dark Blue Sea", Jack Egan; "Put the Sun Back In the Sky", J. Grtener; "That Old Francis Egan; "Home 1 ", Adolph Quadt; "Little Old Church in the Valley", William HnnBen; "Rufus John- son", Mrs. Agnes Gelling; "When Irish Eyes are Smiling", Mrs, Mol- ly Breen. , The Minstrel Chorus, afecom- panled tjy Miss Anna Wordell; is aa follows: Albert Antonides, John Bamlln, Charles Canna^tn, Dennis Desmond Stephen Elko, Chick Galja, Frank Kovach, F, J. Leltner, Thomas Markous, James Nagy, Paul Pat tcontinued on page five) Strutters Ball",,. Prat ''Roll on, Mlsalsilppl". ST. PATRICK AFFAIR PLANNED Bt COURT Plans for a public card party ' i to be held Monday evening April Mi'fflui at U l e C t ! lumblllt i dub', were 19,925,421 Court Mercedes, No 769, Catholic Daughters of America. MrB. John Cosgrove was appointed chairman of the uffatr. It was also decided to hod a St 'atrick's party on Thursday eve- ing, March 17, at the Columbian -*•««*« I""' Ws& Allda San( >ahl is In 52S.33 T 1<Ke ° f arrall 8 em ents: 2,640.28 ADJUSTMENT BODY ».«.«• CONSIDERS THREE BUILDING PERMITS Three applications' were dls- cu8aed at a meet.ng of the Board of Adjustments of the Zoning or- dinance-at a meeting held, Wednes- day night at the Memorial Muni- cipal building. The. matters dis- cusaed and held for further consi- Prizes were won b? the following: Bridge, Mrs. Thomas Roy, Mrs. DaVld! Preacher, Mrs. Vliicent Weavet.'Mra. M. Hollohan; p.nQ- eble, N. S. Kelfer. Mrs, J, Rolide, Anna Davis, F. Schlcker, C. Bralp, Mrs. Thomas J. Leahy, .J, Rech- ultsep, 4ln. Eena,. A^ Perry, A. Smith, Mrs. Fred Wltherldge, Mrs. Bostack, Mrs, M. Moscareli, Rose Kelly, Rolland Sprague, 1 Mrs. P. MoCann, Mrs. Coley, J. Coley, A, Rechnltier, Andrew Kath, J. Christ; fan-ta«\ Alice Pender, Mra. Mary Kath, Mrs. Michael Lahgan, Mrs. Rodgers, Ruse WUUB; euchre Andrew" Hanson, Nels Jepson; whist; Helen Camplqln, Mrs. P. Campion; rummy, Mrs. A. Hansen and Mrs. M. Tarlosky. Refreshments were served. The / S r furth deration were as tollowV Permission to b^uUd a boiler at the plant of Tyson Brothers, of the Etfgar hill section; to,reconsi- der the establishment of a lumber .yard on the super-hlghwal' at Av- lenel by B. B. Clark and permls- slon to er,ect gasoline pumps on the. east side of A-mboy' aveniw, north of tlie park, by Anna Larson, committee, chairman; s w Mrs/ Henry Mrs. Arthur d. T Sayer O'sen TfELP WANTED: EXPERIENCED OPERAT- ORS ON SILK STEADY WORK. THE POSE ' \ DRESS COMPANY ,136 WASHINGTON AVE CARTERET Mrs. James Filer and Mrs. Wil- liam Mustek, wishes to thank the,| merchants and others who donaU 1 ed prizes or helpfed In any way to* make the affair a success. If It Bwlm*—We Have .It TOWN FISHERY Opnoslte State Theatre VKKSH FISH Chum anJ Oyster* • S-2180 Deliver)' An Announcement to Mothers BABE AND VIVIAN DANCING SCHOOL Opens Friday, March 4, at 4:00 P. M. in Craftsman Hall, Green Street TAP, ACROBATIC, BALLET, LIMBERING • AND STRETCHING . , Babe and Vivian were formerly the Lawrence Sisters of Musical- and Comedy Vaudeville Classes: Girls 7 anf$ 14, Friday 4.00 P. M. — Qlrls 4 to 6, Saturday 10.00.A. M. — FIFTY.CEKTS A LESSON. 'Apply at Craftsman's Hall, Lesson Days . " OR PHONE RAHWAY 7—2329 HARDIMAN'S PH ARM AC Y Ed L. Hardlman, formerly of Seaman's Perth Amboy Prescriptions Called For and Delivered Cor. Rahway Avenue and Orean Street Tel. 8-0185, Woodbridge, N. i.

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Page 1: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

THF, OLDEST

?APER IN WOODBRIDGK

TOWNSHIP

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

r-THIRD YUAR WOODBRIDGE, N. J., FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1932 THREE CENTS PER COPY

ION MAKES PROGRESSIN F A U L A N I r R U J t L I Lillian Doak, age six. of New

• . l Brunswick Avenue, Kurds, was—r—: r—— • . I slightly. Injured Saturday' atter-

PoiU Meet With Local Legion to Further Plant noon,, when she ran into a. light

r«"

For Big Bicentennial CelebrationTo Be Held In June

FINANCIAL AID NEEDED^ of five American Legion posts were

at a meeting of the Woodbridge Post, No. 87, Am-Legion held Wednesday m$ht at the fire house on;m;ed h e r t a k e n t0 l h e P e r t h Am.

truck going west on the avenue,owne4 and operated by ' CharlesSchaffer, of, Mlddletowri,.. N. . J.,according to a report made by'Schafter to Motorcycle Officer Carl

Hchaffer said the little girl rahoff the sidewalk into the right sideof his truck. He took her to Dr.Gauzza'B office and the doctor ord-

Btreet, to further plans for a ftttirye celebration for!iBhington Bi-centennial celebration to be held Sat-

f»nd Sunday, J(ane 25 and 28. .thu |io«ts represented • ' ' '

rth Anihny, Woodnrldge,Metudien and Curteret.and Hlghlund Park havetheir lnH-ntlon ot cooper-

1th the loral Legion, butable to send their reproB-

thU wwk. Only two"the County, Post 29 and

of New Brunswick, Willto participate In the

on account oi an inde-i celebra: Ion in the county

hoy General Hospital where shewas treated tor cuts on ttie loweipart of Iver stomack.

Youths Sent ToJail For Hurling

Stones At TraintlioIn a campaign to stop

throwing of missiles at\\ representatives, ap-!trains going through, the Town-their posts, to Confer i 8),ip, Edward Frey, 16, of Harold

JiL11!?!""!?!™. b^..!l!La! Avenue, and Francis Valllancourt.^ ^ ProSfiect Avenue, both otthe Edgar Hill section, wtre ar-rested by Sergeant Utn Parsons,Friday and sentenced to 60 days

J «.m. i u »* , In the workhouse by Juge B. W.and William J. «*™> o t vo^ul on the charge ot atrocious

Post; rdward Walsh, j M | £ u U a n d b a t t .el and riiomasi U 8 l T h u r s a B y, it was alleged,

, nf Dnnolkn Post m t m l n g o i n u , t h r o u g t , Avenel'. i, oCllA i 1 and seriously Injured four passen-

Four ArrestedFor Log CabinHold-up Sunday

Youths Held For GrandJury Without

Bail

Idge aro; Percy Quack-Harry Kaliluist, of

Amboy Post No, 4 5; Ed-en,

md RussellPark Post 88. Col- The charge

pressedagalns-t ' the

Lt}'-,Jo]imo?' ^!pt>rin, tn;'McNeil, of the Pennsylvania Rall-t t i e Union County School M N t l d

L t } ' - , ] ? ^ ! i , ; M c Nt i e Union County School n u u , yC a p t a l n M c N e U told

I^ ^ p

, . , the court that the train In quea-problim pr.easnted to U o n w a g a n . e x p r e 8 a ( t h e flrat atoppottts in the problem .fcel g o u t u A r a b o y i H e pointedthe iiaBeant It was a t r a l n going, at that

b y a r o c k I n i j ; l u b r e a k

(a O

8 the iiaBeant.OUt in the

had a

It wasthatcele-

Would cost tlioni a greatthan by co-operating In

. The representativesr Lesion posts corn-local post forthe celebration.

out thaispeed, hia window .and kill a.passenger. Oragain that,it might be possiblethat the rock would strike an en-gineer and the lives of the pass-engers would be in danger.

Judge' Vogel said that any one

Within a lew houre after theyheld up the Gray Log Cabin onAmboy avenue at ten. o'clock Sunday night and emptied the con-tents of the cash register, fourWodbrldge, youths were In thehands ot the local police and eachconfessed their part in the holdup.. The youths areated and he'dfor the grand Jury without baiby Judge B. W. Vogel, Mondaymorning were:

Alex Edward Deak, 19, 215liamford avenue, Woodbridge.

Joseph "Cowboy" Horvath, 27of 21 Crampton avenue, Wood-bridge, In addition to the robberycharge Horvath is charged withcarrying a concealed weapon.

Michael John Shernok, 20, o33 Garden avenue, Woodbridge.

Steve Slpos, 20, of 75 Crampton avenue, Woodbridge.

According to the confeslon?signed by the youths, they wento the Gray Log Cabin with the

the celebration. j D)-Ollsi,t before him on that charge i intention of holding up the place.|hn of the local legion b l ; o u l d not.fxpect any mercy from j They went inside, sat down at onefaifalr a'strictly Legionjlble, but If thij, finan^should not ht> forth-

Ill tw neces«ary to ask,i h

amunlty and county ^«1 take purt in the affair.

Imls for cos-received. One firm

York bid $3.SO rent-ionl.il costutnf, $2.50

costumes and $1.00tigs. Thu 'proposition

Tver's seemediable. • They suggestedthe costumes. Their

J00 costumes Intrudingi00. No bid has been

yet for the Legion

. . . . They ....him. The Jail sentence . imposed iOf lhe tables and ordered a meal,upon the two youths should serve letter they, got through eating theyus a warning, ho said, to anV|Went up to the counter as if tcyoungster who thinks It fun to use ^Hy their check. Instead, accordft fast moving train as a> target. • i | u g to their own statements, Hor-

Chief of Police Walah said that yath pulled a gun from his over-he snid his men would do every- coat pocket and told Miss Eileenttilng.tn their power to check Hits, Craig, who was In charge, to keeppractice,"but that he hoped that]still ajid no harm, would come the would have co-operation f»om her. " Horvath then ordere<lho ftarcnts. He expects Hie par-ents to keep an eye on their boys

a n y troubla of that kind.t 0

DAVID BABBKTTKunmal services for David Mc

Kride liarrrtt, 13, son nt Dr. and' hMrs. William' • Barrett, .who

di-e<l Wednesday morning at thell b»get bids from all over ) a m n v ] , o m e a t Stelton will be

L " " " ' — ' '""K1 held ' tomorrow morning at. thellaptlst church, Stelton. Theboy tiled twin pneumonia,' 'David..Is..survived b v fou . r sl9~ters and five brothers, Mrs. IdaTIK^n, of Payette, Idaho,' Mrs.Charles Rellly, of i\lodmneld, Mrs.Betty Brown and Mice BajretfiofStelton; 'Herbert of Rahway,. Ffledof Wondbrldgc "Manning. James

. bidilor will no doubtcontract.

will bo h«'dweek a t ,whtch

•r plaris will be made.

Violates Piwflt'Eethy, 47, nf Rye, U. Y.,

of Woodbrldgo, wasto Detective McDer--

the pro3ec.utor'Hmofnins by the

offlce[und Bertram, of Stelton.local

the chai'Re.of violatingRethy waB recently

A daughter, Reva Louise, wasborn Wednesday night to Mr. and

on the promise to support; Mrs. Rene A.'de Russy, of Van-The, complaint was iderblty place', WoodbridRe.

Detdctlvtv John Kinder. Mrs. John Gorton, of tisdale

CROW'SNEST

ORDERSTRANSFERS INPOLICE FORCE

Sixteen Men Shifted for•'Good of the De-

partment"A polite "shake-up," Cor" the

good of the department".was or-ered into effect Tuesday by Chief>f Police James A. WalBh. Chief

Walsh believes that It is the dutyof, each man on the force to kn'owthe Township thoroughly.and will K a l h e m e E v e r l t l i aud | tors.ransfer men from time to time.

"Our Township," said the chief,'is over 27 square miles In area.If a man Is continuously on onebeat and has to be placed on an-other In an emergency he would beabsolutely useless, for he wouldbe unfamiliar with the territory."

The transfers ordered were asfollows:

Traffic division: William Drownfrom Post No. 1, Main stret, Woodbridge to Post No, 3, lselin:, JohnCholar from Traffic Post No, 3 inUClln, to Traffic Post No. 1, Mainstreet, Woodbridge.

Motorcycle . division: DanielGibson, from Green street, Wood-bridge territory, to Port Readingbeat; Rudolph Slmonsen, fromAvenel, superhighway to Greenatreet, Woodbridge; Meyer Lar-

Tt\e Installation of officers ofPine Grove, No, 10, Woodmen1*Circle, was held Friday night ntthe.Cra,ftBmen's Club, the of-ficers Installed for the. ensuingyear were: . • v , ,

Mrs. Ella Olbrlch, guardian;Mrs. Anna Meslck, past guardian;Miss Helen Lorch, advisor; Mrs,M. »F. Boos, financial secretary;Mrs. Anna McDonald, banker;Mrs. May Coupland,,' chaplain;Mrs. Clara Murdoch, attendant;Mrs. Emma Peterson, nsatlant at-,lendant; Mrs. Agnes Oaumann,Inner sentinel; Mrs. Matilda Plr-rong/buter Bentlnal; Mrs. Cecelia

illuth, Miss Anna Petto and MissKatherthe Everltt; auditors. Tlieofficers were installed by Mrs. M.F. BOOR, a member of the nationallegislative committee.

