•skt cartere nptgttt pres - digifind-it.com · • for tw. splendid gathering," said ....

8
the Price of ThiaPaper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no BMW nPtgtt r A . '<flB •sKT CARTERET PRESS "»•«»• _*^_ _ _ _ ._ | v -- r ;— ; ' "" PRICE THREE CENT| : ^^^^| D^J f rowf l U^n c, BYE o A vucH TS .v IN o ! ]p 0 Btics and Refief , Hold ''T^c^ Better Typw Of i * ^ ^ ^ , Kecora uowa ™ars j-^j-jai Discussed At Meeting l^rft^K^? Mkw Here FarJInempM H -Moore At Big Uuting ^srs?^- : n t .T^^ For t^^rx*?x^ *»« <* BUM,* i^M.^™.«H.. P T,O-J ^m ° O ''"d Ttae become effective Democrat. Get Together For week ^.^ ^ f weeks s|f0 , £ ^ , ndicale . From Codhty - Steto AU I ^ M Annual Outing Of Middlesex Democrats Ha. Biggest Attend- . ^ T i ^ ' t ^ ^ ^ f t . f ? Mp J lf » * ° * " * £ ? I^fi tlTh?ilSX W*9™& Upward Tr«d In Grade Of M. l*p«t«I-Rel*f Co- j ^ H ance In Hi.tory Of County Organization Candidate For' Sunday morning but if yoirwould Attention lo Unemploy- ^ ^ g ^.^ ^ ^ ^ ^ „. m ia.to«i To Be Named. I ^ ^ H _ Q T k » » i A T ' T r . i- I be on time for church, the trains, men t. have been the lender of the Ran*. He " •*" J^^^H Governor Say. That People Are Turning To Democratic c tc, it is advisable to set the m 1(lft the horou _ h immediately after .... . th . numb()r o( new Way* and meani to bring relit* i ^ ^ H Party For Leadership At.emblyman Elmer E. Brown |> Rn(ls ot , VOUr tlm . e P iece ""J. 1 * i The candidates, the district lead- the alleged robbery and did not re- Hn u«ii«K^ ei-ectSd in Carteret in re- to the unemployed durin* the cm> 'l^^H _ ... „. , . | .. ,. . . _ hour when retiring baturaay , prominent Democrat* turn aeftin unti Saturday night "' " A. «kw.« . rir..n •* com- inn winter occupied * food deal of s^^^^H Rap. Repubhcan R.pper Leg.slat.on - Many Local Party | night. | ^ t R ^ e9 °day n i ^ in the llorough when he w», arr,-t«l by Motorcycle ^ . ^ ^ t t T y.^rf The" Is a the time of theVyor and C " " £ J ^ M Men and Women At Gathering In Riverside Park. Hall. It was a political meeting but Policeman Robert Shanley. marked improvement in the type of Monday night at a regular ™««wj| J^^^H . " ~ „ rL nWA L fvnun the unemployment situation nndpro- —— ( lwellln« according to th«report of of that body. The Mayor annouftcja J^^^H A. Harry Moore, democratic can- He called attention to the fact L m l l C I l 1110111) visions to relieve it was n topic fully huildinirInspector Frederic T. Col- that he is reasonably j u r e of t *™f,i«^^^M .M.iate for Kovemor, was Rreelcd by tnat theannual appropriation hill in- w ""* r a, interesting aB politics. TrOI»fl llriVOr III ton for Augi^it. The report follows: aid in improrin(t i-onRfellow «tr«(L d^^^M , ll( latc torjo * als inde created from $2fi ,500,000 in 1928, UJ,. L I I nAVMVV The Mayor told of thr conference H d C C UnVCl Ul "Buildinit operation, for th e The money, he Mid, probably wfBf^ l^HB r= s 2 S H ^ " •fisftttSiVa: MarksAnniwsary, a £ s -^.JJ-- „, , R - US*«\Krtf.rfS.s?^ffi H ^SS&JMi: " = '"-"'iSrs•>-*-.ois,M.*.H.V. Kv^t'^'c'-ca MB-ano-Kun tar w^^,^™™,,™ . ^^^--j H MJESSTWl = j ^ - S i t S S ! ; «*j«- i. *- .of s, a3? 2LSff-.S f S5 »—« *~ "- «•»«-Efc^SS,LSTS S'-'tr^StrSlSS H Heil former assistant County Prose- again; what a relief it would be I' ""pu""^'-,,,. and dance number. ap . p0 '" t tn hi n in e ^ne aid to the accident happened at the corner of HorvMh on Carteret. avem.e com- . t k " the UB-| . T^^M S:r tf firsts!: sKsfsaKMjrsjfts: ^ H s i ' , ^ , bl ''S'-HS^"-"»-"as w t'ti":,,w «ssy^rys.-sw>" s « a;tsatTc?»-at S? FS'Cr R £ b.in R Edwar, I As^b.y.an Elmer E. Brown R > c u hard M rs D °ThZ n a, D S u e ^ ^1^ S ^erTl™ta»S A COMMUNICATION ?I.ir!h?A ««tL 1^0 for .UnVi^VEl'Sn To" b^h H 8 St2i^^^ S KC^Jft^ When Is aw^ Kins and the fcbSSTSM ^S?0 ? J| S ^t^ SST.^ STCSt H I So?^«ndTdXnU° 4 he "would Home Rule for thepurpo*. of bui.d- Helen g-n, "^A^Bod^ ». «rf J Women , ^0^0 «rt ^n^Ilta^ ffljv™. ^ t() take care of ««» other, a, tr. ^ H E carry Middlesex county by a plural- in* a pohtical party fc . y . , t V a n p dt Miss Doro . j d Louj9 R Brown| of t ne he ! Dit ' h ^f w Jtr K n« f I i C 1 in ' ,. „ ... u A*. '^H Uv of 20,000 votes. Mr. Moore was Civ.l S«v.« R.pper h ^ Da i rymp i e , Miss Bertha Bowler, Yo ung Men's Democratic Club. he ,»P'^ ™? »iT?t Jnlttin'- he', sneez Klff IlCKCl MK {)ne o{ thc 1deas lh<> M ? y ° F if5 ^^H Mcompinied to the outing by Mrs. "The Republican candidate for «&„ Evelyn Kircher, Miss Helen, Those present were asked to re- . Jh»tc»tamtspi n hmneeHUIg 11UVCI UO1C s( . r ihed is the appointment of a rehfrf _^H Mo^re and. a delegation of Hudson Governor was the prime mover of «^ 8 ^, ly j; hi , ip Tur ' k M iss Adele i membe r the big card party held m 1 ," said Scroggins, ' and I m havin _ .. ,,, mmissH , n t o a i d i n l h e work of ^ H S Democrats1ncludin K the Jer- such bills ns the Civil Servicej W g* M M i S3 Myrtle Barker, Harold ZZtli^gH under the a^piee. ^ *«1'« °*» t' me tr y ln ' to cure f Af CharitY Ba «»«* f " rthe •"??'• lfc ^ %"£ 1 H lev City Police Quartette. per, the Hudson county boulevard » ^ Miss Peggy Morris. Cur- of the Wo V me n's Democratic Club in h "2™,, makes hi . sneeze 7-. r ask . ' WI VIIttl "J UU " times that nverythinn po«ibe «n fct T^M ^The fcuge crowd swarmed through ripper and he attempted to have ^ ^ Catherine se»lly, Na than Hale school and all promised What makes hu sneeze. I ask .lorn- to overcome any eonutfionirf ;^H the spacious park. Box lunches were passed the Passaic npper, the con- y Ginda, Miss Dorothy Gu- to attend. , V, Wpl , Rflvs c CT . 0OT i n3 "!„ the Advance Reports Indicate That distress that may develop Jus win- M^ tt* "*•' *t ","«"' S f f ' ^ S S S n i ^ S d ™ ^ ™ Perth Amboy Police C.tch -—- lik, til. M l , 1 ,H him b.,k .. .rftjut ;»»«,.!> B._« «. nb. ••• ^ '™» ta ^S"^ ^St V S^SX^aA"'^ th. J t^-j'J i'S Hi™ O» Roof OI H.11 Wher. C.rd Party W«ta*l.y N, 8 ht th^.t rubbto , ^ ^ e %f o.^.oc . Utl p . J2R* fl SxiSSw isa-^ "™:;r:: . « ^ « « — r^H/s^ri?. SHiStHhs a p r t t f a 1 cat short. Mr. Moore refrained from have these 1™ n «>»° e " oftid . have vowed to DreaK up Werfer w a g w onbyMra kma ^^ the ^jnp^^v- . h Perth Ambo Gcnera i Hospi- *"v'"f. T >j information w m be S B "P.rmtt me to extend by crfngrat- iief," said Mr. Brown the topic for th« sermon at th« Pres- ™« M v l l i G i ecklleri M ra, for -"„,.'• was the immediate cause uf death. « u l a f f to the voter, of 'Middlesex phol ^ '^'emme? Mteissen in byterianChurch or.Sunday mornn* ^ G , eckneri Mrg . A . Markwalt , That - s foo ; talk," said I, "you're wa Mr . Nash wa8 3fl yel?rs old last G > Q _ p_ o ,,^ ^ ^ 9 for tW. splendid gathering," said . freeholder Klemrn e iaivt The pastor wlU3p e a k to the Juniora jj^iniam B eisel. ., , a Democrat ain't you?" March. He wa a born in Carteret and "' i. TL' 1,' r™. fl B Mr Moore "It is an inspirational his .remarks told f th ^ m ' n " n Y y " s on "Stony Hearts." 8r Mrg John Adam3 w »a general .. Ohi i neV er say nothin about, me th Bonof a former councilman At Tref inko. Grore B B ilht *nd is tvpical of the poltical which the bus ' n « s % 0 ^ e ^Ve coun ty Mis * Evelyn Beech will lead the I h ^ m ' in charge of the arrftnp | own politics," says he. "I am just f 8 ^ borough. He was widely , , .. . • B wSirtnn throffiu the state in conducted «*&<**£&&* county ^ . ^ ^ n ™ a n d deserve, much credit for hink ;V about the general public; « ^ At on / timc he waaact ive in There will be a meeting of tte M B SahSLin of ours. »•»» ( been dlvl t d «f '"^fc S gtributed P- m - " What ,? ur CI t ety . Plans T ° the success of the affair. if.Tike thl. new buBinen of free b b „ , j and frc(|U(!nUy aided Daird For Governor Club at h.ad- .W B Vh^MoiDle of the state and na- ments and the nrk t h p Boar j| Do This Year" is the-topic. wheelin'." in promoting sport events. quarters, 56 Washington avenue, to- SM B « .r« P tSrn!n£ to the Democratic among the members of! the Board A { a mee ting of the Session on ^ , . -How d'ye mean?" fi r Nash served in the A. E. F. night at which time the committee »•.» B J « T l p X 4 i D They have been He said this system replaced the for even Mrs E j Bennett Jr. Slovak Club n u t t "There's a lot of guys," says Bnd " r waa \ rae mber of the American charge of the family outing will B 5^** H >,„ the Republicans who mer one of dividing all the work in ^ 3elected ag organist to SUC ceed For Hallowe'en Social ScTO gg inSi "that say they's Demo B ide8 a widuw huis Bur . TOake thc final arrangements W H betrayed by the nep to committecg . PiriaTlce Mr. Merrill B. Huber who has been t they . Republicans but they « d . brot her, Edward, ui»d The outing which will be held Uui !M B ta Mu!tf J?k«t in office, everyone "In th« Department of »,„««« , gtf o r t he t ight w ten . oft h Junior S i ovak c V0 8 te s all ki J of wayg wi th changing " ^ °[ ° MraH ' oraee Armour , coming Sunday, prom.ses to be the M B STave a chicken in their pot and Administration through the su^ Bennett B the director ^ a la « t weefc ^ the s ed their , abe , s .,, Paulfi _ Hani ton and Mrs. largest <-vent ever undertaken by the « K would "**. their iraraee and as a gestion of Director .^""P^"'*"; o f the choir and will be assisted in. ^° H u ^ h streeti plan* "You mean they have a complex? j Iugh Carlton, all of OartL'n.t. local RepuUlicans. fl B *"!?• T f S t ftev even haven't the policy of not borrowing W™ increaaed duties b her daughter Hew* Han Hallowe>en Socia l , ., tmean they have a price/' says uu « h f ', Mr , iw w ,,, (! he]d The County candidates nave b«n ,fl H matter of fact, they even ^ . nQnc a r t h ls dU£ s tor Mrg Edward Web b. It is also plan- w ere ™^ e ^ th a hall late i n s ina , , this morning from the UU home invited to attend, there will be gmrnei M H I ^. P t o n u h l l e i n warty 'ha. broken the retiring of bonds jof_ttat j e a r to train some o f t h r to £e held^n ™e «^ ^ w then g truck ^ load £ ma^morn g ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^.^^^ M be played «« S B , The A BeP i U «p m^de to the"people, has been adopted by thc Board, sa.u members on the organ so that they U^^or a picnic to be held thU barrels twenty feet high comes ^ h whet " e a so lemn high mass of th« lawn, ri .f reS hmenU will, be *oM m m T^Stad a reduction in, Uxe. Mr. Kalteisjen. " Bare fully «» ^ of service to the: church ,rJ § !a ^ or in g t . Elizabeth's fifove along. .. mereqU iem wa» offered for the repow ht moderate prices, adm^ion will S B They Promise". a tt . r X state budget "All of the accounts are: Laroimiy work The cholr3 wlll hold tne , r sunaay^ geveral com _ n e fl dollar to ^ke me i , The tunerul was very be free „„«*. S K but instead raised OLLMit B fked am , a statement available at reh(iarsals Thursday evening. At "Xes were appointed to run the down Washington avenue, fast as £ ', h altended . ThB interment was The outinft comm.ttee >».«'™«h M H many "Wionj. They wud in ty sothflt ft budget may be , rf thfl Brotherho od on r'"? e8 T ^ e *P as foUowg! Refresh he truck wilt go," say* Scroggins to * rg s e t ' y j a ames CemeUry. ly requested to make it a point tort- M H agamst ^^'VM" b B « i n s t prohibi- strictly adhered to," l -; u n t ! n "f au I * r r - Monday evening plans were made for cnc. 1 hey^ar a^ ^ ^ ^^ drivin Th stop3 s.t Ja ^^ tend ^ ^ ^ ^^ m order to „.,. « K done a blessed thing again.st , KalteislM . n who also stated that auar- v ^ ^.^ the FaU and Winter. "><>nt S Anna Me , Mudrafe ^ ^^ Md Scro?e;lna pl « sln , c , t ln beauUfu i floral tributes. Mo a full report. M H Co»fid.nl of Winnie U-vUaudits are ™ft «*/» coun Speaker, of various typej, will be se- na Se ck and and A]eclc an ^ and goe8 the Uuck. *J m c m w , rt , in lhe fun e r . M ^•^ ..TU n-mn^atic oarty in New ty's business and publ shad.., th( , inl . cured foiHhe meetings. Men who are "i"^ When I see that tall load of barrels The bearers were: Al J, | IT I I 9 H "The. Dem °«f wi P a a ',\l i am „„- Reference was made ^ jht " ^ th itiea intheLr VHrioU s helda. At Baumgara^ bearing down on a Eepublican ban- « w m i v (;hhlli Coun-1 Anjlvpttf KliriiVb " W H Jersey tt going to win a * a , ovments B t the county woik ou«c meetings, probably iri No- L ,. -. s , ner st run K low across the street I cilman Kdvva ,d Dolan, John Dono- iUHUeW IVIUUjia 9 K » W to be e ^ ct , ed . r ^Xt ith r«- and tin- Kiddie Keep Well Cam^Ht ^ .,. jg hoped to have the Bandits loo MOW Scroggins a D«crat ^™ Ewa ld Grohinun and Thomas __ ,M H Mr ^ OOr \ Wh ' "Thh U a Ilemo- also stated large quantity rf wood . Army f , a ., The w DoUn CnR8es Them HUCKLEBERRY HhSS. ™"' k berg 01 . exem p t mem- Kurd ^ ^j 52 .,„», « H iW 5 dto 5Jr and the Ue.mhlicans Wli re mad, available sothat the same . Q{ Deep S€ c b , ,, pmentad. __^ _ ; fpire ColnpBny No . 2 of which ^^erJn stnfet. diej tWa ;.;• ••; ««tic year and tin J in )IlditioIl wlU I)revu il this yea . K k Bareford is the chairman h banditg walked !nto the De- - FnrrM i I. n dinK Mr- Nash was a member, until he be- «J^' j th Perth ^bo, c«er- ;• •1 J. 110 ^ ": H \tLZJ, of my op- Mr. Kalteisaen also ld *[, ^ o f theprogram committee which.will LuxeDiner in Roosevelt avenue Plane Make* Forced Landing t 734" after . lonif iUaew. B* M •K Camden, the, home town ot y ^ ^ ^^^ p , ami park projette cha ^ e of the3e features of the d at 3:00 a . m and one or- Carteret Flying Field The n tt(t on the firehouse is at J H«ptt« wjd<w< Ann^ Ml. •« ••: ponent 10,000 voters a ^ havt; b ,(e told work. dered the proprietor, John Dolan to Al ^ y; ut aff. Besides the bearers nam- w »« r *, rerident of O» netting lff hout th^ « Hte arc t-ntion by the freehoidenj. He toM _ « H „ Hehad ^ but t u ,, c . hBra were wv «ral honorary bear- » j ww employed for thto- •§ met™ th™ th a j rev . (lf Uu . .^.placement of »«"•• * 00 ^3 METHODIST CHURCH NOTES Do]an w83 quicker on the draw and That the ^ l [ixv wil h u|a illdu ding Mayor Joseph A- Her- £ ""* in the i^big P U»L S H being better attended than H b Cl)n( . rete rtructuieg and MBm wjU be ^ H i s o w n ^ nwa? prerae d coming more anu m ^ vicinil uf Cal . tereti Mayor W.I »»; A. tten ye e wjB ^ ^ H &L? D TTur"ntereK«.Ua.n- he definite progran,.mapped out an, benun ^ J ^ f " against the bandit's .heart in a split «£" ^ ^ ° ihurt ly after one K yan. of Woodbridge, and other ^ Mentoon at tk. Hog fl H ™i»n and we wil «"«•« t"" « nialertl nu! '" v b \ L ,'" ,h.U Mr Kalteissen's choir and added interest for the fall L econd . The ,bandit and his compan « , ^ Thurs(iay afternoon prom.nent men, Family church. lnU-roumt will be i> m ^ctorv^n The history of this state" W- 1 ^ 7 , fl "^ c tiefly in which Vork. ions fled. when George Briss, of Staten Island St. James Cemetery. . y B efforU werl warmly applauded. The event of hi^elec n. buma( , e Scout rtpr«,entaUv»of to ^ 11 « » , .£^ bee[ , f tl fwt lha i Mr^ Ann* ^hw« ^^^ ^^ rf | B State afTaixt"aid tax reduction dur- ^nuing the ^J >W reflW(sd to time. Bible instruction by competent *J£ mo(]ern improvement. took ^ ff for hia destination. CHtholic chulc h . Interment will be any dtbt. l Jg'n, ABLJBMML^-B B ing the present Republican admini*- the K ^' ca '- a ^ B J f the commis- teachers. Apply Kahn's Furniture Store, Wash- ____ «_ .,, .... 1.111 n>.,, IH t 1 -v. „" mM