Choir To SingAt High School

i Concert TonightI Miss Fraser To Present

Students In Annual Re-cital — Dancing To BeHeld In Gym.

REMOVE FORTY NAMESFROM VOTING UST

County fto»rd of EUctipns Order* Nnme» Stricken O« /Township P«rm«n«nt Regiatr*-

tr«tion Binders,

POST CARDS RETURNED

Close to ,40.nnmeS, residents of Fords, Hopelawn andSewawih, will be runvovecl trom Uic yermtinent. registra-tion ^in^ers of the Township of Woouonuge, mu«fw \nevoters personally appear beiore the County tfoaru oi fcliec-ti 313 A b

p ytiona, at 313 American blag., 117 Smim si., m t n i yMarch 15, ana prove to the satisfaction 01 the Boaiu tna.Uiey are still residents of the Township of Wooabriujje anuentitled to vote.

highway, Avenel; Carl Sundquisttrom Fords, Hopelawn and Keaa-hey to Woodbridge nvoper, Ce'es-tine Romond from Woodbridge

have all to makethe annual concert of the Wood-bridge High School orchestra un-der the direction ol Miss Anna

proper to Fords, Hopelawn and Fraser, to be given tonight at theKeasbey. ' . High School auditorium on Bar-

ron Avenue, the beat concert pre-sented so far. The choir of

Night patrolmen: Closindo Zuc-caro, from Isolln to Sewaren; JohnGovellU from Sewaren to Iaelin;Joseph tinhorn from Itahwayavenue and territory surroundingthe White Church to Go'.onla;Karney Romano from Colonia toFord avenue andFords' to RahwayWhite church area,

Main street,nvenue andWoodbridge;

J. Mokflnaky from Port Readinglo Rahway avenue, Avenel; Thom-as Bishop from • Rahway avenue,Avenel to Port Rending. •

Make Plans For (Fords ChurchAnnual Easterly Off ers LargeSunrise Service

Third l'reabyterian Churchtheot

Elizabeth, will sing the vocal partof "The Heavens are Telling",from the oratorio, "The Creation"byHayden. Miss RuthErb wtll playtwo piano selections,concert dancing will

After thebe held In

the High School gymnasium withmusic by Hurry Browns orchestra.

The complete program will beas follows: *

^continued on page five)

NEW TAX RATEIS $5.77;-29POINTS LOWERA reduction of 29 po.nts in

Woodbridge Township's tux rau>vaB announced tlilti week. Tlitaew tax rate la $6.77 per $100.iseeBsed valuutlun , as couipiueuwith $6.06 of 1U31. Althought>art ot the Veduction was made Ui,account of the increased valu-ations of Shore property, It wa.recently pointed out that evei.with the Increased valuation otthe shore properties in Woou-bridge, the Township valuation Uuot as high afi tlvat imposed oi,similar properties in Perth Am-boy and Carteret.

The largest Item on the 1932tax bills will be for the operationof the t OWUKIUP schools and forthat purpbse $551,45!).58 Will biappropriated. The amount to bel&lsod by taxation will be $352,-379,02. The county tax. aaseBaagainst Woodbildue UIIB yeur wll,be $195,150. State school lax wllamount,to $57,635.28, slate roadtax, $21,114,22 and soldiers bonustax, $2,891.22.

It has been felt for some timethat the shore property has beenundervalued and the townshipcommittee Should be commendedon its attitude \n revaluing thinvaluable land. The industries aregetting a "fair break" and In themean time-srtuftl1 norne owners arebenefltting by a reduced tax rate.

Deak to take the money out oi thtaBh register. The youths clalmeithey cot $26 but JJlss Craig say!that there was $67 In the cas'register at the time.

After the hold-up the youthsaid" they made their get-a-wa;through the nacei track. They wenas far as the fast line at Avenelwhere they divided their moneyfrom the "Job" an* then returnedto their homes.

Patro'man Frank Miller, Jos-ph Einhorn and William Ro-

,mond were assigned to the. ease.The pnly description that MissCralp could give them was thatthe four were all dressed in lightovercoats, two wore soft hats andtwo wore capB. .She Said that themsin with the gun had a lightmoustache. Shortly a^ter oneo'clock the three officers had Shor-nak in custody and an hour anda ,hal.f later Slpos was under ar-rest Dealc-and Horvath were pick-ed up at three* o'clock. The -gun,that was used in the" holdup,a .38, was found in Horvath'apocjtet.- Shornak told the poljcetiiat he did not get any money,that lie was to- receive his sharetrom Deo,W later. All four madetheir confessions without, muchquestioning. ' .

Chief ol BoUea James A', Walshpraised the three officers for themanner In which they conductedthe Investigation and made the ar-rests. ' • t

FoxErnest

NAVIGATOR

Committeeman from the second ward is reputedsecond Caruso—He sang at the banquet given in

jf Chief Walsh in Amboy rast week.. ..:ivigator kfiows of a certain young prominent manB his breakfast on Valentine Place practically every

t D t i M f AmboyThat Detective Murray.fromHefoverheard the Navigator t'other

And 1 was only talking in a whisper.. And the worst part of it was that I was askingUna who he was : : Actually believe heron the back of his head „ no wonderdetective And 'tis rumored that a

eS young man from the Township treasurer'sa certain lawyer with offices near the Memorialbuilding may be seen running around the racemornings, if you should care to get up around

And Pefce sent some amusing post,.. Florida ..Wonder who the "meany1

sent "Joe" formerly of Rahway, avenue and nowlift, a pair of golf hose Two guessesdon't count : Rubbing it in, 1 calls it• tcooiluued oa pAgft s l l t t )

SASSOS CELEBRATE10TH ANNIVERSARY

Mr. and Mrs, Michael S&sso, ofPort Reading, celebrated theirtenth wpddlng anniversary Satur-day night at their hquie. Therooms were decorated, in * colorKcheme of blue and pink, Cardswere played and a supperserved at midnight.

Among the guests were: Mr,and Mrs. Sabadlne Zullo, of Rah-way; Mrs, Mary Sllllto, of St:George, Staten Island; Percy Cun-ingham and Thomas Sorners ofWoodbridge; Miss Cecelia Caseyof Sewaren; Joseph Sabo and Jos-eph Kilmurray, .of Perth Amboy;Mr, and Mrs. Carmen Zu}lo, Mr.und Mrs. Sabatlna Martlno, Mr.and Mrs. Benjaminl CyBkowskl,Miss Rose Richardson, Miss AnnaBelmonte, Mlssea Clementina andAntoinette Martlno,' Miss AgnesQelB, Tout Martlno and Mr. andMrs.. Michael Saseo and QUUdren,Michael,' Raymond and Mae.,

for the annual Union Eas-ter Sunrise services were madeat a meeting of live representa-tives from tlu< Young; People'sSocieties of the Methodist, Con-iiregatlonal and Kirst Pruubyter-iun churches held Sunday after-noon at the home of Mrs, JohnStrome, of Wedgwood Avenue. .

The following chairmen wereappointed: William H. Voorhees,j r general chairman; MissClaire Pfeiffer, program chali-man; Walter. Levl, music; MISLBvelyn Fox, puhlicity. . • ,

Those present were- Miss ClairPhelffer,- Miss Jeaa Decker, MtosEdna Geigel, Miss May Reid,Margoret EleU, Miss EvelynMra>John Stromo, Rev. EAbbott. WlUiaoi H. Voorhees, Jr.,James Reid'and Walter Levl.

Former StageStars To typen

Dancing Schoolf'Opening of a 6taS<J dancingschool in Craftsman's Hall. Grpenstreet' Was announced this weekty Vlv&n Seed and h e r d e rBabe Sheppard, formerly ot NewYork\clty, but now of Rahway andKeansburg, N. i- The school toha known as the Babe atd VivbnDanctnK School, is the tjiird classTo be Inaugurated within the past i Irish Mother of Mine"t h S weeffa class already organ E«an: "Home-. Adolnl

Improvements2nd class R.

R. propertyPersonalHousehold

exemptionsNetAppeals

Minstrel Show"Jack" EgaTTo Act As

Master Oi CeremoniesOn March 7th and 8th.

The seventh annual mindtrelunder the auspices of the ^os ii-y,Sodality, Parent-Teachers undHoly Nome Societies of Our'Ladyof I*eace (jburch, Fords, wilf be ,_,„„,„„.,„„aeld March 7 and8 at the auditor- j Motor°vahi<:iesiura of'the church. The show is 1 Total exemp.

The names have been P;movedirom the voting Hat for ttie reasonthat post cards which were ma.iwuto them »t the.r Laet knowu au-dress have been returned by inepostal authorities Indicating t l iaithey no longer reside there.

The names to be removed ac-cording to Chester It. Ho nunpresident of. the county Herd ofElections and Walter J, R|e,iysecretary and Commission or theregistration are as lollows'vim'ber t

JA n d e r " n , Jr., ' Crows

Mills road, Hope.awn. •Qustav Bodner, Jersey avenue,

Hopelawn.Oliver kray, 71 Dougiai street,

HopelaWn.Wallace Bloomfle'.d, Menlo ave-

:iuo, Forda.James Dias, Oakland avenue

newaren.Charles 'Drost, Main mreet, Fords

John Dunham, 18 Doug,aB"tr<?et, Hopelawn.

William Fisher, 22 Doug'ag stHopelawn.

William Grey, William street,Hopelawn.

George Orlffner, William ntHopelawn.

Joseph Hllbrecht, William st.Hopelawn.

Mrs. Mary Hilbrycht, WilliamBtreat, Hope!aw&.

I Continued on Page

1 9 3 2Land , . . . 5 6.080,065

ANTON STKNOEltFuneral services for A. Sten-

ger, 52 years old, of St. George'sAvenuft Woodbridg h

,9,210,875

1,980,1812,478,505

11,61020,479,516.

1931

• 9,083,2931

, ofWoodbridge, who died

Saturday mornln* at the PertnAmboy Hospital after a long ill-ness, were held Monday niorn.n«at 9:30 o'clock trnfo E ,V Finn'sfuneral parlors an Amboy a'veenueund 10 o'clock from 'Mt. Carinel^f I In St.cemetery.

1,962.7702.393.J73

aliiUtll

ed 01,895eg 696.600,y valuation Iible . . . . . . . 21,1W,2Z1\

i:\EMPT10NB '•Public BchyaU '.., .$ 2,lC2.fl5Other schools .HuOUc property

.1 118,6 .1,031.060

. 225,6787U.815

200,0003,798,038

15,21')200,000

Rate 5.77

341.975.791,399.54

6.0U

Many Win PrizesAt ^Legion Party

The American Legion auxiliaryli.eld a successful card partyWednesday night at the MemorialMunicipal buiding.tweaty-four tables

Thero wereof1 playei'

threeized li

Sedan Breaks datessedan, traveling north on

West avenue, Sewaren around5:30 o'clock Tuesday night crash-ed ,into the gates of the Centralrailroad crossing and kept on go-ing, according to a report made toPatrolman Closlndo Zuccaio byby Mr. KUmurray, the gatemaii.

class already organKeansburg and another

j'd of Elisabeth, Rahwayand Crark Township pupils.

Several .Woodbridge residentshave requested the. opening of aclaBS in Woodbridge ,so that theirchildren might nave the opportun-ity to learn tap dicing and other6tage routines.

Babe and Vivian formerly theLawrence Sisters of Musical com-edy and vaudeville apearlng In theGreenwich Village FoUles, TheGingham Girl, productions of thelate Sam Bernard, the WinterGarden and on leading vaudev1Uecircuits In dancing specialties^

They are assisted in their class-1e. W Mjm Anne O'Nell, pianistand instructor ot Elizabeth, N. J.a^d In addition to the regu'arschedule of lessons plan to stageperformances In Woadbrldge fromtime to time so that mothers aridothers may appreciate ihfi..Mfilffl?*.being made by members of the

M Classes for glrla Beven; to four-teen years ot age are held FVldayat 4 p. m. sharp and tor girls trorafour to six on Saturday »t 10 a.m.

Mrs. F. Valentine aijd Mrs. J.B. Breckenrldge were guests yes-;terday at a Wncheon given by theWestae,ld t). A, R. Chapter at cheShackamaxon club. \

under the direction of "Joe" Mty-I AVPI»JW'K1NMBST OF TAX.KSunaer tne auetuon or jqe n u - g t a t e r o a d $21,114.22 "gerald and promises to go over 1 state school 57,635.28blgg.er.and better than ever. The: Soldiers ,music will be funiisTied by Ernest I- bohua ioc'?En"onChrlstopherson and his orchestra. I §££& achooi' WmS'Sergeant "Jack" Eg'an, well' Municipal tax ..,.352,379.02known for his. pact In m.nstrels,' Bank Stock 225,90will not only bo an eudnian butwill act as master of ceremoniesduring the vaudeville acts. A surehit will be Joe Hurko and luadance revue, introducing twoyoungsters, Ryan and Hawkins,Dancing will follow each evening'sperformance.

The oomplete program wi)l beas follows: Part 1., InterlocutorAdolpn Quadti "Now's the Timeto'Fail in Love", Dick Krauss;'fWho'b Your Little Who-zls",Tom \agoi "I fleed Lovin'",Leonard ' Fischef; "D»rk TOWB

Prank Meaney;Andy Shee-

hy; "River Stuy Way From MyDoor", Ed\Grimm; ."Between theDevil and the Dark Blue Sea",Jack Egan; "Put the Sun Back Inthe Sky", J. Grtener; "That Old

FrancisEgan; "Home1", Adolph Quadt;"Little Old Church in the Valley",William HnnBen; "Rufus John-son", Mrs. Agnes Gelling; "WhenIrish Eyes are Smiling", Mrs, Mol-ly Breen. ,

The Minstrel Chorus, afecom-panled tjy Miss Anna Wordell; isaa follows:

Albert Antonides, John Bamlln,Charles Canna tn, Dennis DesmondStephen Elko, Chick Galja, FrankKovach, F, J. Leltner, ThomasMarkous, James Nagy, Paul Pat

tcontinued on page five)

Strutters Ball",,. Prat''Roll on, Mlsalsilppl".

ST. PATRICK AFFAIRPLANNED B t COURT

Plans for a public card party 'i to • be held Monday evening April

Mi'fflui a t U l e C t! l umbl l l ti dub', were19,925,421 Court Mercedes, No 769, Catholic

Daughters of America. MrB. JohnCosgrove was appointed chairmanof the uffatr.

It was also decided to hod a St'atrick's party on Thursday eve-ing, March 17, at the Columbian

-*•««*« I""' Ws& A l l d a San(>ahl is In52S.33 T1 < K e °f a r ra l l8ements:

2,640.28 ADJUSTMENT BODY».«.«• CONSIDERS THREE

BUILDING PERMITSThree applications' were dls-

cu8aed at a meet.ng of the Boardof Adjustments of the Zoning or-dinance-at a meeting held, Wednes-day night at the Memorial Muni-cipal building. The. matters dis-cusaed and held for further consi-

Prizes were won b? the following:Bridge, Mrs. Thomas Roy, Mrs.

DaVld! Preacher, Mrs. VliicentWeavet.'Mra. M. Hollohan; p.nQ-eble, N. S. Kelfer. Mrs, J, Rolide,Anna Davis, F. Schlcker, C. Bralp,Mrs. Thomas J. Leahy, .J, Rech-ultsep, 4 ln . Eena,. A^ Perry, A.Smith, Mrs. Fred Wltherldge, Mrs.Bostack, Mrs, M. Moscareli, RoseKelly, Rolland Sprague,1 Mrs. P.MoCann, Mrs. Coley, J. Coley, A,Rechnltier, Andrew Kath, J.Christ; fan-ta«\ Alice Pender, Mra.Mary Kath, Mrs. Michael Lahgan,Mrs. Rodgers, Ruse WUUB; euchreAndrew" Hanson, Nels Jepson;whist; Helen Camplqln, Mrs. P.Campion; rummy, Mrs. A. Hansenand Mrs. M. Tarlosky.

Refreshments were served. The/ S

r furthderation were as tollowV

Permission to b uUd a boiler atthe plant of Tyson Brothers, ofthe Etfgar hill section; to,reconsi-der the establishment of a lumber.yard on the super-hlghwal' at Av-lenel by B. B. Clark and permls-slon to er,ect gasoline pumps on the.east side of A-mboy' aveniw, northof tlie park, by Anna Larson,

committee,chairman;

s wMrs/ Henry

Mrs. Arthur

d. TSayerO'sen

TfELP WANTED:EXPERIENCED OPERAT-ORS ON SILKSTEADY WORK.

THE POSE ' \DRESS COMPANY

,136 WASHINGTON AVECARTERET

Mrs. James Filer and Mrs. Wil-liam Mustek, wishes to thank the,|merchants and others who donaU1

ed prizes or helpfed In any way to*make the affair a success.

If It Bwlm*—We Have .It

T O W N F I S H E R YOpnoslte State Theatre

VKKSH FISHChum anJ Oyster* •

S-2180 Deliver)'

An Announcement to MothersBABE AND VIVIAN DANCING SCHOOL

Opens Friday, March 4, at 4:00 P. M.in Craftsman Hall, Green Street

TAP, ACROBATIC, BALLET, LIMBERING• AND STRETCHING . ,

Babe and Vivian were formerly the Lawrence Sistersof Musical- and Comedy Vaudeville

Classes: Girls 7 anf$ 14, Friday 4.00 P. M. — Qlrls 4 to 6,Saturday 10.00.A. M. — FIFTY.CEKTS A LESSON.

'Apply at Craftsman's Hall, Lesson Days. " OR PHONE RAHWAY 7—2329

HARDIMAN'SPH ARMACY

Ed L. Hardlman, formerly ofSeaman's Perth Amboy

PrescriptionsCalled For and Delivered

Cor. Rahway Avenueand Orean Street

Tel. 8-0185, Woodbridge, N. i.

Page 2: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

HEADACHE

?" ASHRINBAYER

Omaha h My^tilkdby Gac£

Safe Food Econom

Page 3: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY MARCH 4, 1932 PAGE THRU

X (MAPMAH

IDI8ON AVENUB,ivrn AMBOT

P. A. 2500 • 2101

MEACUAM

V don't luvtyour rig In thamiddle of tha

road and go to a fence-'pott to read • tile blil4o your Then don'tMgjMct tha other fel-IffWtodolt.

UiM of th« wcithtr,'•Dow you Vint laiMtdtyourinnounei*

wbUi *tiud tl bit

ti»tS«»roKMCtlv« buyer•ttVtltT* him it youruli.DM a s t n buy tr of tin piy*

1 i t tntira axptnu of th«I IT (Hi tl'* a poor *d thatWtftVttU that buy «r.

iMT b« • n<e«Hlly.but

lA It th* tblng that doit

think of hiring •without utlni«p*«« In thU

OneExtraBuyerUtilaliafta HT* * •

Git That Bayer

iGot Something

Want to SeU?l io« pMpk have a pieca

•BM&fjr aotnething elseufattlt they have discard-ed gjnd which thay no lon-(gCWfOlt

things are pat tnor atored away

j | $ W barn, or left lyingabout, getting of less and

i v«lu« each year.

91TIL BNQWBRR

-iBURVETOR

vertis-aSale!

CAGEDBy COURTNEY RYLEY COOPER

. Copyright by Courtney Ryley Cooper (WNU Service)

WHAT HAS TRANSPIRED

NOTSELL THEM?Somebody wanta thosevery things which havebecome of no use to you.Why not try to find that•omeiody by putting a

advertisement in

NEWSPAPER?Went

ihi iw*i thins r«»•t your Mora In th»

ofthbptpw. FMturett.Then til In rouf•I tlw t*cunlwr

wttdoos. u H H «

Merchantsadvertise init will givevalues for

mey.

. Jot Barry, country youth la .New York, *k«« out a living *•egra taker In a poor rooming houseand accordion pltfyer In LouieBtrtollhl'i restaurant. Lured bythe open country, he spendi • k.night In .the fields, .near New-burgh. Bertollnt discharge! him.friendless and "broke." h» is of-fered $10,000 by a man he knows

.only "hi "Martin" to Impersonatea liquor runner racing arrest. Itmeans the penitentiary, but Joe Isdesperate. He defers decision untilthe next night, and \i given 11,000"on account" Next day Joe de-posits 1800 in country banks, giv-ing Ms name as Joneph Bradley.Outntda a circus tent he sees anaccordion and In tempted to playIt. A girl. Sue Dayton, niece ofthe owner, who admires the music,urf{f>s him Td loin the circus, but.loe "ays he must flm return toNew York "on buslnt'fia." He ha*decided to refuse "Martin's" offer.In his room four man accost him.Hewlldered, Joe »fl«s the men, whoare detectives, find large amount*of money, a mnchine gun, andtwo revolvers. Next day, underarrest. Joe Is identified by menwho hnd seen him the night be-fore near Newburgh. when twnprohibition agenis were killed androhhed. Joe Is accused of theirmurdor nnd robbery. A man knowna« "Fullhouse," waiter at Ber-tollnl's, hurts Joe's case by hisevidence, "Martin" cannot befound. Joe keeps silent as to hisprevious day's doings, fenrlng toembarrass Sue Dayton. His cellrmate, Hymle Fradke, gives himISO-

CHAPTER IV—Continued

There came the swift, deep crack-ing of revolvers, not one but a dos&-en; a frosted door panel tingled andspread Its crnshlng glass to thefloor. There wpre shouts, the soundof many running forms, the wilecry of some one cursing nhove thechtler of gunfire; a third shot tookhnlf the glass from the transom,and with that the guard clicked thelock of the Oregon boot, swung toJils feet, and with a leap, reachedthe cage door. He nnlocked It, he

'swung It wide and darted through,then with the over-strength of ex-citement, slammed It heavily behindhim, nnd ran forth to the corridor,not looking hack. Joe Barry movedforward. The door had struck andrcboitnded too swiftly for the snap-lock to find Its receptacle; now Itswung wide to Its full extent, struckagainst Its .stop and^ then movedlazily hnck on the rebound, A formpassed Joe; it was the prisoner inthe Oregon boot. But he did notseek flight. He merely Btood therennd as the door came to the Jam.his hlg hand closed over It, .meshIng It Into Its proper,position. JoeBarry turned away, like an animalhe hud seen a cnge door wide openbefore him, like an nnimnl lie lindbeen afraid to risk'what freedomheld for him.

Wilder grew the sounds from out-side; a hundred voices shoutingnow. There were mote sliots--fromthe side of the mezzanine corridor,from the rotunda, from tiie stair-way, where some one evidentlystood at bay,

"Look out'." It was one voiceabove all the'rest. "He's got H shotleft! You, up there on the niezzunine, pull down on him!"

Then another voice sounded."Close In on him, down.there In

the rotunda,"Then tf long shot came from the

-itnlrw'uy. followed immediately hyttie booiulng of. a dozen guns. Theman In the Oregon boot lookedswiftly about hlhvtoward tlie pp-lleemen, guards nnd attaches In tli

.rotunda, struggling with tlie stni _mob • which now was flooding Intothe fmliaing. Tl(e Vff muscles of,hlis 'right shoulder bunched. Site,staring, saw htm slowly ipull ba,ckthe door,' i .•

"All rfcht, kid!" ho comnmnAed."Lain it!'1 - ' l ,

Joe gasped. • The door luid beenclosed, yet now it was open', day.'edly he understood. That greathund-had rulsed-|ust—ln -time to

1 catch It and hold the hasp a frnc-jtlon of an Inch from .its recep-tacle. Now, It stood open, beckon-

"Lnm, It!"• "But you?"

"Me?" The"Witli this?" . , . _,— ....boot on his right ankle. Suddenlyhe scowled, "Lain It, I said. Thinkyou can wait all day!". His free arm went forth andcaught Joe hy the shoulder, whirl-ing him through the door.

"Keep your head I" he whispered."Jam In with the crowd and Het

.'em ease you out I"Mincing, furtive. Joe Veached the

corridor. Some one caught,htm byan arm, swinging him angrilyabout, and half throwing himagainst a crowd of others much thesame as he, milling forms beingherded by excited rhen In uniform.

"Out* of the bullilng, there I" avoice sounded. "Make it snappy.Out of tbe building)''.

Another policeman caught him,and pushed, him forward. He halfturned Joe about, so that he c«uldlook toward the broad, castle-tikestairway. The crowd there hadparted for an instant, to reveal thesprawled form of a man. A sleekman, wltb form-BttIng clothing andgleaming hair. The' head wasrolled back, the eyes open, staringupon things they* could not see. Hy-role Fradke had kept his boaBt. Hehad beaten Dannemora.

"Go. go. go on—don't standaround all dayf" They were mov-Log Joe again, wltb s hundred otb-

erg, "Keap 'movingI" shouted apolleemnn. *;Qet off those.steps!"

Joe obeyed. Now he was on thelast tier, now on the sidewalk.

"Ke*p moving you—of! theblock I" A" mounted man had rid-den to the curbing and was; wavinga gloved hand at the throng there."OfT the block I"

Joe Barry went on. A\ the end

with the -soil of jail upon him andthe odjws of the fell block Mill inUs nostrils, he bad merely fol-owed a natural Impulse at the

sight of. ft sign. As for the clerkWho banded him his k/y upon its

he passed morea car rounded the

of the blockmounted men;corner before him, its siren scream-ing, Us tonneau loaded with police-men. Then a patrol went clangingby. Joe Barry walked on.

Within his brain there dinnedand shrieked the command to run.His nerves twitched with the de-sire. He could all but hear tb<ewords: "Bun—run—for G—d'ssake, run!"

But the man only continued towalk, with the thonsnnds of otherfree persons who cluttered the side-walks, he only continued to lookabout him with narrow, frightenedeyes, he only licked at his lips andwalked on. Far uptown, an hourlater, wearied by repression, hisleg's aching from the exertion whichhnd held them to a strolling strideJoe halted as he passed a smallcrowd before a radio stow. A voicewas shouting at him from thethroat of the loud-speaker.

"Station \VNYC Police Alarms.During a desperate effort at free-dom today at Criminal Courtsbuilding, Hymle Fradke, twenty-eight, New York gangster, waskilled by police when he attemptedto shoot hla way out with a revolv-er slipped to him by a confederatin' the hnllway as Fradke was be-

usury a turklsh Imili. Niiw

kpy)nstrubber ring, he was just another

fellow with a hangover, bearded,soiled, unkempt, seeking the puri-fying qualities of heat and soapand water after the pollution ofliquor. Joe snapped the runnerband about. his "wrist and turnedfirst' for the barber shop.