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the Price of ThiaPaper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no BMW nPtgttrA. '<flB

•sKT CARTERET PRESS "»•«»•_*^_ _ _ _ ._ | v--r— ;— ; ' "" PRICE THREE C E N T | : ^ ^ ^ ^ |

D ^ J frowfl U^n c,BYEoAvucHTS.vINo!]p0Btics and Refief , H o l d ' ' T ^ c ^ Better Typw Of i * ^ ^ ^ , 9K e c o r a u o w a ™ a r s j - ^ j - j a i Discussed At Meeting l ^ r f t ^ K ^ ? Mkw Here • FarJInempM H

-Moore At Big Uuting ^ s r s ? ^ - :n t . T ^ ^ Fort^^rx*?x^*»« <* BUM,* i^M.^™.«H..PT,O-J m° O ''"d Ttae become effective Democrat. Get Together For week . ^ ^ f weeks s|f0, £ ^ , n d i c a l e . F r o m Codhty - Steto AU I ^ M

Annual Outing Of Middlesex Democrats Ha. Biggest Attend- . ^ T i ^ ' t ^ ^ ^ f t . f ?MpJ l f» * ° * " * £ ? I ^ f i tlTh?ilSX W*9™& Upward Tr«d In Grade Of M . l*p«t«I-Rel*f Co- j ^ Hance In Hi.tory Of County Organization — Candidate For' Sunday morning but if yoirwould Attention lo Unemploy- ^ ^ g ^ . ^ ^ ^ ^ „. mia.to«i To Be Named. I ^ ^ H_ Q T k » » i A T ' T r . i- I be on time for church, the trains, m e n t . have been the lender of the Ran*. He " •*" J^^^HGovernor Say. That People Are Turning To Democratic c tc, it is advisable to set the m

1(lft t h e h o r o u_ h immediately after .... . t h . n u m b ( ) r o ( n e w Way* and meani to bring relit* i ^ ^ HParty For Leadership — At.emblyman Elmer E. Brown |>Rn(ls o t,VOUr t lm.eP iece " " J . 1 * i The candidates, the district lead- the alleged robbery and did not re- Hnu«ii«K^ ei-ectSd in Carteret in re- to the unemployed durin* the cm> ' l ^ ^ H_ „ . . . „ . , . | .. , . . . _ hour when retiring baturaay , prominent Democrat* turn aeftin unti Saturday night " ' " A . «kw.« . rir..n •* com- inn winter occupied * food deal of s ^ ^ ^ ^ HRap. Repubhcan R.pper Leg.slat.on - Many Local Party | night. | ^ t

R^e9°day n i ^ in the llorough when he w», arr,-t«l by Motorcycle ^ . ^ ^ t t T y.^rf The" Is a the time of theVyor and C " " £ J ^ MMen and Women At Gathering In Riverside Park. Hall. It was a political meeting but Policeman Robert Shanley. marked improvement in the type of Monday night at a regular ™««wj| J ^ ^ ^ H

. " ~ „ r L n W A L f v n u n the unemployment situation nndpro- — — (lwellln« according to th« report of of that body. The Mayor annouftcja J ^ ^ ^ HA. Harry Moore, democratic can- He called attention to the fact L m l l C I l 1110111) visions to relieve it was n topic fully huildinirInspector Frederic T. Col- that he is reasonably jure of t * ™ f , i « ^ ^ ^ M