All this had been done hazily;almost subconsciously. The condi-tion continued until lie steppedfrom the chair, after the extrava-gance of a haircut, a f>hnre nnd ashampoo. A crumpled tabloidnewspaper was on a chair; hesighted a picture on the1 llrst page,passed it over with a glance, thenlooked at It more sharply. A wordabove the picture had Jerked himto attention; heavy, black letter-Ing, followed by a bulky exclama-tion:

"ESCAPED!"There came to Joe the overpow-

ering realization of this omnipotentthing known to htm as tlie police;He had been free only a short time,but the news of It was .already es-tablished arid old—old enough for

Ing led from a detention room tthe courtroom for trial. During,the confusion resulting, a man be-lieved also to be a confederate ofFrodke's escaped from a detentlocage ID magistrate's court His de-scription follows: Joe Barry, twen-ty-four, dark hair and eyes, heightfive feet nine, weight one hundredand forty-five—"

Joe Barry looked np. A few feetaway, stood a man In blue andbrass, diligently taking down thedescription in a milch-handled note-

one of its carriers to be crumpled,discarded, even by burber shoploungers. Every one must knowhim now; he clicked his teeth withrapidly tightening Jnws. [Us barher had pressed against him, In asurvey of the photograph.

"Them guys are certainly gettingfree with their hordwarp," he said."First thing we know, iheji'tl stealthe city hall. Tough buby, ain'tbe?" «

"fben the barber moved on, leav-ing Joe Barry still stnring at hisown photograph. Must the man beblind that he could not hnvo seenthe resemblance? At lust Joe Bar-y glanced Into the mirror.

The person he saw wns not theroan who glared at liim from nrogue's gallery photograph on thatabloid page. There wns the dif-

ference between youth mid age. In-nocence and granite hardness, Forhe features of th'e mnn In the pic-

ture were hard with Imte; he hadlooked what the picture portrayedhim to be. a sullen gungster, hat-ng his enptors. The face that he

looked irpon In the mirror was onlytired and fagged; a boy worn bygrief, and looking piteously at theworld, as If trying to understand.

Hymie Fradke Had Kept His Boast,He Had Beaten Dannemora.

book. Tlie voice above ceased, glvIng way to tiie lilt of a Jaz* drches-tea. The policeman opened hiscout and tucked, tbe memorandumwithin, Joe Burryj IteKed his lips.Then they both' walked on.

much relief now to thlfek bt money,precious though it might he. Hewns moving, where he (}i<i not rare;qnly that it be away from NewYork... . ; :'

When the end of the line arrived,Joe Barry stepped forth and lookedabout htm with more ot coh.IWen.ce,He wns away from New York andit« canyons of buttressed fear; tfl?rehe could plan with something ofcalm. • Early thnt afternoon hewalked slowly past a bank In asmall Pennsylvania town nttdlooked within.

This was to be his trial. Cer-tainly bnnk-ers would wat<'h tnenewspapers, and he alert for thesight of criminals. Immediately,Joe fought against the word; hewns ,not a criminal, he told himself. But he Iniiiilied mirthlessly;it was a grlmnre and an expulsionof- nrerith, little more, lie wasadjudged a criminal and he'wns be-ing hunted as a criminal; n mur-derer. If thnt made It any elenrer,and what difference did It make itIn his own mind, be knew himselfto l « innocent?

That was bad reasoning. Itmade him shaky. Then suddenlyhe whirled, walking swiftly, andturned In at the door of the bank.

"Good afternoon," he soldi andwaited. The banker looked up.

"Oh, hello," he said, and smiled."Back to make that other deposit!"

Joe Barry cleared hla throat."No—I'm sorry, I've got to draw

out some money.""Certainly, certainly." Then tbe

banker passed over a saving ac-count withdrawal slip and mnde aremark about that most casual ofthings, the weather. After a time,Joe picked up the pen. His bandhad stopped Blinking.

Then, almost before he realizedIt, he was ouj of the bank. Free,and money In his pocket. He haddrawn only half of his deposit butIt was enough. There would he noneed to take the risk of going tothe other hank; all custodians ofmoney might not be alike.

He had money In his pocket-two hundred dollars. He could buya ticket all the way across tbe con-tinent with that and still have 11something to live on after he hadmade the Journey. His brain wasfilled with the thought, of the clat-ter of trains, the rush and roar t ofmiles slipping away beneath \nstrange cities where one could loseoneself, ships at anchor, lookingfor eager, hardworking young men.More and more glorious became

Not a "Luxury"Dentistry is not a "Luxury," but * vital "Necesiity."When positions or "joba" «re scarce it is the mm oriroman with the good appearance who Is preferred . . .and good-looking teeth ire the dominant feature ot inimpressive personality.

A Vital "Necessity"Come to us »rid have your teeth cleMed . . ..thftte yel-tbwed or blackened tooth "stumps" removed or thoseunsightly "gaps" closed up. (

We can1 improve your, appearance . . . . make you morehealthy . . . increase your efficiency •""" -fcl- ••-cope with the present depression. •

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We perform alt branches ofdental work—Fitllntt, Extrac-tions, Plate »nd Bridge Work,Crowns, Pvorrhea Treatment,X-ray and Dental Cleanings.All at the lowest possible cost.

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The hnrber returned. and-bAnded-hini tiis check, to he settled on hisdepnrture from the big bathhouse.Joe Hurry went onwfird, to the ele-vator, and to the locker floor, thereto be assigned his l>ed, tp divest

the thought of the far away. ThenIt all was gone.

For Joe Barry realized that bewas standing still, half turned fromthe chipped sidewalk which led tothe blackened railroad station, Be-

himself of his clothing, and to give fore him was a wooden fence, andIlls orders to the floor boy, ns he I upon, that fence,, the rain-washed.

CHAPTER 'V,

prisoner grinned,He.< eyed I lie steel

INSTINCTS which Joe BoTrjy'dMl .not bnow> He poss^sefl now, hadassumed control;.'his brain Was atutmoll.' his exterior calm, liewanted to run, he wanted to hurryto a railroad station and eaten thetlrst train out of town, but ho onlywandered along a side street, look-ing In a window here and there.At lust, h • entered a turklsh 'bath,-and walking silently to the clerk's

pulled out the money whiche Fradke- hnd given Mm,

placing it In the tln^ deposit boswhich the clerk I as silently extend-ed hliu. •, I - • i

As an escaping animal* seeks thecamouflage of vegetation that willmatch its protective coloration ,soJoe Barry, by instinct, had gone tothe one place and the one thingwhich, for a time, at leant, wouldmean his freedom. He did notknow that the main Ingredient ofescape was not the breaking ofbonds, but the actions which fol-lowed) With the first tenseness ofthe breakaway over, be slowly hadbegun to revert to the ordinarythings of life which he had known.The police did not flnd him in thepoolrooms and clear stores andspeak-eaBles which .they searchedan bis natural habitat, because henever had known them. The pd-lice, In fact, were looking for agangster,. a pal and confidant ofHymle Frtfdke, whose hate of Dan-nemora had caused him to battlesingle-handed against the enforce-ment power of the greatest city IDthe world. They were not lookingfor a man who did innocent thln'gsbecause he was an innocent manand whose mounting desire, eversince he realized that freedom hadbeen literally thrust upon blnvwaato be clean.

Joe Barry Umged for Just that.Ruring hia etty life hl» "one extrav-agance had been tbe comparative

bunded over hla shoes for shiningfind his clothes for the tullor'sIron.

Tlie door opened to take him tothe clatter and heat of the bath-rooms deep In the basement.

No one noticed him;, the sweat-Ing men In the stenm room, theshouting ligures which plungeddhnut the pools. .Toe* Barry won-dered what the ruhners would ,do;ttiey who had time to study menunder their energetic manipula-tions. 1 But they* only asked him.after the soaping and showeringwas over, If he would -hnve oil oralcohol. Fjnally he was baekj onhis floor nnd the hoy was-preced-ing him to Ipull back the blanketson his bed.\ ©tilled, relaxed tfor the first timeIn days, he felt tlie soft*tout* ofn- clean • pillow. Tha smoothness

{k'nUe . warmth of blanketsCrept iilvout tils shoulders. • WhenL

J l - | t wns with the jtnowl-.n eflj lijilit., Jo« Barry

throw the onvefs from him, fllmrtsf

tattered, posters of a departed cir-

cus.

excUeilly, nnd swung to thf side ofthe 'he'd.

It w a s , a s If he 'hud ..,.„...,.„something, of vast importance. Illssubconscious mliiil, wns telling himto hurry, as If there was n trnlnto he made, or im all-engrossingappointment whVli could not wait.He dressed nml-wnshe<J with tlietitr of n ninn whose minutes musthe counted. He iWge-ted at. thecounter downstairs, nnd wrotesenitchlly on the account pad whenthe clerk passed It over for him foenumerate the amount of his tips.Then he reached eagerly for thetrifle less Ijlmh ten dollar* whichwas due him and hurried from thebuilding. Yet he' did not knowwhere to go, he did not truly real-ize why he must rush so—therewas something to he pone—some-thing to be don^-hnlfway down theblock, he halted, his lower Jaw sag-ging. Tbat screaming thing with-in his brain was calling to him torun, to run, and because of that heonly walked along,I an unnoticedearly morning worker movingacross town toward—where, he didnot. know, *

Common sense held Mm from therailroad stations-; the very factthat these were denied,him senthim into the subway and to a Jer-sey City ferry. And at Jersey heJust walked, moving where thecrowd took him. At last, buttingbefore the traffic, he aaw s suburban bus move toward him; Involuntarlly he-rutsed hla hand Innal. The big vehlvle halted,door opened, and be was within,bound anew upon an aimless Jour-ney. Others had gotten on wltbhim; It had given him time to think

"All the way," he said to theconductor, and .Kan(led him a five-dollar bill, He received change.without counting i t There was too

Two, days later, Joe Barry stoodon the curbing of a down-town bnslness block In the quiet olti town ofFrederick, Md., his own troublesfoV the Inoment forgotten. Fromfar down the street, there came thefaint music of a band, '• risingthrough the stendy overtones of Itsbass drum. With this the'crowd-ed sidewalks forgot other thing* Inan undulating bulge-toward thecurb, like the sweep of a1 wave.

The must? of the hand becameleuder. Joe Barry edged 'forward.He had come here only after* men-tal travail. In a few minutes nowthe "grand, glittering and gloriouspageant" of the Bayton- Blotterscircus, would pass him, and hewould see little of it, save one iwrvson. And when that view had beengained, that one lilt of worshln. si-lently nnd. sur.reptltlousltf given,Joe. Biiciy;twould go nn—to far

l ; to s'h'lpH thuf KniWI:W Seng,l h ld t d t h i

better able >to.

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ti pHe 'felt he could not do otherwise.

He had fi|U 'ht Jt'-all dut. that dayhe hud'iseen ttie'ti<ist£rs, down bythe railroad 'station. Conditionshad chnnged since,'Hushed with thelure of."a new life, Joe Barry hadpromised to (mnne •hack to the Pay-ton Brothers circus just as poon ns\e could be released "from his oth-er joli"

No\y, he knew, there could be norelease. [His job was a Job of alife or (Ifhtli; eitjier It dung to himlike a hateJ scobrge, to haunt himthroughout the tears, or It wouldsend htm to'wlfere men, screamedand beat their' ipugh shoe3-againstthe floor late at nlgllt when one oftheir number, his head shaved andhis tronser legs slit to make wayfhr the touch of clammy electrodes,went through a little door, never tocome back. Joe Barry bad beenforced In the last few, year-likedays, to face this situation withsomething of dull resignationthere was nothing else to do. Buthe complications of his heart hadnot. In the turmoil, been reckonedwith.

The poster had brought them In-to sharp relief. Lonely, harassed,hungry for some one who would bekind to him, be had stood beforethose tattered circus bills likereverent neflBon before an altar. Ihe could only gee her and hear netvoioe; If he could once more standbeside her, watching the slantlnsun string It* filmy gold througher soft hair, to have her talk thim, the tones of her as stiff as acarets 1 The protective side of hliqhad cried out against the thoughtwhll« the heart of him throbbeand pounded for her and demanded her, this one thing above a!! thworld. So,, at last, there bada compromise.

(TO BB CQNT1NU8D.)

Giveu$ a trial and be convincedHigh Pressure Aleraite Gun Used

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PAGE FOUR W0ODBR1DGE LEADER, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1932_

DEFEAT OLDRIVALS IN SLOW TILTBtfort Woodbridf* U w 16 At

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WOODBRIPCE LEADlft. FRIDAY, MARCH 4t Ml

WOODBR1DGE LEADER SCHOOLDAYSPUBLISHED EVERV FRIDAY

Main St., Woodbridge, N. J. Holered at the Po«t Office atWoodbridge, N. J , us Second Claw Mail Matter

LAWRENCE P. CAMPION; Manattr .ROTS WOLK, City Bdltor

Subscription *1.60 a Year. Payable \n Advance '

Phon« Woodbridge 8-1400itfpublication of nowi and editorial nfalXer In thoa«columns it i>ermtu,e<\ provided credit is given toTlio Woodbridge1 Loader. Correspondencr froiureaders, expreatints opinions on topics o( interest.nre solicited, bill no anonymous letters wiil b*>

Friday, March 4th, 1932

By DWIG *TEMS OF INTEREST

AMERICAN LEGION DRUM COftPS •

Ma the easiest tHing in the world to sit back and watch~r ie.now uotne r worn—ana then U ne succeeds o*

one to pat him on the back, or if he" tails, to beas prompt in giving mm tore weitsjtntmn "raw

but never do anytning to help. Why,vthat wouiuanu you woulun t tnniK ot such a thing, woula

&ree years ago (it aeems a short time, doesn't it),rmge iownsnip coiim put out its chest ana say,fcve one ot the oest, if not the best, drum and bugie

ita tne State of New Jersey." Just three short years| e Vvoouuriage fost, No. »/, American Legion, had a

urp tii'dt won tropny alter trophy. Evidence of theirice m periormnig, in ueanng, can be. seen in the

| case 111 me American Legion rooms at the Memorialu buiiumg. in contest alter contest, the local out-

jf. prizes lor the best appearing corps, tor the mostpresent, for the best piaying. Tnrough the out-

age began to be known. When asked aboutNuge,.an outsider, especially if a World War Vet-

*ouiu say, "Uh, yes, that's the town thatf has. thatrum ana Bugle corps." ,)

that's the town that used to have a crack drumlie corps. That's the town that had the second

Iprps in the state and the first in North Jersey. Yes.ite To#n that had 40 members in the corps and hadthat number in trophys won in New Jersey ana

now Woodbridge cannot boast of its.drum corps.| past year the Legion outfit has not entered a single

They are supposed to rehearse every Tuesdaylay night at School No. 1, but how many show upVare handful, the oldstand-bys. The rest are con-

$tet George do iL It's much easier you know,feodbriage wants to know what the trouble is, youjoys. Are you going to be slackers in this late stagt

tgame ? Is that the way you did things in the days'18? Did you let George do. it then? You didyou are not going to fail now! At that rehear-

jfht you are going to come out 100 per cent, strongjfo your bit to make Woodbridge a town worth broad

about. And no more of letting George do it, eh?