.M.iate for Kovemor, was Rreelcd by tnat the annual appropriation hill in- w " " * r a, interesting aB politics. TrOI»fl l l r iVOr I I I ton for Augi it. The report follows: aid in improrin(t i-onRfellow «tr«(L d ^ ^ ^ M,ll(latc torjo * a l s i n d e created from $2fi ,500,000 in 1928, U J , . L I I nAVMVV The Mayor told of thr conference H d C C U n V C l U l "Buildinit operation, for th e The money, he Mid, probably wfBf l ^ H B

r= s 2 S H ^ " •fisftttSiVa: MarksAnniwsary, a £ s - ^ . J J - - „, ,R - U S * « \ K r t f . r f S . s ? ^ f f i H^ S S & J M i : "= '"-"'iSrs•>-*-.ois,M.*.H.V. Kv^t '^'c ' -ca MB-ano-Kun tar w^ , ™™,,™ . ^ ^ ^ - - j HMJESSTWl = j ^ - S i t S S ! ; «*j«- i. * - .of s,a3?2LSff-.SfS5 »—« * ~ "- «•»«-Efc^SS,LSTS S'-'tr^StrSlSS H

Heil former assistant County Prose- again; what a relief it would be I' ""pu""^ ' - , , , . a n d dance number. ap.p0 '" t t n hi n in e ne aid to the accident happened at the corner of HorvMh on Carteret. avem.e com- . t k " t h e U B - | . T^^M

S:r tf firsts!: sKsfsaKMjrsjfts: Hsi ' ,^ , b l ' 'S ' -HS^"-"»-"as wt'ti":,,w «ssy^rys.-sw>" s « a;tsatTc?»-at •

S ? FS'CrR£b.inR Edwar, I As^b.y.an Elmer E. Brown R>c

uhard

MrsD°ThZna, D S u e *« 1 ^ S ^erTl™ ta» S A COMMUNICATION ?I . i r !h?A ««tL 1^0 for . U n V i ^ V E l ' S n To" b^h H8 S t 2 i ^ ^ ^ S KC^Jft^ When I s aw^ K i n s and the fcbSSTSM ^ S ? 0 ? J|S t ^ SST.^ STCSt H

I S o ? ^ « n d T d X n U ° 4he "would Home Rule for thepurpo*. of bui.d- " » Helen g - n , " ^ A ^ B o d ^ » . «rf J Women , ^ 0 ^ 0 « r t ^ n ^ I l t a ^ ffljv™. ^ t() take care of ««» other, a, t r . ^ HE • carry Middlesex county by a plural- in* a pohtical party fc . y . , t V a n p d t M i s s D o r o . j d L o u j 9 R B r o w n | o f tne h e ! D i t ' h ^ f w J t r K n« f I i C 1 i n ' ,. „ ... u A*. ' ^ H

Uv of 20,000 votes. Mr. Moore was Civ.l S«v.« R.pper h^ D ai r y m pie , Miss Bertha Bowler, • Young Men's Democratic Club. he,»P'^ ™? »iT?t Jnlttin'- he', sneez Klff IlCKCl MK {)ne o{ t h c 1deas lh<> M?y°F if5 ^ ^ HMcompinied to the outing by Mrs. "The Republican candidate for «&„ Evelyn Kircher, Miss Helen, Those present were asked to re- . Jh»tc»tamtspi n h m n e e H U I g 11UVCI UO1C s(.rihed is the appointment of a rehfrf _ ^ HMo re and. a delegation of Hudson Governor was the prime mover of «^ 8 ^ , l y j ; h i , i p T u r 'k Miss Adele i m e m b er the big card party held m1," said Scroggins, ' and I m havin _ . . ,,,mmissH,n t o a i d i n l h e work of ^ HS Democrats1ncludinK the Jer- such bills ns the Civil Servicej W g * M

M i S 3 Myrtle Barker, Harold ZZtli^gH under the a^piee. ^ *«1'« °*» t'me try ln ' to cure f Af CharitY B a «»«* f"r the •"??'• lfc % " £ 1 Hlev City Police Quartette. per, the Hudson county boulevard » ^ Miss Peggy Morris. Cur- o f t h e Wo

Vmen's Democratic Club in h"2™,, m a k e s h i . s n e e z e7-. r a s k . ' W I V I I t t l " J U U " times that nverythinn po«ibe « n fct T^M

^The fcuge crowd swarmed through ripper and he attempted to have ^ ^ C a t h e r i n e se»lly, Nathan Hale school and all promised What makes hu sneeze. I ask .lorn- to overcome any eonutfionirf ; ^ Hthe spacious park. Box lunches were passed the Passaic npper, the con- y Ginda, Miss Dorothy Gu- t o attend. , V,Wpl, „ Rflvs cCT.0OTin3 "!„ the Advance Reports Indicate That distress that may develop Jus win- M ^ H

™ tt* "*• ' * t " , " « " ' Sf f ' ^SSSni^Sd™^™ Perth Amboy Police C.tch - — - lik, til. M l , 1 ,H him b.,k .. .rftjut ;»»«,.!> B._« «. nb. ••• ^ '™»ta S " ^ S t VS ^ S X ^ a A " ' ^ th. J t ^ - j ' J i'S Hi™ O» Roof OI H.11 Wher. C.rd Party W«ta*l.y N,8ht th^.t rubbto, ^ e% f o .^ .oc . Utlp . J2R* fl

SxiSSw isa-^ "™:;r:: . « ^ « « — r H/s ri?. SHiStHhs aprttfa 1

• cat short. Mr. Moore refrained from have these 1™n«>»°e" o f t i d . have vowed to DreaK up W e r f e r w a g w o n b y M r a kma ^ ^ t h e ^jnp^^v- . h P e r t h A m b o G c n e r a i Hospi- *"v'"f. T>j i n f o r m a t i o n wm be S

B "P.rmtt me to extend by crfngrat- iief," said Mr. Brown the topic for th« sermon at th« Pres- ™« M v l l i G i e c k l l e r i Mra, f o r -"„,.'• was the immediate cause uf death. «• u l a f f to the voter, of 'Middlesex p h o l ^ '^'emme? Mteissen in byterianChurch or.Sunday mornn* ^ G , e c k n e r i M r g . A. Markwalt , T h a t - s f oo; talk," said I, "you're w a

M r . N a s h w a 8 3fl y e l ? r s o ld last G> Q_ p_ o , , ^ ^ ^ 9• for tW. splendid gathering," said . freeholder Klemrn e iaivt T h e p a s t o r w l U 3peak to the Juniora jj^iniam Beisel. ., , a Democrat ain't you?" March. He waa born in Carteret and " ' i . T L ' 1, ' r ™ . flB Mr Moore "It is an inspirational his .remarks told o£

fth^ m'n"nYy "s on "Stony Hearts." 8 r

M r g J o h n A d a m 3 w»a general ..Ohi i neVer say nothin about, me t h Bon of a f o r m e r councilman At Tref i n k o . Grore BB ilht *nd is tvpical of the poltical which the bus 'n«s%0^e^Ve county Mis* Evelyn Beech will lead the I h ^ m' i n c h a r g e of the arrftnp | o w n politics," says he. "I am just f

8 borough. He was widely — , , .. . •B wSirtnn throffiu the state in conducted «*&<**£&&* county ^ . ^ ^ n ™ a n d deserve, much credit for hink;V a b o u t the general public; « ^ A t o n / t i m c h e w a a active in There will be a meeting of tte MB S a h S L i n of ours. »•»» (

b e e n dlvltd«f '"^fc S gtributed P- m- " W h a t , ? u r S°CI

tety. P l a n s T° the success of the affair. if.Tike thl. new buBinen of free b b „ , j a n d f r c ( |U( !nUy aided Daird For Governor Club at h.ad- .W

B Vh^MoiDle of the state and na- ments and t h e ™nrk t h p B o a r j | Do This Year" is the-topic. wheelin'." in promoting sport events. quarters, 56 Washington avenue, to- SMB « .r«PtSrn!n£ to the Democratic among the members of! the Board A{ a meeting of the Session on ^ , . -How d'ye mean?" fir Nash served in the A. E. F. night at which time the committee » • . »B S« J«TlpX4iD They have been He said this system replaced the for e v e n M r s E j Bennett Jr. Slovak Club n u t t "There's a lot of guys," says B n d " r

w a a \ raember of the American charge of the family outing will : «B 5^** H >,„ the Republicans who mer one of dividing all the work in ^ 3 e l e c t e d a g o r g a n i s t t o SUCceed F o r Hallowe'en Social ScTOgginSi "that say they's Demo ™ B ide8 a w i d u w hu i s Bur . TOake t h c final arrangements WH betrayed by the nep t o c o m m i t t e c g . P i r i aTlce Mr. Merrill B. Huber who has been t t h e y . Republicans but they «d . brother, Edward, ui»d The outing which will be held Uui !MB taMu!tf J ? k « t in office, everyone "In th« Department of »,„««« ,gt f o r t h e t i g h t w ten . of t h J u n i o r S i o v a k

cV0

8te

sall k i J o f w a y g with changing " ^ °[ ° M r a H 'o r a e e A r m o u r , c o m i n g Sunday, prom.ses to be the M

B S T a v e a chicken in their pot and Administration through the su^ Bennett B the director ^ a la«t weefc ^ t h e s e d t h e i r ,abe,s.,, P a u l fi_ H a n i t o n a n d Mrs. largest <-vent ever undertaken by the «

K would "**. their iraraee and as a gestion of Director . ^ " " P ^ " ' * " ; of the choir and will be assisted in. ° H u • ^ h s t r e e t i plan* "You mean they have a complex? j I u g h Carlton, all of OartL'n.t. local RepuUlicans. flB *"!?• T f S t ftev even haven't the policy of not borrowing W ™ i n c r e a a e d d u t i e s b her daughter Hew* Han H a l l o w e > e n Social , .,t m e a n t h e y h a v e a price/' says u u « h f ', M r , i w w,,,(! he ]d T h e C o u n t y candidates nave b«n , f lH matter of fact, they even n» ^ .n Qnc a r t h ls dU£s tor M r g E d w a r d W e bb. It is also plan- were ™^e th

a h a l l l a t e i n s ina, , this morning from the UU home invited to attend, there will be gmrnei M

H I ^ . P t o n u h l l e i n warty 'ha. broken the retiring of bonds jof_ttat jear to t r a i n s o m e o f t h r to £e held^n ™e «^ ^ w t h e n g t r u c k ^ l o a d £ ma morn g ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ M be played «« SB , The

ABePiU«p m de to the"people, has been adopted by thc Board, sa.u m e m b e r s o n the organ so that they U ^ ^ o r a picnic to be held thU barrels twenty feet high comes ^ h whet"e a solemn high mass of th« lawn, ri.freShmenU will, be *oM m

m T ^ S t a d a reduction in, Uxe. Mr. Kalteisjen. " Barefully « » of service to the: church ,rJ § ! a ^ o ri n g t. Elizabeth's fifove along. . . m e r e q U iem wa» offered for the repow h t moderate prices, adm^ion will S

B They Promise" . at t . r X s t a t e budget "All of the accounts are: Laroimiy w o r k T h e c h o l r 3 w l l l h o l d t n e , r sunaay^ g e v e r a l com_ n e fl d o l l a r to ^ke me i , T h e t u n e r u l w a s v e r y b e f r e e „ „ « * . S

K but instead raised OLLMit B f k e d a m , a statement available at r e h ( i a r s a l s Thursday evening. A t " X e s were appointed to run the down Washington avenue, fast as £ ' , ha l t e n d e d . T h B interment was The outinft comm.ttee >».«'™«h M