STARTSTo SCHOOL

i* Uur.i Itrod'liuiid, of Oreeu. ha* returned (mm nwith hoi clatvr, Mm,

Fuiw, or v/cm Nt'wtotvM-ftitB.* . • • * .

Mr. imd Mrs, Kdmund Rowland•John nud Holen . have

from >\vt>nt>l to', their np*on Llndpir iiv'emic,'' Wood-

bridgt). „ , . ,» • . • » •

Word tftiK Iw-n-rttrfctvod h'frrk Oftlu< denth'of Mr>: Robert Dean, of

•j Wlnfteld, MUHB., mother of Mrs.l.Sjshuyler C.'.l'ewt.»ot 'Morrit'town,' formerly of Woatlbrtdge. The lateMrs. D»an died art the home of he>daughter, Sunday. Tnie body hasWsen wni to Wlnfteld where hnrletwill be hfcld.

* • * • , » * .

The Lafayette Country club ofFords will hold a danee tonightat the club on Malmtreet.. Musicwlrrfce furntahed by Ernest Chris-topherson'i orchestra.

The Qood,F*rt«ndB Ctaas of theMethoAlit Sunday School will proBent "Booatlnn Bridget," a farcecomedy in one act, on Friday nightMarch 11, Mrs, H, U. iBrulsch JocoacBlhg the east which Include*:Misses, Margaret Mack, Leon aRyerkuM Vi»gln}a Leonardfl JeanDecker, irraa Deter, Edna Geigoiand Eleanor Bills.

• * *Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Scheldt, of

Eaet avenue, Sewaren, entcrta'neda group of frlerfds Saturday nigh Iin honor of Mrs. Sehcidt'a- birth-day. CardB were played nud prlz-

to repeat It on t'riday ninht,March 11, and charjtc a »mal! ad-

Mlun prl. e. The iirurrcdit willbe devoted to tluv let and inlik

Tin' L-yo-pU Kroup of iht> Canip-Vlrc (liilB )iel>i it aucce»i<(iil iwn-eflt,.c«.rd party Friday night at thulto'm« or Mr,' andl fn . pilver N.l-lon, oi-Hllhlde avet>\ic, The «t iewfnners went Mm. F. Barrett,:«».,BUne Logan, Mlu Ri(a tiaum.ln,Mini Margaret Nllson, ,Mlpi Dor-othy Lcwlt.' Mik Bertha Mandy,MU# Klorence/oibrlck. Mlw Mar-,guerito 8 Ibermann, , Mini ViVlanApptemte, Mr*. O T. Jrtlsen, Mr*.R. Therkeltep 'nnd X). 1,' Nllt^n.

• • »

tihf Marie Large, of Avenel,wat hottest at a.party given atner horn* on, George ttre«t, mhonor ot her sixteenth1 birthday.The'guetts were: Lillian andTfte'mR-Anderson, Fellee Donate,Helen Butter, Marlon Suchy, MaryDetweller, Ruth D« Youn», Kath-leen Dody, Donald Zenobln, Jos-eph Joy, Burl Smith, George Acton,Oscar Large, Jack Buchanan, MluMae Burner* Mr. and Mr*. OscarLarge and Mro. Mae Began,

WOLVES IN WOOL ttime draws near to the date of the majoi1 party

ions, the air is becoming clarified with respect tothe causes that have had a marked effect on the

the political and the international entangle-' our country.Jministration at Washington is blamed, rightly or

., . for refusing to assist in our economic recoveryIpioning the cause of capitalism against the work-fpposing an increasing demand for the libt-ralia-Jihe Volstead Act. Again for taking^sides with tnet "owner" and his wine cellar againsVth desire off.tnan who justiiiedly causes no "sinfumess" in his

to have a glass of wine or beer. .ics, the leaders of the Democratic Party are at!g of the ways with the administration, charging

cabinet officers of Mr. Hoover are claiming for the..per-human prerogatives, in his supposed leader-all questions of the progressive government thatlocrats are seeking to establish since Garner was

liead of the House of Congress,even charged that the President's, friends took theLincoln from his pedestal a few days ago and made.

like fin "also ran" in comparing the virtues of the'

resume transactions with the wealth of this country again.They are not the losers.

But the Canadian government has its own thoughts inthe matter, and so totiay they are negdtiating a preferent-ial form of treaty to be submitted to 'all of the dominionsof the British Empire, waging a campaign to buy and sellEmpire goods on a reciprocal baBis to the exclusion oftheUnited States from their markets. Again we ask, who arethe losers?

And we now charge (rather trifely), that the Americanpeople are the losers, who by the sweat of their brows arecondemned to slavery for their daily bread. The Americanworkers and their families are the sufferers. The poor, hav-ing nothing, lose even that which thy have not.

It is different with the rich. 'Capital refuses to be kick-ed, even -at the hands of its "frien,ds" but instead of exhib-iting the spirit and principle of ita intumescent Americanism, it condones the acts of the oppressors of our land bymoving its factories and capital to foreign ports.

It is estimated that American industries are setting upbranch factories in Canada at the rate of 150 new estab-lishments a year. How are we going to break the depress-ion with capital moving to foreign ports? How can theAmerican worker find work to do when the means of hislivelihood are removed beyond his reach?

With this condition of facts patent to all, itris about timethat the administration at Washington started in to Worryabout things American.

Congressmen and senators were elected by you to beyour voice.

FREE!GLADIOLUS

To advertise our superiorWashington Bulbs we ore giv-ing away several thousandGladiolus Premiitiiws Hy-brids, a new. tyiK- <>[ Gladiolushighly recommended on ac-count ot the long floweringperiod and the <'\<|u!site pft.su*coloring If planted In pucceB-BIOH, they will bloom (rum

_M§y to November. Mall thisad. with 10c (no stamps- forpacking and mailing of onepackage containing 12 bulbsguaranteed to bloom, \

This offer la good (or 10days only,

Puutet Sound Bulb Co.820 Republic -BuiMing

Seattle, Wash.

In some mule* H niiinh<>t if ifffervhi elm 11 IT'S tiuvt* IHCII frinucilby Ilif U'ulKlnlin-t* mill cl| c- mepermuted n choice of tlii>i<e.> Inoilier mules «>inli i-lty "fcltiM 18 iM-riiillini to (mm* \\t,

ea were won by Mra, George Hr-1 chiUPti-r. which when It IKban, Mrs. Samuel J, Henry, E. 9 n> '!''' vtm-re. «»*•» Inn. ,-nrnt pmWheeler and Movrison Cliriat i«. vl<l(1(l " <*-IVH imi iMinilli-t with It*The guests were Mr. and Mrs. F. • W "1VV(I ^ wtiwiinitlim In aJ. AdamB, tor. and Mrs. Samuol J '•"*Henry, Mr. and'Nfm. E. S. Wheel-,er, Mr. -and Mra. Morrison Chris- >tie, Randolph Worter and Airs. •George Urban.

• * •Thf progr m t;lven by tho Little

Woman's club at their "OucstNlRht" Friday was auch, a markedsuccerB that it has been decided ;

\ the ch)iVtf»OUS

furiii fur dllc* of vari

L»wi uf EtlquMUAll the IHVVB oi t'tliini'in* enn

si1i'i|iiiiii't> BtitimitMl up In nmil' "lio wliilti'vi'i \n initiinil miltdull I Ihlnh ' ;ilmt|l 1| "

([tyred dead with the attributes of the living executive,international matters, it is a "well known fact that,ington has liown more concern In the stabilization

of Europe than it hivs exhibited in' the wel-..f America. "We must not have too many ships gunsba eB, or too large ah army'or navy, because the

»f Nations ai d the'Wo4d.CfilirL.i1tS Step-child, for-Be things." , Where are we drifting? Are ,we af

tfnd independent peopl'o, or an appendage to the' i and wishes of an ephemereaj bureaucracy, a group

^rupteea, holding court threethousand miles away?of the outstanding blunders of'the administration

Jrundy-Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act. No one can deny jiifi infamous piece of legislation is to be justly blam-,•the continuance of hard times ' and empty dinner (

^ that is the portion of millions of our workers* As an .>le of the destructiveness to American industry,it about by that act, let us consider the losses SUB-in our trade relations under the present tariff laws,,

Dominion of Canada. .fo digress for a, moment,e of interest to the reader to become acquaintedfollowing record: *

en 1911 and 1921, Canadian trade, with the*Umted.icreased from 139 milliohs'to 542 millions. Ourturn increased in a proportionate ratio, amounting

millions nt the end ofthe decade. This vast sum re-• American exports represented approximately 25

of our total foreign business.. With the inaugur-1tthe Fordney-McCumber Tariff Act, Americani ex-apped to 292 millions. l•. ) \,rastic provisions of the Fordney-McCumber Act'Entirely alienate the friehdlines arid trade of theas as is shown by the period 1921-31 when the rec-Ifollows: . • "--•v bought $7,535,000,000 of American products,. bought $5,000,000,000 of Canadian products.

_a comfortable balance of more than twpmilUonIvor. Then came the Grundy-Hawley-Smbot TariffIB it effected Canadian exports to ou* country, itn additional $150,000,000 on ta<anufac£urers andists who sought to do business with us.mi of protection to American industry was con-jo high-handed and our erstwhile friends anqi ifo the North took the bit between their teeth and

jsed to do business with us. Who are the losers?lends of Grundy, Mellon, et al., in whose fovor the

rift act waa passed, are apparently satisfted,„ their vast financial interests they feel thatford to mark time .and yet suffer no hardships

'Of {to world "

ptily a few minutes without leaving

your office-^-by telephone.

You can call 100 miles for 60 cents

id the daytime; almost 200 miles for• . • * • .

60 cents after 8.30 p. m.

Stop Getting Up Nights

PHYSIC THIS IUJ.VDDEU WITHJUNIPER OIL \

' Drive out.the impurities and ex-cess adds Ui:it cause irritationburning and frequent desire. Jimt-per oil, bucliu lcj\vea, etc, is con-tained1 In Buliets, the bladiU1'" i>hy-sic. It works on the bladder similar "to castor oil on the bowels.Get a 25c test box from any drupstore. After four days If not re-lieved of "getting up nights" gobaqk and get your money. If youore bothered with backache or legpa,[a,B caused from bladder dis-orders you are bound to feel brft-ter after this cleansing and youget your regular, sleep. Sold atThompson Dfake, druggist.

MARGIE'S'Ufc BEAUTY SHOfPE

Ftngerwave • Haircut -'MnrcelleManicure - Sh miHk) - Hot Oil

Facial • Eye Brow Arch. Open 9:00 A. M\ to 9:00 P. M.

Permanent Wave %%.BO•77 ItahwAy Ave., Wtoodbridge

Phone: Woodbridge 8-2200

The Paulus DairyEstablished 1890

Main Office:

Phone: 2400

189-195 New St

New Brunswick, N,

Paulus1 Positively Perfectly

Pasteurized MilkRaw milka produced by tuberculin and blood tested

cow»: Walker Gordon Certified, Golden Guern-

sey, Suydatn's Special, Rutger't Special

Distribution-Covers: New Brunswick, Highland Park,

South River, Sayreville, Parlin, South Amboy,

Perth Amboy, Woodbridge^ Carteret,

> Fords, and Metuchen, N. J, ,,

TA'BIETS - SALVEB6« Uquld or Tabled uied tntornill)MUl 66S SilVe externally, m»ko * comptote u d «fleetlv« trmtment far Colds.Most Speehy Remwlles Known

ONEFRIENDTELLS

ANOTHER

WE SPECIALIZE4N FANCY CLEANINGI

PRESSING....REPAIRINGALTERATIONS OF ALL KINDS ,

DRESSMAKING 1

"CAM VS AND WE'LL CALL P R O M r W "WOodbridge 8 -

1 7 3 5MAIN STREET WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

State Theatre Building

NSW JERSEY BELL

TELEPHONE COMPANY

A. NIW nmiiY ujtrmmoH BACKID »V NATIOMAI H^OUWM

• 4 * -

"Alfd, Bunut inimt good.iuiWH.

the pjaco to tmy tmrc food'reasonably,"- io one friendteilH another."i

THE WOODBRIDGEDELICATESSEN

102 MAIN STREET

Wake Up Your Liver Bile-Without Calomel

And TonH Jump Oat of Bedb the Morning Rarin' to Go

IJ TOO fed ioor u d mn)c and theworld loolaiHmlLdoo'tiWfcllowtJoto( Mitt, minmLwtt*. oa, luattntn&f at dwwtof poo u d tspw*ttan to nuto you nddentr mak•nd buoyant •ndfuflotwBihtefl.