H many "Wionj . They wud in ty s o t h f l t ft budget may be , rf thfl B r o t h e r h o o d on r ' " ? e 8T ^ e *P a s f o U o w g ! Refresh he truck wilt go," say* Scroggins to * r g

se

t ' y j aa m e s CemeUry. ly requested to make it a point t o r t - M

H agamst ^ ^ ' V M " bB « i n s t prohibi- strictly adhered to," l-;unt!n"fau

I*rr- Monday evening plans were made for cnc. 1 hey^ar a^ ^ ^ ^ ^ d r i v i n T h s t o p 3 s.t Ja ^ ^ t e n d ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ m o r d e r to „ . , . «

K done a blessed thing again.st , Kalteis lM.n w h o also stated that auar- v ^ . ^ t h e F a U and Winter. "><>ntS Anna Me , M u d r a f e ^ ^ ^ M d S c r o ? e ; l n a p l «s ln, c , t l n

b e a u U f u i floral tributes. Mo a full report. MH Co»fid.nl of Winnie U-vU audits are ™ft «* /» c o u n Speaker, of various typej, will be se- na Se ck and a n d A]ec lc a n a n d g o e 8 the Uuck. * J m c m w , r t , in l h e f u ne r . M^ • ^ ..TU n-mn^atic oarty in New ty's business and publ shad.., th(, i n l . cured foiHhe meetings. Men who are " i " ^ When I see that tall load of barrels The bearers were: Al J, | IT I I 9H "The. D e m ° « f w i P

aa',\l i a m „„- Reference was made ^ jht " ^ t h i t iea in t h e L r VHrioUs helda. At Baumgara^ bearing down on a Eepublican ban- « w m i v ( ; h h l l i Coun-1 Anjlvpttf K l i r i i V b " W

H Jersey tt going to win a*a „ , o v m e n t s Bt the county woik ou«c meetings, probably iri No- L ,. -. s , n e r strunK low across the street I c i l m a n Kdvva,d Dolan, John Dono- iUHUeW IVIUUjia 9K » W to be e ^ c t , e d . r ^Xt ith r«- and tin- Kiddie Keep Well Cam^Ht ^ .,. jg hoped to have the Bandits loo MOW Scroggins i» a D « c r a t ^™ Ewald Grohinun and Thomas __ ,MH M r O O r \ W h ' "Thh U a Ilemo- also stated large quantity rf wood . A r m y f ,a . ,T h e w D o U n C n R 8 e s Them HUCKLEBERRY HhSS. ™"'k „ b e r g 01. exempt mem- K u r d ^ ^j 5 2 . ,„», «H i W 5 d t o 5 J r and the Ue.mhlicans Wlire mad, available so that the same . Q{ D e e p S€ c b, ,, pmentad. _ _ ^ _ ; f p i r e C o l n p B n y N o . 2 of which ^ ^ e r J n stnfet. diej tWa ; . ; •• • ; ««tic year and tin J in ) I ld i t io I l w l U I)revuil this yea . K k Bareford is the chairman h b a n d i t g w a l k e d ! n t o the De- - F n r r M i I.ndinK Mr- Nash was a member, until he be- « J ^ ' j t h P e r t h ^ b o , c«er- ; •• 1 J.110^ " : H \ t L Z J , of my op- Mr. Kalteisaen also t° ld *[, of the program committee which.will L u x e D i n e r in Roosevelt avenue Plane Make* Forced Landing t 7 3 4 " after . lonif iUaew. B* M•K Camden, the, home town ot y ^ ^ ^ p, a m i park projette c h a ^ e o f t h e 3 e f e a t u r e s o f the d a t 3 : 0 0 a . m a n d one or- Carteret Flying Field T h e ntt(t o n the firehouse is at J H«ptt« w jd<w< Ann^ Ml. • «• • : ponent 10,000 voters a ^ hav t ; b ,(e told work. dered the proprietor, John Dolan to A l y ; utaff. Besides the bearers nam- w »«r *, rerident of O» •• • netting ™ l f f hou t t h ^ « Hte arc t-ntion by the freehoidenj. He toM _ « H „ H e h a d ^ b u t t u ,,c. hBra w e r e wv«ral honorary bear- » j ww employed for thto- • §• • m e t ™ th™ t h

a j r e v . (lf Uu. . .placement of »«"•• * 0 0 ^ 3 METHODIST CHURCH NOTES D o ] a n w 8 3 quicker on the draw and That the l [ixv wilh u | a illduding Mayor Joseph A- Her- £ " " * in t h e i^big PU»L S

H being better attended than H b Cl)n(. re te rtructuieg and M B m w jU b e H i s o w n ^ n w a ? p re raed coming more anu m ^ v i c i n i l uf C a l . t e r e t i M a y o r W.I »»; A. tten ye e w j B ^ . «H & L ? D T T u r " n t e r e K « . U a . n - he definite progran,.mapped out an, benun J ^ f " against the bandit's .heart in a split « £ " ^ ^ °ihurtly after one Kyan. of Woodbridge, and other ^ Mentoon a t tk. Hog flH ™i»n and we wil «"«•« t"" «nialert l n u ! '"v b \ L,'" ,h.U Mr Kalteissen's choir and added interest for the fall L e c o n d . The ,bandit and his compan « , T h u r s ( i a y afternoon prom.nent men, F a m i l y church. lnU-roumt will be i> m• ^ctorv^n The history of this state" W- 1 ^ 7 , f l"^ c t ief ly in which Vork. ions fled. when George Briss, of Staten Island St. James Cemetery. . y |

B efforU werl warmly applauded. The event of hi^elec n. bu ma(,e Scout rtpr«,entaUv»of t o 11 «» , .£ bee[, f t l f w t l h a i Mr^ Ann* ^hw« ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ rf |

B State afTaixt"aid tax reduction dur- nuing the J > W ref lW(sd to time. Bible instruction by competent *J£ m o ( ] e r n improvement. t o o k ^ f f f o r hia destination. C H t h o l i c c h u l ch. Interment will be any dtbt. lJg'n, A B L J B M M L ^ - B

B ing the present Republican admini*- the K ^ ' c a ' - a ^ B Jf the commis- teachers. Apply Kahn's Furniture Store, Wash- _ _ _ _ «_ .,,....1.111 n>.,,IHt1-v. „ " mM

• • • • « ; ; • • ; - • ' •

t ' ' ' • • j t - ' • ' • . " '

PAGE TWO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, M81

GREATVALUESPREPARE FOR

COOL DAYS

All WoolPull-Over Sweaters

$1.69

Heavy-Weight All Wool

Pull-Over Sweaters $2.95Famous Homedale All-Wool

Pull-Over Sweaters $4.95

Fine Knit Coat Sweaters $1.39Men'. All-Wool

Fine Knit Sweaters $2.69Famous Lion Made Sweaters

Regularly $5.00

$3.95Genuine Suede

Lumber Jack $6.95Trench Model Goodyear

Rain Coats $4.45DOUBLEDOYLE 8 .a*-

CUNNEEN

Eirly CongreoeiCongress moved from Hew York to

Philadelphia December 6, 17W); midBtayed there until May K 1800. TheCapitol nt Washington was first usedby congress when It reconvened InOctober, 1800.

tnow in the Ko^kieiThfiri' la snuw on the Itueky moun-

tiilns all llu> year nnniiul. Sometimes,If the summer has bren exceptionallyhut. It will only lip found In crevicesnml shadowed phirea which the sunseldom reiichi'S.

Berrien Home HasInteresting Features

House At Rocky Hill W a tO n r p Headquarter* . OfWamhington-

Oiif of Hip most IntercBtin? build-ings hnving o close connection withrevolutionary days is the BerrienHome at Rocky Hill. In the closingdays of the war General Washingtonlived in the house from August 24thtill November 10th, 1783. A letterdated November 9th, written by thoGeneral is shown, giving full instructions to Captain Howe for the re-movnl of the (foods to Mount Ver-non. During his stay the house wasthe scene of festivities M the termsof peace arrived in October and pre-paration was made for the disband-ing of the Army.

A room is shown where Washing-ton wrote his farewell addresR tothe army and nearby is the bedroomof the General which contains thebed on which he slept during thefiKhtinp; on Long Island. The DeF'uyster home at Flatbimh was usedby Lord Gornwallis and later becamethe Headquarters of Washington andit is believed that both men used thesame bed on different occasions.Many interesting relics are shown in•he ten rooms of the Main Buildingat Rocky Hill. An adjoining build-ing which is a replica of the slavequarters of the Eighteenth Centuryfarm in New Jersey is also shown,including furniture and cooking uten-sils of that period. This building isused by picnic parties who bringtheir lunch ar\d enjoy sitting amidhistoric surroundings listening tostories of the olden time when theGenera! and Mrs. Washington enter-tained the statesmen and militaryleaders of his time.

In the interest of those who arenot familiaV with the district it maybe well to Rtatc that the building isclose to the concrete road which con-nects New lirunswick with Hopeweland Pennington and is twelve mileafrom New lirunswick and fifteenfrom Somprville.

The present custodian, Mr. Barrowman has made a study ofthe history and genealogy of theRevolutionary families connectedwith the district and is well qualifiedfor the position he now holds as cus-todian of the historic building. Forseveral weeks the house has beenundergoing repairs and all of the exterior painted—also new roofing andcopper gutters as required. Thegrounds are all cleared and manybeautiful flowers are to be seen alongthe borders of the well kept lawns.Many fine old trees surround thhome and the coming fall, with thetrees changing color, will be a sourC'of delight to all lovers of nature.

Truth About OitrichThe ostrich's proverbial foolishness

In hiding Its head In the sand nndthinking It Is thereby concealed Is oneof the myths that have been discred-ited by modern science. vThe ostrichIs a very alert' and wary bird and. ex-cept for its habit of running In acircle, can rarely he cnupht.

Daughter See* MotherMurder Father-in-Law

Aiihnrn, N. Y.—A bride, of one yenrmny nppear H» H nlnl(> wltnefl* In theIrnll nt nor mother, wli.n In chnr^dwith stnhblnR to denth John Dehadts,forty-sli, the. young woman's fatherIn-lmv.

A Cnyitga county grand Jnry re-cfltly Indicted thn mother, Mrs. RoseAlloco, forty-four, Sodim, N. T., tforfirst degree murder In connection w||thhe glnylnj. The Indictment charged

Mr*. Allnco ulew Dehadti with •'ntoher's knife.

The stabbing of Debadts culminateda year old fend between the two fsmt-

1P« which started when Cnthertne Al-oco married Adrian Debndts.

Althnngh both families objected,Debndti was Infurlnted after the mar-riage and refused to »ee his dunghter-

-lRw or any of her relations.On March 14, according to police,

the bride appeared nt the Debadt*home and tried to effect a reconcili-ation, but was ordered from the place.

She returned with her mother, policemid, nnd In the argument which en-sued, Debadts was n!nbbe<1 fatally.

The families lived one mile apart

4-Foot Snake Trie* toSwallow 4-Foot Snake

Henton, 111,—Robert McMahan, efarmer living nenr here, thought hehnd found n new kind of reptile whenhe snw whnt appeared to he a sli-footsnake with two tails and no heartwrithing on the ground near his home.

Closo Investigation revealed that aking snake had nltemplert to swallowa cottonmonth. Tloth snakes wereabout four feet long. The king snake,writhing In agony, had Rucreeded Inswallowing half of the reptile, but (Jiatwas all. Two feet of (be cottonmonthyet remained to be. swallowed whenthe king snake died.

Blind Swimmer RescuesYouth From Drowning

V/nynssbnrg, IV—Guided only bythe shouts of spectators, HlchardBrooks, twenty-eight, Greenboro, whoIs totally blind, swam lo the side ofa ten-year-old boy who wns strugglingIn deep wRler In the Mnnongnhela riv-er and hronght him to ahore.