Fc* thay ain'A do It They onlymove the bowea and a mere mov»>n»nt doesn't g«t at the cause. Thenuon for your down-and-out fuelingtil your liver. It should pour out twopounds of liquid bile into your howeli

41 Oh M» k Mt Botrtnt tt*b, Jtmdotaa't (Kurt- It to" &*W ta tO H U M U op ram MoMacb. I n

M . u d row bnMh k M , * k> b bbaUm Ta« hmk

•eba u d yaa M ds«» iad Mt. Yar 1

UVW RUB «»n* tiyn tm> pownbJ IW - d

y Wteia wamtarfnl, bwista,«t«tb| i Utrmcta, ouuriag «bM it H H t»

*Bm don't ult Iprllw pills. A* forC»rt«'iI4ttl« LJvar Pills. Look (or the nun« C»rt»rtLittle JUvtr PUU >« the rad label. Rawot •

l C

Page 6: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

Tht njae raiiroad*

v: •'

Page 7: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1932

FARM TO OFFERSPECIAL VALUES

ON ANNIVERSARY

The Farm Market, of 224-226FIREMEN WIN Smltli stret, Perth Amboy, Is cel-

The Third Alairrn Boys took two games out of- three, ebmrng IU six monthsi the Schwenzers by a $lim margin at the Craftsmen's S a f + f s K maimKor,

a'leys in a Civic League match, Wednesday night, department ahd Herman Rosenj'erkuas was top man with a 223 chalked up to his credit, (eld ol the Rrocery department'lers who reached the two hundred mark were Einhorrt, wl»h^0. «xPrBBI1 t n o l r

iSchwenzer and Al Simonsen.The scores: .

IV. The Destruction of Atlantla.

The Heaveiin are TelUnji.(from the oratorio "'TheCreation"! Hayden !

Tlie vocal imrt n.y the eho.r nfthe Third Presbyterian churchof EltiabPtli, N J.

SPECIAL NUMBERS

! Piano S o t o • , ' _ 'Miss Ruth Erti ' •,

a. Humorcfiine Tschitlkoiskyb. .Scotcll l'oeni - , '•

Fords ChurchOffers Large

Minstrel ShowCoiitinii-jrt from Page One

(ihornilCk .orneaer ..

IU8B

•FIRH fX). (2)

192: 160

194,.....'17

......1.168

. ttCHWICXZOTt (1)J. Schwenier .204 191

204- 169 S, Pnimmond ..:J62175 167. tunlBon lfHi 169

.192' 174 Schubert lliO169. .178 Lorch : .-.•176 130217 223 Al Slmonsen , 179 202

ToUlB 864 967 899

117

" 1.5 217.0176

• 1 5 6

Tota l s . . . .'...897 852

and thanks to the ronnycustomers.

They tUkc pride and pleasure toknow that their aim to nerve thepeon!e right'at nuch low prices onfoods ha» been rtccompllslied. Inact it was the Farm Market, they

ctalra, that Juirt made prison .finfoods come down In Perth AmTxiy1.On Friday * and • Saturday, themanagers of both ," department!have prepared specials priced solow, Buch as never have^een.hea'rdof before In Amboy. In comme

hI moratlon of thlB occasion the meati ANDY SHINES AGAINThe American Legion 'retreated to its dugout last, department win present each meat

lit when the .Craftsmen'took all three garrjes at the purchaser with a full package ofBen Street alleys. Andy Simonsen knocked the pins for BU*ar cured jiiced Bacon, free)w when he totalled 661 for the three, fle tallied 222,t and 195. Stan Naylor displayed some"pretty consistentrling with 222, 202 and 184.

Bagger, of the Lcgionaires, starred however when heied 256 in the second game. He just missed beating out

friend Andy, when he dropped considerably in thescore. Anyway his total read 622.

The scores:AMR1UCAX I,K<1ION (0)

CKAI1SMEN |Slmonaen 222

laylor 22.2limonsen 192iwenzer 184Bvt ...166

Choir To SingAt High School

Concert Tonight(Continued from Page One)

244 196 Wltherldge 153202 184 Kllcoy - 18320() 162 Elnhorn 15716* '17 2 Sullivan ...... , .......142206 176 Dagger 200

1701SS14718325fi

168189170161Ifi6

Vloha Solo . » • ', . ' •Brrifc Ft-rdlnandBon ,

'Trumpet S<>loMr. Otto Ugervall .

Clarinet Duet '6eorge, Acton iinfl Donald l>el.|n

French Horn So\oOenrge fcspoBlto' r

AcconiqaniatB . 'Miss Ruth Ejrb nnd MIBB Dorothy

' Terhtine '

The dance .orchestra Is' HarryBrown's,

Mr. LagervaIt will play severalfrom among the following solos;Polka Petite by -Goldman, .T!\eCavalier by -Walter mlth, ''Jose-phine" a waltz by Uohunilr Kryle,These trumpet solos are all Inter^eating and well calculated to givean opportunity for the soloist tofascinate you with his perfecttechnique and wonderful tone-qualIty.

Many in the community haveheard Miss Ruth lCrb play thepiano and know that BUCII tech-nique and interpretation as

lick, Henry Soluiildt."Harryi Paul 'Smalley, Alt*John YtilinK. John IknaiBky, Wil-bur Illanriuinl. Anthpny Ctt'.uiu-Mttl, K. O. Denny. Wilbur

A der, Andrew Koch, Anthony KtuJ,Andrew I.esko, John Mako, Mat*tin Novak, lltiijuird Peterson,fi\;iilmt Sen£, William Sheiwjola,

'P.'^W. Seyanlck, John Ynnovnkyand Joseph Zlck. •• •

Numbers during intervnlMlon:KIBB Me Agnln", .cor.net au'lo,

Esiroslto;. "Little Gypsy

JOHN' WEYGAND

John Weyeand, 52, at one time.B of tlu> woalth.est cliUeitH of

thi' Town«hlp and,one of lu< larg-est, property owner*, died yester-day morning at the MiddlesexGeneral hospital at New .Bruns-wick. - ;. • •'. . •

Weygahd Wan sentenced to thecwunty workhouse on a drun;k antfdisorderly ohante. by Jodfe B/W.Vp«*l on February S3. ty;''wa»tnitftRed, an a barber In tin' werk-t;»use. Yesterday marnlnt lie'

TotalB 986 1020 889' Totals 835 344 844

AVENILTES COP ANOTHER

uThe double eagles made by Nier, Alandaker, Peterson..trad Larson at the Green Street maple alleys helped thethird warders win two out of three from the Fleas by a veryIjJOBe margin. Keating, the twb Deters and A. Lee were the

' i)Mn who topped the double century marks for the FirstWtTders. The story:

A V K N K I J (»)

Mtadamaker

Totalu

.22714B

....82202174

18415B14 «]«;')20X

187236lit 3171172

!)41 X54 '59

KeatingH. DeturM. Can |iIlernHtein(J. DeterA. Lee

FLKAS (1)

148182154191

: 202

202178

1X22 5713D

176201172

171180

Totals 180

es Win HardFought Contest

With JayveesAcen won a html 1'ought

from llu' SUDUH I'urthLyceum Ju.wcvs nt .theHouse lust wick, Hit' I1II;L1Jadlnu 27 to 2 1. 'IMit^Awere leiuling the locals* ut

quarter , !l to tl. Thut the load at tin? halt

the liilfi IIUSHIOH whlatrtBcort' board, rewd 12 to 10

r . jB . were outst-ortd In theItanza by oni; point but

a comeback in thu flna

"Gfi>U" Baku-led the scoring fot d z l p flvc with 8 polutt

Istva.n tjeored six points1 captured Kcoiing ho;ioj;

plng live Held f-'oalH anc1B for a total of 12 to,lea"vee», ItalKiL ;\ilili'd s k nior

DX scoh's;ACES

fUkttanzlo,

Ht, culo,

Ijaan, gB

G..3220

,F. \P?6lo

. oo

ORCHESTRAThree DanceH from HenryVIII ...'.: Edward German

I. Morris DanceII. Shepherd's Dance

III. Torch DanceCripple Creek

Lamar SpringfieldShow Boat Jerome KernAtlantis (The Lost Con-tinent Safranek

1. Nocturne and MorninKof PralBe

II. A Court FunctionIII. "I Love Thee"

1B only possible after years of care-ful study and :i keen .appreciationof mUBlc.

MIBS Dorothy Terhune the ac-companist . is nn accomplishedpiano soloist. Anyone who 1B in-,terested In' the accomplishmentsof a High school orchestra will geta keen ejoyment from their musicand any who attend the concertmerely to hear some beautiful realmusic will not Im disappointed.

Sweetheart", "Songs My MotherUsed to Slug1' and ".Let Me Call)'ou Sweetheart1', piano accpfdlan,Stephen Kaieka*.

Part 2: "Doing liew Yor.k'.1

Mies Rltn Hlggins, assisted byJennie Bana'sky, Mary ElkoMary Komlsky, Agnes AntonldesElizabeth Oalya, Mary MorrellSue Moznr, Irene Zlgan, MaryZellcokovlce, and Elizabeth OT

lleltly; "Happy Lantllng", Kathrrlno .I'KO and compuny; "Put onYour Old Gray Bonnet." JosephT. h'itXmtrald.; "Mo-and My Shadow", rfpeclal request, "Dob" LevIne; "By the Sigamore Treo," Hel«u Cllitor; Tap dance, Joan

; CIOK dnnco, Marlon AnlonldeaDariee and Song, Elizabeth Mor

Read the Leader Regularly

plained of palnn mid; lie vat re-.ifKed to- the hosp.UI where- he;ed a ghort_Jlmp»liitcr. >\n auiop]

«y was performed Jby Couny t'hy-julclnn John L.MtjOovern' ;

The' latfl Mr. W«y.cand I* mi-vlyfd by l«Q\ Bont, j o h i K> andLouis H. Wejgand of 69 S Bar-rtm avenue, Woodbrid^o, .Thefuneral will be beld tomorrow

tternoofi Rt 2«: 30 o'clock from tttehome of hid sonn, U e v . KrnesiAbbott, pastor'of the'First Pres-byterian church, Wnodbrfdgo .willofficiate: In'ternjent will followIn the Presbyterian cemetery.

MTK.VLS TIK8

PAGE FIVE

DMth Alon« Ends DuelB«t¥r««ii Fif hting FUh

Stamtie Afhtlni flsh have r«dfln, which they wave at friend ormetay, .If they ever hitd a friend.ThtN JBib nre known to the tradeu Bettt dmbflRdlt, and in Slnmthfjr t r t trained to battle In th«(Mnntf ot eock-Dshtlni.. Natlvn ofSlam i n fond ot Betta CtmboidUbtrtle*. . .

Thtj take two .mule* and putthem In separate howU nf water.Then th«j bWng * Itiwj full of fe-males, placing It between th« twocombatant*.

TW malti) it*r* ra|h*r rwenifullfa t tach other for a bit Then theyerndunlly sitwt jewing Ha«t/.' They

.heitln chumlnit up the unte'r, way-*lng th^lr i-eil fln* And looking dug-gen at each other.' Plnsll'y, whenfnelr wrath rtsdiei the stage thatthey'T* • t)Uh«r cot to flght-or ex-plode, they . a / 6 tosaed. .'nto thesame tank.

From then on" the action Is fast.The Betta CntrihoRdla take theirfighting sWtotuly nnd there are norett periods nor long counts. Theyfight until on* or the other Is dead.

. *A fine of $25 and costs watt im-

posed upon Steve An'doe, 45, ofA'lce plnco, Woodhrldt-'e, by,D W V l i li

rell; clog.waltz, Hetty LaForge"Happy l'eet", Ellen Thompson"All of Me". Mary Iiwhler; "WasThat the Human Tiling to Do",Huth- Blanchard; "Call Me Darl-•ln&V, Bertha- Moore; "Home", En-

1 ^ * ^The commtttp in charge of the

affair Include: Mrs. John R. Egan,Jr., president of the 'Rosary; MISHAnna Suteh, president of the So-dality; Mrs. S. Darbaotta, presi-dent of the raront-TeBChers;Adolph Quadt, D. ,J Desmond, H.

Big Nol . . From Littl. Hor.In the Eighth centnry, or there-

abouts, when the Vikings desiredto summon a council or bodj ofsoldiers they did so with the use ofa horn of peculiar construction, andtwo of these have recently been

. ( sent to this country for exhibition4_purp«ses*1n a museum. The Instru-

ment consists of a long curled tubegrndiinlly expanding into a (Inrewhich Tesemhlrt somewhat a mod-ern loud speaker. Instend of a bell-shaped flare, the end hns a num-ber of small openings, nnd the noisemade by one of these Instruments

J. Sslimldt', Holy Name Society;} *>1(n™ hy one who Is experiencedJoseph. A. Dmnbnch, Jr., E. Donn, l^' l t n t n e m l8 cnpnhle of being heard

p t , y, udKD. W. Vopel in police court yes-terday tnortiltii; on the charge ofpetty larceny. It -was alleged thatAndoe stole HOIUC, railroad t ea ;itthe Green street crosahiK nf thi»Pennsylvania railroad, Wednesdaynight. Ho wns arrested by l'ut-ro'man William Romnnd.

HVhen Andoe was lined he wasalso warned to return the ties tothe railroad detectives or hewould gfl to Jail.

Read the. Lender

property man, Wil Inn Ncidor.iuelectrician;plnnlBt,

and MIBS E.

for mnny miles. One who Is Inei-perlonwl ninnot Ret much of speep from thorn.

12/Lyceum Jayveea

. G)IU, I ••,; 6t " " h-

le'.;i .'•:-•:•ciak, s • • -• u

iczak, K .-. 2

3 27

...0

t

P.20

• 2 .%0

p.12

A,4

Rutgers WinterSports Teams

End ScheduleWith the exception of iMitrunt^

ii individual ch;iiMpionshi[is, thetutgei'8 winter H|>orts seawm vyjllXy_pe this week end with a I'rinco-ua but-ku.tbull :;aniL- Loniglit and?iKer freshman and varsity swim-ulnK ineets tomorrow tufthl.

Between the halves o( toninlit 's>ask el ball final, the new- ItuiHerbiymnasiuia will be presented tolip undergraduates by Dr. I'liilip

M. Brett, acting president sinceOctober, 1930. Dr. Robert C.CJothler, who took office an presi-dent early this week, will preside.

The ^carlot qulni.ot l which haaplayed 'sporadic ball throunhoutthe season, will fiave only one se-nior In -the s tar t ing lineup againstthe strongest. Princeton live Inmany seasons. Mort O'Connellveteran center and acting oaptuin,W|ill probably complete his careerat guard teamed with Frank Hee-nau, sophoniore star wlipse' play-Inij-'has* been the feature of anotherwise drab season. Ued De(m-rtrest will nil in at the pivot berthand,Doc Davy and t'GoiKe Chil-son 'will handle the I'di-ufai-d aa-BlgnmentB.I Victorious in but three of theirseven meets to date, the lUit^ersbwlmmers will enuuye the i'rinee-

9 6 2BQuarters; ^ { ^

9 1 8 B—24J. Baka; umpire, "Uud "

ell;' timiir, Stubby; scorer,Time of periods, 10 mi-

)DIES SCRUBSTROUflCE ALUMNI

beforeg -Alumni Five

thu supbrlor forcesSb IPeddle Institute Scrubs in

28-25 scoring game. Wed-night, at Hlshtatown. The

_te used 11 men againstbridge's stalwart five.

lbri(\!;e was fast through-game but missed munythe first half that would

>n the game, They wereraised by the. Peddle coach

superb playing. Afterthe local boys wore thethe coai'h at a dinner,

loores -.Peddle Institute

.G. •f 2

3r ....: ic : : o

o

F.001-0000

Tl.44

• 7

bwlmmers will enna^ton natators In' BMlantme l'oolIn N«w Brunawick, Waltm-'.SpepcBworld's record holder, will findltts stirtest competition vf the sea-son in Weeks, Tiger breast Htrok-qr. As a companion feature, .theScarlet water polo team, led byCurt Heinfelden, • greatest inter-,coliegidte forward, will'meet theDedford Y. M. C. A. nexte-1. '

The Undefeated RutKer.i fr«Kh-men swlmipers will end theirseason against Princeton's cubs atold Nassau.

Fortfs Firemen ToMeet Ramblers At

School 14 Tonight1 A J . r I

One of Union County'H strong-Jest basketball teams will be seen14 tonglht wliim the Railway Ram-in action at Fords School Numberbiers will mee.t the Fords Firemen.In the preliminary, the AntlerGirls with a record of 12 straight,conquests, will engine the Shoot-!Ing Stars, of Elizabeth. '\

Reports are that the Hampers1

will coiiie here with u bolsteredlineup ready to put an end to the '-Firemen's successful, homo standdefense, Dob Handeriiun'b crew,•however, is confident or addingthe Raniblera to the list ot teamsthat already have been vanquishedat the school court' in Fords sincethe atart ot the season.

As usual there will be dancing jbefore and after the game. TheFiremen Will have their regularlineup available.

Burter, l b . . . . . . 25cFre&h Laid

Eggs, doz

D H LARKET

170 SMITH STREET, CORNER MADISON AVENUE

PERTH 'AMBOY, N. JWill Open On Saturday March 5

Dairy Dept. -- Groceries - Meats and Poultry » Fruits and Vegetables5 POUNDCotton SaCk

S u g a r . . . \ . . . .Armour's SugajrCured—SMOKED

LONG ISLAND

. 21c Ham. lb :12''c Potatoes, 7lbs.. ticSunnydaleSANTOS

Armour'* Sugar CuredSLICED

FANCYYELLOW

Coffee,2$8.V...25c BaconJ-2lb...;. M Oilions,2lbs. . ljc

f .« ..

10. 4Alumni

....3 1

Campbell, o' ,0 2 2Gerlty, g 4 4 - 1 2HouBman, g 0 2 2

,8 9 25Score by periods:

Wflfldbrldgft. AL .3 7 a 7-26Peddle last. . 7 12 5 4-28

Referee: Webb; Scorer, Istvtin,

Cheese , 1 b . . . , . 1.17c

Pot Cheese, lb . . 5 c

FULL HEAD LOINS OF JERSEY Fresh Garden

Rice, p k g e . . . . . . . 5c Pork, l b . . . . . . . . 9 \ | Spinach, 3 lbs, 10c

Extra HeavySWEET \

Large CanWHITE ROSE

C o r i j , . ; . . 25c

FANCYEATING

Apples, 12for. 15cLargest canPEACHES

OR PINEAPPLES

Shoulder's, Breastajnd Rack of

LARGEFLORIDA

Cream V b o t . 12c *&£T. \\ Veal, lb,.....'... 7c« firapefnrit, 3 for 10cBest CountrySOUR

Michigan PEA

Cream, qt, .... 29c•ImportedSWISS

Armour's SugarCured—CALL

FANCYSTRING

B e a n s , 3 l b s , . . l f l c H a m s , l b . .... J \ \ \ B e a n s , l b . . . . . 1 0 cImportedPure Olive .Oil

Top eye and bottomROUND

LARGE JUICY

SWISS rureuuve,vii • ^v/w»» - ^ f ^ti

Cheese, l b . . . . . 39c Sardines ,can .:.. 5 c | R o a s t , l b . . : . . . , 19c\\ Oranges, 12for .23c

F REE -SHOPPING BAGS^

Page 8: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

PAGE SIX THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY MARCH 4, 1932

nMhorwigii colon ele«n»ta»- lM*Nf•allow eho«k«. - . - . , . . - • - ^_c

&lkrw thorough wta_ej«n»m«. "Uk*tVolTyour iiimlrtillve orjini. Thenthe tmTuformntion. Try Mi ta»t

i O ly ZSe

hent*»d

Women Like tq Fiih ->Dny by diiy, In <ivcr,v way, women

-«re liklnjr to ilsh iH-tu-r*.ruid hotiVr,One Tension Is, mi? niilhorltlcs, Mintthey may now wear knickers orabort skirls nuil• U'jiirlnss withoutfear of whnt Mrs. flnimly will any.Another element IM Unit' tisliennow frequently use arlillcinl Imit tinwomnn's (Icllei.lfi sciisihilllles miV)nger need he slini'koil by linndliiiBBllmy worms, or slipiiory rnlnnmvsto bolt their honks,

"STOP RHEUMATICPAINS WITH HEATOF RED PEPPERS

Relieves Almost InstantlyGood old Nature ban put into rrtkpeppers a marvelous therapeutic heatthat gets right down to the source oftrouble and almost instantly relievetthe pains and aches of rheumatism,•tiff joints, lumbago and neuritis.Thousands have found it the one safe-guard against chest colds, too. Nowthis genuine led peppers' heat is con-tained in an ointment that you ju«t rubon. In less than 3 minutes you feel re-lief come. It it called RowbB Redtipper Rub. Safe. Will not bum otsting.Get a small jar from your druggist.

The Poet's LotJohn Minefield, the poet laureate,

snlrt to an American Interviewer InLondon:

"The liners nowadays all advertisetheir steerujje as VHIICBO cabin."

"Our new Third Class CollegeCabin," you read, "arranged exclu-sively for ministers, students, pro-fessors, resenrch workers, etc.' "These advertisements leave out

poets. Ports aren't even up to col-lege cabin."

Mr. Mursli taushed and ended:"Poets are horn, not paid."

Can-Opener AgeSiiys n passing item: "Not five

families in » hundred In this coun-try have even a part-time servant.In the Eood (?) old days before wom-en's clubs and bridge clubs 99 out ofevery lOCi fmiii'ies hud an nil-timeservant in denr old mother. Hut notany more!—Cincliiiiiill inquirer.

THATOUGrl

ihe safe easy way beforeworse troubles follow. Take

HALE'S HONEYOF HOREHOUND AND TAR

The tried home remedy for breaking, up colds, relieving throat troubles;healing and soothing — quick relieffor coughing and hoarseness.

3Oc at all drarfUttU»o ftke'H Toothwhii Dnipa '

Hard fo Please"I hear she Ijit* left her husband.

What wus ilic trouble?""She siild she couldn't stund If" to

live with a moil win) couldn't iliink'Up as many ways of muring umiicy,

"as she toiilil of siR-udiiifi it,"—Q'iclnuuti

President Opens the Washington BicentennialMercolizedWaxKeeps Skin Young.p . ,1 . l . n . n d tnMm dl«»pi«tr.,n,i . . Ivr ly . Yi»>r Imn lnnlu » r i l«

Wl I oot-UU plat wIMk bM«l. M d n m W .

Modern Skill"WhiiT n plly -we* litive no .irllsts

«IN> .MII psilnt like the'old nr.sirrH,"mint tin- Mhtccre lnvt-r of picture*.

I'.iii." nplled Mr, Oitnr»v wholin.l '.|IM inquired a sMHirloUH slirmi-turi>. "I lie Brent trouble is tlnjl »"e

I ' r t 'S i i l l ' I l t I l l lnViM"

lit i l i c n i i i ' i i i n ^ o f t i n :

i l ( M n " - s l i i L ; t i n - J o i n t s e s s i o n o f

(li'<>r;:<* \ V : i s l i i n i ; l i i n l i i f i > n t i M i n i : i l

I h e S n | i r r i i n ' c o u r t m i ' t H i p ( l i | i l " i n : i t i c < ' o r | i s

o i l u l l i c h « i l l C d l l l i l l l l r t l l l ' iMlu l l l i i n c i n n t l t l l S .

New Wind Guide for Airmen at the Camden Port

RheumaticPainsRelieved thisQuick WayIf stabbing painsshoot acrosa yourback and crippl*you, rub on goodold St. Jacobs Oil.Kelicf comes beforeyou can count 60!...Relief without burn-

This famous oilSimply draws outinflammation andlpnin. It is soothing;,!healing. For thelaches and pains oflRheumatism, Neuritis,Neuralgia or Backache thme's noth-ing so quick or sure to brinp relief.Get a small bottle of St. Jacobs Oilfrom your druggist.

Attribute! of PrideOne thine pride luis, wliidi no oth-

er vice thnt I know of biis: It Is nilenemy to Itself, anil n proud mancaniuit endure to see pride In an-other.— Felilmm.

This is the newly Installed wind tee nlop a hiKi«»r ut the central airport In Camden, N. .1., replacingthe outmoded wind sock. Hows of lights operated by pressure denote the force of. the wind and are visibleat a distance of three miles. '' •

Senator's Son and His Fiancee

Underpaid Teacher*The nveniKi1 suhH'y fur rural touch

« s in $S5">, imalnst SI.H78 fur cii.\teachers.—Country Home. "

FASTEST MILER

fDorit rSedlectlYour Kidneys

Heed Promptly Kidney andBladder Irregularities

If bothered with bladder ir-regularities; nagging backacheand a tired, nervous,depressedfeeling due to disordered kidneyaction of bladder irritation,don't delay. Users everywhererely on Doan's Pills. Praised formore than 50 years. Recom-mended the country over..Sold everywhere-

,W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 10-1932

Lieut. Kciynl S. (Yipi'liinil, Jr., sou of Senator and Mrs. 'Itoyul S.Cnpi'liii)d ut' New York, phoii>j;niplii'd at the home of his parents InWashington with bitf iitlraclive liiiiu'oc, Misa Viryinln Duryee ofYork, lo whom lie will bo married Ip tbij fall.

Got Down Almost; to Absolute Zero

Neat* 8 MotherHas Right Idea

W i t h i n a fewmonths there will beno more feverish, bil-ious, hendnehy, eon-Btlpateri, pale find'puny children. Tlmtprophecy would sure-ly come true If everymother could see for

herself how quickly, easily, and harm,lessly thp bowels of babies nna chil-dren are cleansed, regulated, giventone and strength by a product whichlias proved Its merit and reliabilityto do what Is claimed for It to mil-lions of mothers in over fifty yearsof steadily Increasing use.

As mothers find out from using Ithow children respond to the gentleinfluence of California Fig Syrup bygrowing stronger, sturdier and moreactive duily they simply finve to tellother mothers about it. That's one ofthe reasons for Its overwhelmingsales of over.four million bottles ayi'iir. .

A western mother, Mrs. Nea.1 MT(Mld. \'*n West 27th St., Oklahoma

' City, (Win., says: "When my son,Nciil. WHS three years old he beganhaviuu constipation. I decided top v e him <'utlfornia Fig Syrup and ina ft w iliiys he was all 'right nndIdoki'd fine nsuln. This pleased meso lmicli Hint I have used Fig Syrup«;\>r since f»r all his colds or littleU|isct spells. It' nlwnys, stops blRtiuntil*' quick, strengthens htm, makeshim e;it."

Ahviiys ask for California ¥\gPvniji b y the full name nnd see thtlit-'cartun bears thu word "California."' Ttii'ii you'll get the" genuine.

SNYPER'S GARAGE

PhoneWoodbridge

8-0265

Snyder'i GaraRe ii equipped to meet all «mersencies that happen during the colder month.When in need of towing remember our phonenumber. We will be out in a few minutes t,.where you are stalled, anywhere within a radiu*of fifty mile*. For ttorage during the winter,for oil and gasoline, for repairs and tires, in factfor a complete reasonable service, rememberSnyder's Garage.