Brooks, an expert swimmer, heardthe cries of the i>».», James Davis, ten,who had gone down for the secondtime. As he swam Into the river spec-tators shouted directions to him.

Pleasing ProgramsAt State Theatre

"Smart Money" and "Bachel-or Apartment" Holds BoardsTonight.

Constance Bennett in "Bought"and Bnrbara Stanwyck in "NightNurse," two of the current, season's Ibiggest hits are booked for showingat. the State theatre next week. |

"Smart Money," featuring Ed. G-Robinson the "Little Caeser" ofgangster characters and Lowell Sher-man in "Bachelor Apartment" arethe double feature attractions at theState tonight. Another double fen-tiirp bill will he shown at the Statetomorrow, for one day only. This billis headed by Victor McLaglen andKdmund Lowe in "Women of all Na- itions," which is a sequ«l to the"Cock-eyed World." In the second;feature, which is also a comedy,"Everything's Rosie" Robert Wool-sey has the leading nut role. I

Sunday and Monday, ConstanceBennett wili be seen in her latestproduction, "Bought" which is saido be her best, picture. Miss Bennetts supported by Ben Lyon and Rich-

ard Bennett her father.'Monsters of the Deep" is the sec-

ond feature of the program and isone of the most thrilling and unusualpictures ever filmed. Tuesday andWednesday, .lack Holt, and MaryA at or head another double featureprogram in "White Shoulders." JoeItrown in bis latest feature comedyBronilminded" is the second fea-

tu re.Thursday and Friday, Barbara

Stanwyck will be seen in "NightNurse" which is one of the season's

ggest sensations. Other picturesbooked for early showing at theState theatre include D. W. Griffith'snew synchronized version of "WayDown East," "Transatlantic," "TheBad Girl," and "Young As YouFeel."

Mr. Arnold has arranged with theleading producers to present all ofthe outstanding productions releasedthis coming season fourteen days af-ter their showing in Perth Amboyand Rahway. The first pictures underthis new arrangement are "Bought'and "Night Nurse" which come tothe State this week.

— Please mention this paper whenbuying from advertisers. —-

News of All Carteret Borough in thePress, the most widely read

paper in Carteret •

SMALL SIZE

GRAND PIANOMADE by well-Known manufacturer,fully guaranteed, Will be sold f<irsmalt balance (life on left**. No tiownpayment necessary, Just continueweekly payments. Following ourusual custom, all returned GrandPianns are sold In thin manner; of-fern exceptional value for some une,

Trie phone or Write to Mr, Cugle

CREDIT MANAGERGRIFFITH PIANO CO.

606 Broad Htrect, NewarkMullxrrr 4-M8O

I I

USED CARSwith at OKjhat counts

saleUsed car buyers—come to (his spectacular sale today. Youare sore to find a handsome, dependable car, exactly suitedlo your needs and purse and priced far below any like valueeter offered in this city. It's oar red O.K. tag that is draw-ing the crowds, for it means careful reconditioning thatassures dependability. And our amazing bargain prices areselling these good cars at the fastest rate in ear history!Come in today and find out for yourself the tremendousvalue* offered. If you want one of these super-specialsBated below—come early!

hunyy Nfej^1928

ftHRYSLERSEDAN

INPERFECT

MECHANICALCONDITION

Today'* Biggest Values

1929 OLDSMOBILE COACHA Splendid Car At A

BARGAIN PRICE

Jefferson Motors, Inc.160 New Brunswick Ave.

Phone Perth Amboy 15

Perth Amboy

CLIP THIS AD HANG IT UP — For YourTel. WbJ«. B-12U.

Wwt

EARL ARNOLD. MANAGER* " 1 " • •• — — Mjw,^;

ED ROBINSON * J«m*« Cngney in "SMART MONKY, ^ n e D u n n ft Lo,»,ll Sherm.n in "B«k«lor A|»rWnt

SAT - MM. and Eve.—Double Feature—All Comedy BillVICTOR MC LAGLEN - EDMUND LOWE

">VCHf N OF ALL NA1ICN1*-A Comedy Riot, with the Famous "Cockeyed World" (:as|

AlsoROBERT WOOLSEY in "EVERYTHING'S ROSIE"The King of Nuts in His Nuttiest Feature Comedy

Al»o "The Seagoing Shiek" Another Added Laugh Hit

SUN MON—DOUBLE FEATURE—Sept. 27 - 28

CONSTANCE BENNETTIn Her Latest and Most Fascinating Role

""BOUGHT ONou u uii i Rlcnard BeniMsttAlso The Moat Thrilling Feature Ever Filmed

"MONSTERS OF THE DEEP"An Ocean of Thrills That Will Make Your Blood Tins;]..TUES. - WED. — DOUBLE FEATURE

Both Corking Good Picture!Jack Holt — "WHITE SHOULDERS" — Mary A»tor

Also "BROADMINDED" with JOE E. BROWNExtra "Adventures in Africa" into the Unknown

THURS. - FRI.Prepare For a Dramatic Shock When You See

BARBARA"NIGHT NURSE"

SMALL PRICES—Mon. to Fri. 10 - 3Oe—S«t. & Sun. 15 - 25 . 35C

Two W.y Road,Business follows good roads; In fact

It will open Its cot-out and follow righton to the next town If yon don't putyour own town In orde!\—CountryHome.

Immortal N«tur«li«lJohn James Autlubon was born near

New Orleans ID 1739 and died In NewYork ID 1851. Audubon was not alearned scientist or a great artlet, buthis self-denying enthusiasm for hit sub-ject and the uniformly pleasing qual-ities of his work made him the mostdistinguished and best loved of pioneerAmerican naturalists.

Milk PtttearliatioaExperimental evidence Indicate thnt

paBtenrlzttion does not Injure thichemical or notritlve value of milk toan appreciable degree. U |» possiblethat vitamin C, which protects nitalnstscurvy, Is Injured or destroyed hj ins-teurlzatlon, but that is of little impor-tance, except In the feeding of In-fants, i

NATIONAL FOOD MARKET279 Hobart Street

Next toSear}, Roebuck PERTH AMBOY

B E S T Q U A L I T I E S

LOWEST PRICES

THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAYLEGS OF GENUINE

SPRING LAMB

°*GOLDEN WEST FOWL 19c

FRESH CALI HAMS

orBREAST OF VEALFOR STUFFING

10cFREE POTATO SALAD OR SAUER KRAUT

WITH 50c PURCHASE FREE'ARMOUR'S" SKIN

BACK HAMS

or 17cFRESH PORKLO1N

TENDER CHUCK-STEAK, VERY BEST

or 12kPURE CHOP MEAT

Fresh Vegetables, Fruits, Fish, AT LOWEST

VEAL CHOPSor

SHOULDERLAMB CHOPS

OC

SHOULDERS of VEAL

12kDelicatessen Specials

FINESTFRANKS AND

BOLOGNAS16c

Potato Salad 12V2C

GROCERY DEPARTMENTSunbeam Evap. Tall can*

MILK 3 cans 17cSunbeam Lf. pkg.

Corn Flakes 5c

Pure Tomato large

Ketchup 2 bots. 25cSunbeam pt.

2

10c pkg.

My - T - Fine 5cRed Ripe 10c can*

Tomatoes 3 cans 19cFreeh Roa»ted

Coffee 3Ibs.55c

GRANULATEDSUGAR

5 ib«: 23c

Mayonnaise 23cArm * Hammer 10c box

Washi»S«da 5c

Preserves2 lb. j * r

23cEarly June

Peas 3 cans 2 ^

CaliforniaIt lb, bag 31b. 25c

StarConican 10c

17c

CARTBKBff PftESSFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2B, 1931

Dad ftays:"If old Desperate Desmond

Divorce keeps on improving hispitching arm, Danny Cupid willstop making any more homeruns."

If more people would takeadvantage of our cut pricesthere -would be more happyfamilies in town.

Full Line of U. S. RubberRaincoat*

LATEST STYLES ATPOPULAR PRICES

(Men, Women, Boys and Girls)

Economy Store79 Main StreetWOODBRIDGE

•7.and an Old Iron

Paid for mjr

HOT POINT

HAVE IT DONE NOW!

Yonr heating plant, any kind

or make Vacuum Cleaned.

Be Clean and Warm all Win-ter. Costs Moderate. Chimneydone with each order reducesFire Hazard.

We repair all makes of Furnaces.Repair Parts and Grates installed.Leaders and Gutters new or repairs.

Rooflng — Metal Work

For Ettimata or 9*rri» Call or WriteWOODBRIDGE 81516

FRANK BRECKA17 Park Ave. Avenel

SLATS' DIARYBY ROSS FARQUHAR

Friday — Mr. Gillom was down toare house today anil Ant Emmy was

a tnwking In himabout his wifeand sho sed

here yurr

SUPER AUTOMATIC IRON"XOU too can turn in your old iron and wi> will

sell you the Hotpoint for one dollar le.ss than theregular price. A button nook, a thumb rcit and aheel stand are some of the convenient features ofthe Hotpoint.

Regular price is 18.80f l down $1 a month

PREHISTORIC BONESOFTEN FOUND HERE

United Statet Fertile Fieldfor Paleontologists.

CAR OWNERSDEMAND VALUES-

not Claims!

JH5

MltS HFI1V NIKORAK,~; I'nlrvtrw Avenue. Newark, iftyn:

I li.nl »<mr a d d stomach so badly thatI tiii.k linking Mtxiu JnJIy and It got so Itilul mi! liflp me at all. I wan distressedririt if [lift time and had no ambition toiln my liousfwnrk. I kept gnUlng* worseiiinl worm1, vvhrn a netglitior told me about<iKAT<>NA, and I am very glad that I1'i.pk \\t'r advice. T had taken three bnttleftanil urn now a well woman, thanks toiMCVroNA."

I I K A T O N A coinra to you In a friendlyT'il imtl Kreell box wtti the photo and BIK-iKili're of HaroUl C. Kngiert. OKATONA 1«^uaranlroil liy your drugKht. Listen to ourfi\<> iliilly announcements over Station\, AAM, Newark.

OKATONA la bring Introduced In Wood-liy Hardlman's Pharmacy, Bahway

pniip and Green street.(1KVTIINA la being Introduced In €ar-rel hy Mlltufh'a Drugs, 61 BooaeHctt Avt.

wifeRUfTorn R (Treatdpfl frnm nirvus-ness nnd Mr. (!il-lem rcplywl andsed wol shn ispritty niiviis hutI think 1 nm the1 witi-h suffer".frum it becuz;s h i\ socms toruthor injoy it.

Ratorday — Igpss pn is a |»o-injr to Kct. red ofthe ole 2nd hand-ed fnrd at lastbeen/, hp sei thatwhen ever he

stops at. H strange place evry 1 want*to no wear the accident happoned.

Sunday — Pa Rot wird today thatthree clizzens wan a eomeinir hereto spend there vaenshuns and ma Rota telefone call that her Ant frum outeast was comeini?. Pa sod he don'tno whut we are Koine tn iln so Ant.Emmy sed he better get thnt, nowbook of Ine stines about Relativity.

Munday — Cuxien C.lnrencc wnstawking to pa today and he had tosell his machene and his wife* dia-mond ring. He Bed he got a cut in

Ihis salry a yr, afjo but even at thnthe was (jetting along all rite till they

I give him an interest in the business' and now he is broke.

Teusday—Unkel Hens nefTew wasft •oinjr to join up with the navy but.when Ant Het found out he woodhalf to lern a lot of nautickle terms;she Bed she woodent let him go andshe diddent,

Wensday —Went) to a chirch wed-ding tonite and the bride was veryvery nirvu9 till the groom sed I Doand she settled down rite away.Youd think a woman all most fortywood be settled down but she was-aent.

Thirstdaiy—Tell Sputt tore downhis telefone last month and they arested him and yesterday they senthim to the wirk house and he sentwird home that they give him therite number when he got ther sothat3 sum conBolnshun.

Bulky CurrencyA thousand silver dollars weigh 5iJ

pounds, find 1,000 dollars In half dol-lars, (garters or dimes weigh 5Spounds.

You pay less at MILES forgood quality and style

SUEDE SHOESM404m&ui

Chiffon or service^_ _ weight. Full fashioned

^taxtopT Permanently dull high twist. Wesold the same quality last year for $1.09 a pair.

M ILES§WITH STREET, PERTH AMBQY, N. |

l

S

Factories

Wellington,—Th« dlnrflvtrj In TOT-M of the dnianl armor of a giant ptiy-tosatir, a crocodile Mite creature whichlived mor« thnn W.000,000 yean »»o,•mphntftmi the fact that tb« UnitedState*: I* still « fertile Held fOf paleon-toln(lit« seeking the fomlli of pr»hli-torlc •nlitmlii. Tnicei of many ipeclwof thme monsters hnv« been 'fmindfrom time to time.

Judging from the number of trnclMfound, the dinosaur, or "terrlbl* rep-tile," «eein» to have been th» mo*tcommon In nil part* of the country.Bculde the Connecticut river n«»rNorttiBmpton sre prenerved dlnoimirtracks mill to lie the most perfect ev«rfound. Nearer New YorV, i t Wood-bridge, N. J., dinosaur tracks were dli-covered lait ypftr measuring 20 Incbetacrosn the toes. The; are thought tod*t« hftfTt to the cretaceous period ofth« Meser.nlc ago.

Haunti of th* Dlnoiaur.The haunti of the dinosaur In New

J«rs«j wer« first discovered, however,In IRAS, nnd a mounted skeleton li Inthe State muneum at Trenton.

In the western stntes and In theCanadian province of Alberto dino-saur bones have been most frequentlyfound and most easily excavated.8om« huge tracks, 38 Inches long, hav«been discovered In Colorado; and InDinosaur canyon, near Flagstaff,Arts., 300 tracks were found by onsexpedition. One of the largest skel-etons of this beast was found In UtnhIn 1023—the dlplodocm of the specie*.This specimen was Tl feet long and thepieces discovered weighed shout 82,-000 pounds. This creature It sup-posed to have llvef 170,000,000 yearsago.

Mastodons, It Is hNlfved, wereabundant here about 26,000 years ago,whereas this animal wasj thought tonave become extinct In Europe 1,000centuries back. Mastodon teeth 7Inches long have been discovered Inthe ocean oft the New Jersey coast;and the vicinity of Niagara full* hasfurnished a fertile field for such dU-coverles,

Hug* Thunder Llxird.Near Medicine Bluff, Wyo., was

found the skeleton of one of the larg-est of the prehistoric reptiles, thebrontosiuirus, or thunder lizard, nowIn the Peabody museum at New Ha-ven. When alive, Its weight Is esti-mated to hnve been about 40 tons, nndIt lived about 120,000,000 years ago.Thl Jaw,, of a tlthanotnere, to whichfamily belong the modern horse, tapirand rhinoceros, wag found In theWhite niver. Bad Lands of South Da-kota In 1848.

Border Smuggling Cutby Help of Mexican*

Juarez, Mexico.—Smuggling opera-tions along the Juurez-E! Paso sec-tion of the Elo Grande have been cutIn half since the Mexican governmentordered armed patrols along theboundary, Gen. Miguel S. Oonzalei,Juarez garrison commander, declared.

"While we never will be able toStamp out smuggling, we hare cutactivities to * minimum," OnenilOonzalez said.

"Our greatest trouble Is In airplanesmuggling. We are not yet equippedto cope with It and, as planes allownight operations at Inland towns orMdnded Bpots, we are In a difficultporttton."

General Gonzalez said that a large•mount of merchandise being smug-gled Into Mexico from the UnitedStates also has been seized by his menu well aa a large quantity of liquorbalng taken Into the United Statesfrom Mexico.

Ancient Cuban Letter*to Be Placed in Ca»e

Havana, Cuba.—Valuable documentswritten by General Albemarle, wholed the English Invasion of Cubaagainst the Spaniards In 1702, are tobe placed on display under glass tntile ancient city hall oJ Havana, It hasbeen announced by Mayor Tlrso Metaof Havana.

Some of the most historically val-uable documents In the arcblvei ofHavana, they were written on parch-ment and are tn a fine state of pres-ervation. They Include military or-der* and decrees and a number ofpersonnl letters,

Excavation RevealsRoman Jig-Saw Puzzle

London.—Excavations beneath thenew building of the Royal Bank ofCanada In Lothbury, TC. C, have re-sulted In the discovery of a 1.S0O-year-old jig-saw puzzle In Romanpavement.

Many pieces of the old puzzle aremissing, but there has emerged apicture of the substantial house ofsome Roman citizen.

Archsologlsta are now studying theJig-saw puzzle and other sections oftepsellated paving found In the area.

LOTOMST9•re fladlag theftrmmtmit Vmlmm*! • ffireatoae € • • • -Dipped Tires. Eversince Firestone andFirestone Dealers be-gan advertising thetrue facts about tirequal i ty and con- jBtructlon and actually demonstrating the Extra FoJu«« InFirestone Gum-Dipped Tires, distributors of special-brandmail-order tires have grown bolder and bolder with mis-leading claims and comparison* in the desperate effort toInterest car-ovmers.'. Car owners bought more Firestone Tires In May, Jun«and July, than in any like period in history. This dearlyshows that car owners are interested In Firestone ExtraValues and are not interested In comparisons based on analmost obsolete tire size—confusing laboratory analyses—*meaningless definitions—Impractical challenges with un-fair claims of twenty-five per-cent saving*—and deceivingprice comparisons.

Why risfc a tire of unknown manufacture when you canfiet the Extra Quality, Extra Strength, and Extra Sqfsty ofthe special patented construction features of FirestoneTires—Gum-Dipping, and Two Extra Cord Plies under th«Tread?

You get these Extra Foluea—plus our SwvUse and theDOUBLE GUARANTEE of Firestone and ourselves—at nomor« cott!

Drive in today.—We hare sections cut from FirestoneTires, special-brand mall-order tires and others.—.S«« theevidence,—Take nothing for granted.—Judge for Your$elf.

COMPARE PRICES

Work on New CruiserGive* 1,800 Men Jobs

Philadelphia, Pa.-When the keel of(he new treaty cruiser Minneapoliswai laid down at the League Islandnary yard here recently, It meant tbatl,80O additional workmen would beemployed by th» Navy department. Itwill take' two and one-half years tobuild the boat, according to officials ofthe navy yard.

— A Oawilled Adv. Will SsU It —

WALL PAPfft

4AM Of CAR

W«Ut '. 4.50-20

3»ncil*t

inkliu

([>urant^r*h*.m-PiiltPoatUol

Bulck

TIM

FkntoiitOldtaU

4.40-214.50-204.50-21

4.75-19

4.75-M

3.00-1

S.00-30

5.00-2

5.25-2

*.»oM l

741••SI

MAUOfCAR

B'kJrtq.l

inbornlonlu-RwCudoaiMum'aOaUuul

Stn'b'kijQunbr1

Viking.Fnsk'n

Hupm—US.1I*P.ck'rd

TOtE

azi

18 S7.»sjt7.90

.50-18

1.50-1

Fir*dan

M MEMS

Mpa-clll

BlindMali>d«iIk*

••7§

M «

8.75

8.<K

i.00-18JlI.»o(llJ0(*i.70

.00-1'

6.00-21

Il.4fUl.45 I U I

$PKU

MallCMtiTin

$4.985.605.69

6.63

6.75

6.98

7.10

7.53

8.57

TrnhHi*

OMItM

cJirVksP.i Pi It

11.10

13.14

t4.se

Flrotoin$m«n<l

TypthPrt

I4.SS

• 71

••ft

7-17

MillOldNTH

14.334.784.85

8.68

8.75

5.99

6.10

6.S5

7.S7

FWariMWStatins I

Pit Pili

• M e

11.14

ii.ee

1M*

•(out

PlklP«Pill

».JO

7.se

MAKtOfCAR

'oa-A. .9tnU . .

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TIM

anOM-KM

6.00-31 u . e s 11.65 u . ee6.50-20 X*4313.49 H^e

r.00-20 If 3915.35 M M

Mail

Fk«.

TRUCK and BUS TIMS

H. D.

32.6 ._56.6 .6.OO-2U

FkttlwttOMsild

MT*

>adM*lOrdwTItt

*17.9529.7532.9515.25

FlrnttMCHJliB

•M.eeV t \

GOMPARB QUAUTT, CONSTRUCTION and PRICK

Ttrt*toneGive You

Itor* Weight, pnod.

Hora Non-Skid Depth,M«r« Plies Under Trend

M* Width,fam«l*rlM

H Tlr«

OUUeM

1S.00.»$•.181

es.xe$6.6$

BnudMalt Or-der Tin

17.80

.60S

.250

5

5.2016.65

4,5 e-M Tlr»

Btuiln.l

17.OX.598.ISO

6475

pBrand

M.ilOi-d.r Tin

16.10.561

.234

5

4.75

14.85

uai»u'Molur«r fur Jf.lriliutors *uch aa•naUordax boUMS, ollauupaDjcaanil ulhcra, 111..U t - n.uio Ilul auc» uvlMoutlfrtha lire Diaoufactunr 10 tba public. u.u«lly becauaa I., l.ull.1. Mm "Ixat qualiljr"Una u n d o hia I>MU nwna. I'inatuiu |>uu !•!• u u i u uii hV HIY l l » l>o uukas.

DffMfklal OtlaWIUltaV— Kvrry tlra mMtkufu(;lur<4 by riratuiio l^nr* tbe llama"HBE9TONK" aud oanlaa Vtratvua'a unliiuilnl «ui.r«ul«« nod 111m. You a ndoublT prataetad.

Llftem to the Voiev of Hn»to»e Krery MomdagKlght Over JV. U. t\ nationwide Xulwvrk

Firestone Service Dealers and Service StoresSave You Money and Serve You Better

BRAKE LINING

MUNICIPAL SERVICE STATION, INC.HUGH TOMPKINS, Manager

Rahway Ave. and Main St. WOODBRIDGETel. Woodbridge 8 1280

For Your Coal Supply SeeJOHN RYMSHA, Manager Of

STATE COM & SUPPLY CORP.Only The Highest Grade Of Lehigh &. Wyoming Refioo

Coal Obtainable Handled.We Altw SeH Coke, Soft Coal, Fire Place Logs,

Wood «»d ! « .

-j'l

*" ''•"• '•'*. '•• "•f^vamr.f.:^ . ^ • • ' . • ' ( ( • ' f ••••

PAGE FOUR

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, *1.G0 Per Ye»rPublished Every Friday By

C. H. BYRNE, 130 Jersey St., CARTERET, N. J.Telephone Carteret 8-1600 i ;

C. H. BYRNE - - Editor and Owner.1. .1. RAFFERTY Bualnds* ManserMF.YER ROSENBLUM Sport* Editor

Entered as second class matter June 6, 1924, at Carterut, N. J.,Post Office, under the Act of March 8, 1879.