Towing Service Repairs Tire Repairs

Overhauling + Storage

MARTIN SNYDER, Proprietor

CORNER .NEW ST. AND AMBOY AVENUE

Opposite St. James ChurchWOODBRIDGE, N. J.

r -

•<

"•I

V

Change Your OilEvery 500 Miles

Have Your BatteryTested Today

If your car j» hard to start orseems sluggish these cold morn*ings—you may need different Oil. Come in and Kt ;ilook at your car and we can soon tell.

iwa SELL

WILLARD BATTERIES andKELLY SPRINGFIELD TIRES

. RICHFIELD GOLDEN GASOLINEALCOHOL—PRESTONE—GLYCERINE—MOBO

GERM'SSERVICE STATION

WOODBRIDGE, V J.445 PEARL STREET

TELEPHONE WOODBRIDGE 8-1266

j t i u r « i |

the

V i ' l l / ' c , l ' i > l l s ! n

i l l n i . v , b i n i i e ( l i t f w i i r l i

iilc rwnnl wlitii lit-f ; i i i i n i ] . s I V i i x t i T m i l e ' f a i l u r e

event nf the sixty finirlh mi-niial nicct of the Xi'w Y«rT< AI tiIj'tiir dull iii Mjiilisun Sipniru aur

den. (ji'iin w:i'a chicUc'il In 4 uiiu-11! seniliils.

HELPING FATHER

Tholtf Dear Friendij"1 met V'Ur hU'-liiUiil yi'.su-rjiiy, bin

he iliiln'i sve IIK'." -"IkjKiW. Rf'lnhl 111*."

J)r, \V. II. Krcsoin uf f.i'jih'ii univt'r&ily, llnlluml. wlm unnuuiiveijin Aiiialcrihiiii tlmt he tin il UIIL'L*I>IMII.III in i/uuling u sitiice nf k'li cuhte

lo U.Tii (if u denrue uf K, uhirh la ot|uivalcuil ID minus 481)uutl In bulmvud Lu be the luwti^t temperature evvr obluinetl.

PARKER'SHAIR BALSAM

liaunm Uuidruft Su>i» llur I •DialimpuU Color and

Benutjr to Gr», u d Fulad Hab>Hr anil II.CIO II D r a i U

Hi»am'linn wt fSHAMPOO - Idcalfor ma is

withl'iirkirBHairU»linim.M»keiUioItuify. 60 cenu hy mail or it drug-C l l W k Fthogu*,N,Y,

.limit's ltunsuvtilt, Bon of liovFranklin \i. itootMiveli of Ni'w*Vorkwho Is iu charge <>f the Knosevelliii-;nl(|u;irh'i-.s In Mussacliusotra andworking linril to seoure his fallicr'iiioiiiinntion l)y the PeiBocrats'ths L'1'ebitltiiK.'y.

About Ourialva*Let UB reuieiuber that ai much

Uan Uceu ijiven iu,<tuucb will be e ipeuted truui u s ; and that tru« bumage <iouie» troiu the heart as wet.«» iroui the li|>» iipd ilw»w»In deetk.—t£xchaugiL •

£ "^\ Aiuerica'^Oldest Radio SchoolTclcvUlon, tviitlon ttdto,broidcMtlnf, touBa pic-ture equipment, ntvldng,opcnttn|i

Di» •nd tventng clwwt Mtchoolothoiiic«u(ly.Ctula».

RCAINSTITbTKS.INC.DeplWN WV»rlckBt.i YC,

Old Age Pension InformationK»clk«e Ktaiiiii.

Lehman - * l|umhii|dt. Kail

The ideal

Vacation LandWinter Long

Splendid rouila—loweriiiK mountainnmgeH—HighfHt \y\n; lioti'|»^ili'> in-vlguraliiiK air—chur s l m l i i nCaWernla'i Fwamoit D*i«rt Playground

Writ* Cr*m A ChifttyP

$5,000 i| F YOil.wt're oni; of the. million or uiore persona who" , Jurcd In nutoiuuhlls acci(kuit^ ifi tills C9imtry every

you would .welcome <the liberal'Daymenls -if an A-Special Autouiobllo Accident Policy. , |

A(TXA SPECIAL At'TOMOUILE ACClBE.\'T',POKi( V

« PAYS' "

If JOII aru Injured

u j wbil« ' gp«rhiiii(,djemuiwtrat-

VAYMVIM'S

for lo!w of

is.ooo

^aliment* fortirao anJ ,nif

UfeBolh Eyes, Both

Humla, BothFeet

Hand nn

llunil or Footami Eye

Arm or LogHand or F\»otSight ol OneThumb and In-

d«x Finger

6,000S.UUC

3.0002.5OU

600

HiK ><r reputrtng , aprivate paaaenKer au-tuiuuljUe.it.) wftilltt riding In alAilj|ii.:l ur private auto-(ULIJIIC;IC) In runuequence o(tliu explualun or burn-Ini! uf an automobile:(d) by being alruck orrun <lowii by tin aulo-mublle.

Tut&l rjlafkblUtyper ;

Partial P%VIM) w r wi'ik.' e « c e e d l \ i g *•*••'Huopltal unit Gi ••'

Nurse BereflU$lj nor week, tceeolug 4 wn\>

Non-pliwhllng It-|]Q 'fflr surgeon'IdentHcattnn I

nlty 1100.h

I'

t n g l ««ver shauOeurii, auto mecbaalri, aad MrtalB otherwhile caiaged la Unit aecapatloa

limed to employed aad unemployed men and WVDMB, ai«* IVSS I* i S E E - - . '

J. P. GfiRlTY & GO.

|M>

H H4JN BTUEET OKBITV BI.UO.TKLEPHONB S-«B

WOOI1BHII

TYPEWRITERSSold,— Rented - Repaired

L. F. CAMPION104 MAIN STREET

WOODBRIDGE, N. J."

PHONE WOODBRIDGE 8-1400

Page 9: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

.OFFICES! IF \HAO A

MORETD PAY ME

COULDN'TLOAN ME

MUCH"?

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY MARCH 4, 1932 PAGE SEVEN

Y OF THE FORCESON -01 *M SORRY-BUT THERE!? A ,0O16N A OAYASTIN1

*TUE SAMS

pwviueoc-0"

VJEUt, HERE T H E N - 1 APPEAL TOWtR SPOPTIN' BUOOOl X BET VOUSEA QUARTER VOUSft WON'T SAV

"TWO PINS* TO ANYTHIN' OI ASTYAK! - Y 6 R ON ? —O K A Y - n ^ A Nice&AYI

UJOULOYOUSE TAKEPBft ADOLLAR*

75c to the Good/GOOD! HERES vtfi

/TUOO P\KIS! GlMOAeTH6 DOLLAR'—AI LOST OUH BfT.SO

JvHERB'S A fffef

FEATHERHEADS JSPUUUPT&THrt

17

Felix Is Misunderstoodkd PA06ABLV K S S OKttCKW. MOftR "M"

DO 11

\(VI* I I lr*"ir

RESTFUL SLEEPfor FRETFUL,

FEVERISH CHILD— Wifh Casforia'i regulation•W'hfrn your cUtltl tossos imd «ie»

tfut In tils sloep, It IIUMIIH he Is notconifurlMlile, Very nfirn the1 troubleIs ttint poisonous wnstc mnticr Is notbeing carried n(T us it should be.Bowels tired hel|>—itilltl. gentle help—tot effective. Just the kind Ca»-torla gives. Cnstorta l(f a pure vege-table preparation made specially forChildren's ailment*. It contains nohawh, harmful dnign, no narcotics.Don't let jpur child's rest—and jonrown—be Interrupted. A jirnmrt Aon1

of Oastorln \vlll HI-RC vtulibom littlebowels to act. Then rehixed comfort•nd restful sleep! (lemilne CaBtorlaalways hOB the name:

Steam Roller o/llong the Concrete I

C A S T O R I ADiplomatic

Tlirec-year-old Miniiiii fiml hprmotliyr were visiting !» iIn* IHMHP nf

Uncle Jim, dlgnllU'd mul uiiliniiKinn-tive. Kvi'iils prtivnl siMiu-wlmt ill*-iHilinititiiii; to tli'1 link1 cirl anil KIIB

rvlilently IUMIIIIM] ID lnk(< mutters

Into her own tmiiils. As het uticli?l ift honii1 one min-nlnj;. slio sniil tohim:

"Uncle ntin, If I WHS n lily manlike ynu imd ymi was n litilc nirllike mo ntid you mini1 In sec uu1, I'd

idct you Koine cunily."I She KM the candy.

Quickestwaytoend head colds

Simple cream instantly opensDp nostril*... Gives all-night reliefIf your head's all stuffed up and you'refiRhtinK for brenth just \nit a littleELY'S CREAM BALM up i-ach nostriland relief comes almost instantly—relief that lasts for 1(1 hours or more!This pleasant antiseptic is so remark-ably good because it penctrate9 andactually clears out every air passageto the hjead, soothes the inflamed orswollen tissue and immediately en-ables you to breathe freely Try it fordogged nose, Gainrrh or head colds.WORKS LIKE A CHARM1 All drug-gists sell i t

MCKLEiTHE PUNTER'S DEVIL By Clurtta Sughrae* W , M ™ Nwnw,, Urn* The Car was Too Slow for Pete

* PETB WMAPUS HAS ft

- f\

WWv

rA—

.1? DONfT

wo

£IXS

." ^

i fMlK^

M|*?%&§*<

/I

EORGE WASHINGTON'S TRAVELS k By Jan>e, w. Brooli

fete nAll Klfhl* tonyti

iloriiitly CttMCt SattiknBy CALVIN TAPIS

• ' ' />£

P ^III

^ ^m

^;¥a?

D aid by tlie crumbling home* of YeAeryear still runsthe oU "King's Highway"- the.road of Washington's

•early youth. TwLiy it is Virginia State Route 37. As this!*cene was sketched op 4 ^ray NovemW day, the tinkle at

pbells could be heard (roan back in the woods-a peacefulIptyluilf to the stirring scene* that lie ahead.

H arther along the road are incidents of great moment whenread in relation to Washington's after life. ,At a place

called Oak Grove, near Wakefield, he was advised by a Mr.Williams to take up the ftudy of surveying. Next, in MaryeSchool which stood on the site now occupied by the FirftBaptift Church in Frederickaburg, he began the reading andpractice of "Rules of Civilty" - minor incidents, perhaps, butwatch for their unfolding later in tbe Washington mind. ^

3, A BIT OF OAK GROVE.

Is *Umatiifaetory

"Now, don't you think thispretty welf-plunnptl house?"

"But. the hrwikfnst ruoin doesn'tget the afternoon BIIII'.".

Putting It to UieWIiui'' are you burning

n the ftirnifte?Deadhruke— The gurauc

Now easy to getrid of Gray

Keep Hair Naturally DarkNow without using dangerous dyesyou can darken gray hair naturally,quickly restore its original shade bythe world's finest, Bate way which isnow keeping millions of heads younglooking. Henefits theihair as it dark-ens it to the shade yoa want. A3 sim-ple as brushing. Try I t Pay dniKgist75c tor a large bottle of WYETH'SSAGE & SULPHUR and just followeasy directions. t

NKW A I T O INVENTIONVRRVKNTH 'IIB.VH" HKAl) l . l ( i l |TS

.KI.-IJ'I'K—ainuuiiii: nnw .autu IICVUT liro-lix-tH ht'u mill |itui»j.riy. I'rulsi'.l by au-IDi.iltli'n, Wiuilt'iT liy t'Vtry garjiBo andmotJirlxl. Si'ii'l I'lilv II.(10 at umu l.iv TWOroMl'LKTK HK'I'H, Hutall H.IIU i-iiih BCI,YOU I'HOKIT 100%, Sulla outlU Hint <|Unti|t l ty prlci« VNtKB.Ten-lli>ry KrHHtcrt.llurrytA. V. I'OTI'Kll <()..Ki'|it, 10. \V«bnlcr,Mn«i

OI'I'll'jtTl'MTV t<i Khlubllnh rrrumnralliuMliii.iM MLUinK Im.skxy, i>un ur full time.Nil CHi'llul rwiuiii'il. 111B ruiiinilHglnii.IUANA CO.. 16 WKHT 17TII, NUW YOHK.

IHSTBUHiTOKS. Aiivnta, V. S.-Cauaita.i l tf i it vnroliiKH. Bt<J|> Hteiimy, sluety wlu-f)ou*ii Evtry huHK, <'ILT nwnrr, ini'rrhunt a[iruxpcct. liua Vu.. Brlit BIIIK., ClCTolmia.O.

n i l T O ItcninK> Bteedinsj,IILLU QUICK RELIEF

SEND 10c FOR SAMPLEHEMUolP-OX. Is iLirturi-ut, ata(ia palf andBoruiieua linmt'illnlcly. Try It tnday.

TIIK MAKVON VOW.1811 nriuLiliwu . . . - New Vork.

IF YOU ARE SICKUDo not dcsimlr; try MILI.lillTONB.tThiBumar'lii; cllxuavitry rflluvus euKererii (rumCutiiiTli. High Uiuud Prvwuru, Rheumk-tluni, Kiilnuy and etuinacb iioublta, liead-acliua nnd many othftr allmtiita. Thoit-rnniila trtrtefully proclaim that MlllBrton*Ikobu nave rtsmred th. in lo health. Kn-IIUBB |c atamp lur rreB aamplej. H. Miller.Inc., « Ikacon St., Jitwwk, New Jtrrncy.

Page 10: ION MAKES PROGRESS ORDERS REMOVE FORTY NAMES …€¦ · Post; rdward Walsh, j M|£uU and batt. el and riiomasi U8l ThursaBy, it was alleged,, nf Dnnolkn Post m tmln goinu,througt,

PAGE EIGHT WOODNUDGE LEADOt. FRIDAY, MARCH 4, It32

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