Foreign Advertising RepresentativesNew Jersey Neighborhood Newspapers, Inc.

QFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1931

Exterior Decorators Are Busy

[^j^JXtJS&B^ PR].;,;

•OTHER EDITORS SAY-

THE COST OF CRIME' In its report on "The CosK of Crime" the Wickeniham Com-

mission states'that America's crime bill is well in excess of $1,-207,000,000 a year. The average per capita cort of crime in800 cities which were surveyed, was $5.47. The lowest raterecorded—in Galesburg, Illinois—was 92 cents. The highest—in Jersey City—was $11.30 a year for each citizen. Thesefacts should make the public wonder if the pleasure of pas>s-

*ing new "reform" laws is worth what they cost, not only in ac-tual money, hut in security, freedom and a table society.

As an economy measure the Commission recommends a1 weeding out of laws, to eliminate unnecessary and expensive

' social restrictions. There is nothing new in this, but it is wellto bring it once more to public attention. If there is one causeresponsible for the prevalence of crime,- its cost, and the fail-ure of law enforcement, it is the tremendous bulk of unneces-sary laws on our statute books.

The average citizen needs few laws to deter him from mur-der, housebreaking, kidnapping, blackmail and other age oldcrimes, while a million1 laws, in themselves, will not stop thecriminal from pursuing these same vocations and using a gunor a blackjack or any other murderous weapon, which he willBecure, law or no law.

In 1803 a Ormnn, Rudolph Dips-, the strike were that the man,,«1 invented the Diesel entrine, hut it o f t h e British fleet were cnllc,el, invented m e UIIBLI <••* , , ^ Br lt,gj, g^-^ 0»was not until five yearn Inter, m j d e m i t o ^ h c , r h o m e portf l_ " ^1898, that he perfected it to the , f{rnt time in history the Britishpoint where it could be puhlirly dem-onstrated. In the latter year he didgive a demonstration of his engineat. Munich. Prom that time on vari-

was helpless in peace timeCalvin Coolidge said, in the

of the Boston police Btrikp.body, anywhere, any timeright to strike against the puhl,, ,terest." It in of gravest public ,„eat in Great Britain that the T

ous European inventors worked onthe Diesel engine, making improve-ments to it. i t i i"

As you ride to New York on the be properly manned, yet these ...,.Lackawanna, after passing Newark ors crippled the navy, literally pu\nnd getting out onto the Meadows, out of business, because they",i((| Mlyou see, on your left, the plant of feel like bearing their sharp ,,f ,|.tho Worthington Puhip & Machin- burden that the British govern,cry Corporation. In that building the has been compelled to place nn ifinal touches have been put to the shoulder.a of ail of the peopl,. ,Diesel engine, so that today Europe, payers included. How, strong h ,„the home of the Diesel engine, is ernment in these times whomanufacturing; those engines underpatents of the Worthington Com-

pany. Of what importance is that toyou? Simply this: That within thenext few years the Diesel engine willbe developed to such a high state ofoperating efficiency that you willmoat, likely have one in your houseto manufacture electricity for you,and most certainly your automobilennd your airplane will be driven byDiesel engines. These engines willcause the next great forward move-ment in the mechanics of the world.

—The Jerseyman.

BUSINESS AND COPPERCitizens of the mining states will be especially interested

in a recent statement by Colonel D. C. Jackling, president ofthe Utah Copper Company.

"I see no indications of a downward trend, or, for that mat-ter, an upward trend, in business," Mr. Jackling said. . . .Naturally business men hope for a change toward better con-ditions.

"Improvement of the German situation would reflect itselfeverywhere. Copper, like other so-called world commodities,would be benefittel by improvements in the situation. Stabili-zation of the silver market and improvement of prices for themetal would help everything, including copper, through thereopening of markets. ^ . .

"The downward trend of copper is reflee#jt# curtailmentof production on some properties. It is a natural recession oflow prices, and as long as low prices contimiW, producers can-not afford to produce more than they can dispose of."

i KEEP HANDS OFF!In a recent issue of the Collinsville, Illinois, Herald, James

Monroe, who is likewise a State Senator, opposes discrimina-tory tax legislation against business, in a lopg, and logical edi-torial.

Senator Monroe centers hia arguments around a suggestedchain-store tax, but, as he points out, laws dealing with chain-stores are the least of it. "When you start penalizing, youneed not be surprised if the arm of the law reaches out andgathers you in."

"After all," he says, "we ought not to ask the state nor anyother super-power to stifle our competition. . . . Thd bestthing to do is to let business alone, let the state tend to the pub-lic business and stay out of private business, stay away frompublic ownership, . . . and not try to pull anybody's chest-nuts. . . . '

"In short, I think that business will get along better andthe public will benefit in the long run, if the government keepshands off."

Senator Monroe's position is sound. We must not, in theheat of argument, lose track of fundamentals. Once the state,through laws or taxation, discriminates unfairly against onebusiness, discrimination against others will come as a matter ofcourse. And among those other businesses'may be your own.

Martin Explains Why, Taxes_Mount Higher

State Tax Commissioner From Woodbridge Give* StartlingFacts In Address Before Women At Dinner In Hotel

Woodrow Wilson—Warns Against Tricks CalculatedTo Fool The Public — Many Municipalities

In Serious Financial Condition.

thethe

,1 '

THE DOMESTIC REVOLUTIONTwentyi years ago the light and power industry had 2,000,-

000 home customers. Now it has 21,000,000.In the small space of a generation the home has developed

from a place of incessant drudgery to the point where; it canreadily be a marvel of comfort and efficiency. Twenty yearsago work was done, whether cooking or cleaning, muc,h afterthe manner of two hundred years ago. Labor saving conven-iences were practically unknown. ;

Today, in the modern hom^, cooking and heating is done bygas or electricity. The turn of a switch1 produces light to a de-gree beyond the power of a score of oil lamps. Washing, toast-ing, ironing, cleaning—almost every household task cairi be ac-complished with the aid of inexpensive automatic apparatus.

Thia is not to say that all homes are models of comfort.There are still nearly nine million homes which are not wiredfor electric service—six million of these being on farms. Amajority of wired homes have almost no labor saving equip-ment, aside from an iron or a vacuum.: This situation, however, is beipg corrected by the declinein cost of electric service and appliances and by the gradual ac-ceptance of modern inventions as being necessities, not fads.Farm electrification, now going forward faster than ever be-fore, is giving the rural dweller his chance to live on a scalecomparable to that of the city-dweller. Power in the home,aa in industry, is being given wider and wider use.

Perhaps the present decade will be remembered, a centuryfrom now, as the period in which the revolution, in the. hometook place. ;, "*

There was hardly a municipalityin thia country with sufficient cur-rent resources on December^ 31 topay to its board of education thebalance of the school moneys for thecurrent school year which were in-cluded in your last year's tax bills,and at that, date were supposed tohave been paid in full. J. H, ThayerMartin, of Woodbridge, state taxcommissioner, told more than a hun-dred members of the New Bruns-wick Women's Republican Club, at adinner meeting of that organizationat the Hotel Woodrow Wilson Tues-day night.

"Some municipalities in the statehave gone so far as to become act-ually insolvent," said Mr. Martin."They have defaulted their bonds.One of them has already come underthe jurisdiction of the Municipal Fi-nance Commission created by theIa9t legislature to act in the natureof receivers for insolvent municipali-ties. Several other municipalitieswill very soon have to resort to thefame commission to get out of theirtroubles."

Mr. Martin declared that a reportsoon to be made public by the TaxSurvey Commission of which he is amember will contain a list ofworst offenders inpiling up of deficits.

"A tremendous number of munici-palities will be shown to have currentliabilities as of last New Year's, Jan-uary 1, greater than the whole year'sbudget," said Mr. Martin. "Manymunicipalities closed last year owingamounts greater than two wholeyears' budgets. Since the municipal-ities in this section mostly receivesubtantial gums outside of their prop-erty tax levy, thia incans that insome places it would take the entiretax levy for three years to pay uptheir accumulated deficits on currentoperations, and this without takingaccount in any way of the long termdebt for improvements. This situa-tion is vital to every citizen, tax-payer or not.

Mr. Martin started out by pointingthe way in which everyone, whethera property owner or not, was af-fected by taxation in some way."The largest single item of expendi-ture out of tax moneys is the debtservice for payment of principal and_interest on money borrowed," he ex^plained, as he showed how municipal-ities create additional indebtednessthrough lack of careful considerationand foresight.

Steps which are taken by variousheavily debt burdened communitiesto hide the extent of their financial

obligations were also enumerated byMr. Martin. He explained that somemunicipalities over-^timate reven-ues and pretend to balance the bud-get with low tax levies, incidentallypiling up deficits. Another means ofhiding indebtedness is to pad thevaluations on valueless property,keeping duwn the tax rate, but cre-ating an immense deficit in paper taxliens, which in time even banks willnot accept as collateral for loans.

'These conditions may he combat-ted through action indicated fn re-ports of the Tax Survey Commission,he stated, which will point out howvtry substantial savings can be ef-fected in such matters as fire andpolice protection, highway expendi-ture and schools without impairingthe efficiency of the present service.

Summing up the situation, Mr.Martin aaid, "We feel, however, thatthere is an even more vital necessity,

COUNCIL MINUTES

Regular meeting of the- Council ofthe Borough of Carteret, N. J., heldin Council Chambers, Monday Sep-tember 21st, 1931, at 8 o'clock, P. ""

Present: Mayor Hermann, Coun-cilmen Conrad, Dolan, D'zurilla, El-lis, Young. Absent, Lyman,

The minutes of September 8thwere read and approved on motionby Conrad and Dolan.

How Strong U GoTernm«nt?People who sometimes think about

such matte™—if there be any such—must have felt a twinge of uneasi-ness when the sailors of the BritishNavy flatly refuged to accept a paycut in common with all others in theBritish public service, including theBritish Army and the British police,

l h B i t i h Ki d t

British government cannot ifits order to the sailors in itsnavy? How strong; is any Rll>,,,.nrr.ent when the millions of thp p,., ,,iof a great country ignore the (n,l' ''and laws of the government? \usaw how lucking in strength the ]'sian government was during the v l rwhen the Russian army refusal i,fight and went home and startwl '•'revolutionthan the

that wagGreat War

moreThe

1 theuvful

strength of government rests iobedience of the people to the liorders of the government, deliby its lawful officials. When tli,.,'.orders are not obeyed governim ntfalls to the ground. Everywhere Inthe world there is a weakenint; .,rgovernment by the inclination of ti,,>people to ignore the laws of the ^vernment and make their own Inu ;„they go along. It is * dangerous ;t.uation, and no country ir ftee f>..-the danger. Revolution lies cWBritish Army and the B r t h p , _ ._

as well as the British King, and went hind contempt for duly constituiPiion strike. The immediate result* of I authority.—The Jerseyman.

Per tonal •

The Junior Woman's Club willhold a meeting Monday night in theLegion room in the Borough Hall.

Mr. and Mrs. Lukach, of Grantavenue, spent Sunday in Linden.

The Board of Directors of the Car-The Poor report for August wasjteret Woman's Club will meet Mon-

ordered filed, on motion by D'zurilla |duy ™£hJ^V^lA0.??..0L_ "' W

and Conrad.The Building Report for August

was read, showing estimated cost oi

liam Hagan in Emerson street.

A daughter was born yesterdayh R h M i l H i t l t

up the |,d for- p

buildings, $22,800. Costs of permits,|46.00. Accompanied by check for$46.00. On motion by Ellis and D'-zurilla, report was ordered filed, andcheck turned over to the Collector.

Motion by D'zurilla and Dolan, therules were suspended to take up thereading uf bills. All bills foun<'rect were ordered pkid, allyea on roll call. •

Committee*Finance—progress.Streets and Roads—Conrad re-

ported that the roads were in faircondition.

Police—D'zurilla said that thestreet crossings were all marked, andthat crossings at the schools weremarked, proper signs placed for pro-tection of all. He said that the huck-sters were being checked to see ifthey have licenses. That the Police

g yy:n the Rahway Memorial Hospital toMr. and Mrs. Daniel O'Rorke.

Thomas Uliano, son of Mr. andMrs. Al Uliano, of High street, fellyesterday and broke hiB arm.

. Please mention this paper to advoting Ionise™; it helps you. it help? them

t hel;>a your paper

Successful Concert GivenBy_MLE. Church

A successful concert was helil'l^tnight in the hibh school auditoriumunder the auspices of the M K.Church. There were instrumentaland vocsl numbers, and complysketches. Miss Lillian Richards wasin charge.

—Please mention this paper whenbuying from advertisers.—

and that is to reduce the amount of Census was completed on the unemexpenditures by spending authorities, ployed, and of the meeting beforeThat is the only way in which real , the Board of Freeholders on placingtax relief can be had. If the moneyis spent, it has to be raised in someway by some kind of tax. Thereforethe mere shifting uf lh«> levy fromproperty taxes to some other kindwould after all only be a shifting ofthe burden."

"The first item in our program,"Mr. Martin stated, "is to limit theopportunities for headlong incurringof debt, particularly through themethod of current deficits, and com-pelling the municipal authorities tolive within their actual income, in-stead of relying on paper collaterals.Another proposal which we have al-ready recommended is to provide fora bureau which will establish throughactual experiences, sound standardsof service ami of costs in order thatwhen a budget is proposed, you, astaxpayers, will have a sound basison which you can tell whether theproposed budget is really extrava-gant or not."

The part which voters and resi-dents can play in the lowering oftaxes was pointed out by Mr. Martinas he concluded that "it will be thefunction of you, aa voters, to de-mand that your representatives inthe legislature translate our recom-mendations into law; that your localofficials carry out our recommenda-tions for limitation of expenditure;and that you, yourselves, refrainfrom asking for anything which willincrease the budget."

men on road jobs. This was very sat-isfactory and that many would bepnt. to work.

Lights, I'iir nnd Water, Ruildingsand Grounds, Poor, l^aw, progress.

"An ordinance for the sidewalk-ing, curbing and grading of Atlantic!street between Carteret avenue andTerminal avenue, in the Borough of >Carteret, as a local improvement." I

Was on motion by D'zurilla and!Dolan, passed on third and final!leading, all voting yea on roll call.

(MJSMOLM I (HAPMAMMtmbtn JVW tori Slotk KllktmfV « t n Km T*k Ctrt Euimv

263 MADISON AVE.

TeUphona Perth Ainboy 2SOO

THOMAS MEACHAMManager

Resolution by D'zurilla:"That certain moneys paid by I.

Mausner, Inc. be applied to propertytax and not personal tax." Same wasd p d nn motion by Conrad and

Ellis, all voting yea on roll call.The Mayor then spoke of State

funds for Longfellow street, sayingthat he felt that we would get same,and that we would have to pay ourshare, but that would not be until1932, and if it was needed beforethat time, we could finance same, ifwork was started at once.

The Mayor spoke of the Freehold-ers meeting on employment, amiwork to be started about October 1.That would employ our mjota of menfor about three days a week, forabout four months. He said that hewould appoint a relief committee atthe next meeting. He felt thankfulto the herads of the plants here andthe Board of Freeholders for theirhelp in this matter.

Motion by Conrad and Dolan to

PLAYER PIANOPopular Make! Rather than ship a$7R0 Pluyer-Piano back to ourwarerooms, will sell for balanceon lease, $127, including rolls,bench and delivery. Will accept%i> or $6 a month without interestto reliable party. You get thebenefit of all money paid by theoriginal customer. Write

j R. JOHNSON,605 Bro.d Street, Newark, N. J.

the picnic a.Success* ?w

£>/>«• d/( wdniW' where you

the (ovely

"Well fed husband* are i>a;yto live with. Buy your fund atThe Woodbridge Delicaks-in.

WOODBRIDGEDELICATESSEN

102 Main St. Woodbridge

News of All Carteret Borough in the j adjourn, was carried.Press, the most widely read |

paper in CarteretH. VO. PLATT,

Clerk.

RABWOWITZ HARDWARE"If tft-'HArWre, We Have It!"

Full Lin* PiV-HARDWARE t^HMH, OILS, VARNUHE3

NOTICE OF CHANGEIN

BANKING HOURSIN KEEPING WITH MODERN BANKING PRACTICE, AND IN COM-

MON WITH OTHER BANKS IN PERTH AMBOY, NEW BRUNSWICK

AND OTHER PARTS OF THE COUNTY AND STATE, THE UNDER-

SIGNED BANKING INSTITUTIONS OF CARTERET WILL DISCON-

TINUE THE PRACTICE OF KEEPING THEIR BANKING HOUSES

OPEN IN THE EVENING.0 A

On and After November 2, 1931Banking Hours Will Be As Follows: _

Week Days to®f\$*m*k") 9 A.M. to 3 P. M.Saturdays 9 A. M. to 12 o'clock noon

TRUST CO.

Reconditioned Cars

PRICED RIGHTFOR QUICK SALE

1928 Nash Coach . . . $4751929 Ewex Sedan . . , $3951929 Ford Sedan . . . . $3451929 Nash Sedan . . # . $6751928 Dodge Senior Sport Coupe $ 3 9 5

1928 Pontiac Panel Truck . ' . $2»5

1929 Nash Brougham . . . $545

1930 Buick DeLuxe 5 Paw. Coupe $1295

UNIONBUICK C

273-277 Hi«h St.Phone Perth

GE COLASAIXE

PirtiAmboy

jtTERET PRESSFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1981

arteret High Will Open Season Tomorrow At FreeholdIrst Game Of Carteret

Amboy Series On SundayTo Be Played In Cily Stadium Will Bring Back Mem-

eg Of Old Fall Diamond Claries — Three Minorleaguers, Including Ernie Sabo and Mickey D'zurilla Top]fty With Locals — Big Leaguers To Play Later OnCoplan, Krauache, Regan, In Carteret Lineup — Staubackand Koch To Pilot Field Club.

Hi three minor leaguers in theirPi the Carteret Field Club willI,' the "City Stadium in Perth,,y this Sunday afternoon to

,,„., the Perth Amboy A. A. in theL, ,,f s series of games that will

likely extend to the last weekOctober.

Tilc Knme will bring back the riva-

It. is very likely, too, that Joe Mf>d-wick, when he returns from a frlori-ous campaign in the Texas League,will be seen in the Carteret lineup.

D'aurilla and Sabo will play in theinfield ag will Kiggle Coplan, talka-tive Hebrew cigar merchant fromElizabeth, and Sam Smolenaki, localstar. In the Carteret outfield will heB l k i R

Lt- \mboy series were g,^. contest* were marked withpresence of many major league

.,•< including W i t e Hoyt Bingtiller, Rube Walbew,tnmv Dykes, of the

i

Blnckie Regan, Howie. , Posnac. Regan and

swgen. introduction, havingCarteret years ago.

rk hsia promised that Frednmons and Shanty Hogan,

Waite Hoyt, BingMule Hans,

Philadelphia_ world champions, George

urns, once a great first baseman;nli'v Hargreaves, of the Pittsburg,,ics: Tony Lazarri, of the Newk Yanks, and a host of others,numerous to mention.

Henry Stauback of this boroughMoe Koch of Perth Amboy will

..' charce of the Carteret team,the second game which will be

• vi'd a week from Sunday, Stau-• - • - • F i u _

Newfork Giants hatery, will be in theJjiuret lineup. And for the Sundayft IT that, Stauback intends to get

flock of Athletic stars, includingUnas, Jimmy Dykes and Bing

|i!l<T. These players will not bejiiilable until about the second week

October as the world series, inii,h the Athletics will take part,

|»il! not begin until October 1.Of the three minor leaguers whoII be seen with Carteret this Sun-v ure two local boys: Mickey D'-i-illa and Ernie Sabo. Both have

erfnrmed in the New York-Penneiigue, Sabo having recently re-urni'd from a successful season with.filkes-Barre. The third minor lea-pier is Posnac, of the Middle Atlan-tic League.

andno

played withys g

Jess Sullivan will pitch the open-ing game with Al Stutzkc behind theplate. Jess's brother, Herb, will heon hand for relief duty. Amboy willuse the same team that defeatedFords last Sunday.

ForBurke,

the second game,manager of the

FrankAmboy

forces, has intimated that he will im-port a few big leaguers. And it isvery probable that Billy Urbanski'sDay will mark the second game. Atthat time, Urbanski, Amboy playerwho is now with the Boston Braves,will be presented with a gift.

The probable lineups for the open-ing game follow:

Yard, Tank HouseFight For Pennant

Only Half Game Separate*Club* As End Draw* N e a r -Much Depend* Upon GameTonight.

Leaders emerged victorious thispast week in the U. S. Metals base-ball league and the margin betweenthe first place Yard and second plncoTank House is still one-half game.The Yard completed its schedulelast night by drubbing the Mechan-ics 10 to 3. The Tank Hoase, havingdefeated - - -Tuesday,game to play with the Office. On thatgame, which will be played tonight,depends a great deal.

In the event that the Tank Housewins from the Office tonight, andthere is every likelihood that it will,a tie for first place with the Yardwill be the result This will necessi-tate the playing of one game to de-termine the second half race.

On the other hand, if the TankHouse loses tonight, it will be allever, for the Yard will automaticallycop the second half flag. Then thethree game series with the Mechan-ics, first half winners, will start nextTuesday. If the race winds up in adeadlock, the playoff will take placenext Tuesday, and the first game ofthe series lor the championship ofthe league will be played on Thursday.

the Office by a shutout3-0, still has one more

Jess SullivanHerb Sullivan

Stutzke

Coplan

D'jurilla

Smolenski

Sabo i

Regan

pitches

catcher

first base

secand base

short stop

third base

AmboyGarrettKnothe

Wynkopp

Marskano

Mizerak

U, S. METALS LEAGUETeam Standing

W L Pet.Yard 7 2 ,77Tank House 6 2 .750Office 2 5 .285

I Mechanics 1 7 .125Hadder Rnultt of Weak

Tank House 3 — Office 0Yard 10 — Mechanics 3

Yard Wallopt MecUnict, 10-3Clubbing Charney, Mechanics'

moundsman, for seventeen hits, in.

lungarians Play TieWith Amboy Worker

uarleret Soccer TeamStrong Amboy Eleven To 2-2Deadlock In Fiercely-FoughtContest.

iiiuuuuoiunii, IUI ocveiibeeu mm, in-

Peploski eluding a flock of extia-base blows,| the Yard won easily at the Copper-

Zawlinski works field last night by a 10 to 3left field I score. The victory broke the tie be

Krausche Karwatt tween the Yard and Tank House foicenter field | first place and put the Troskome

Posnac Burke in the lead again.right field Burt Mullen started for the Yan

hut was blasted from the hill in thfirst with a three run attack. LeiVan Dusky then went in and held thMechanics in check to the finish. S<effective was his pitching that Leiturned back the opposition withoutrun after the first.

Charney hurled for the MechanicHold* i Here Tomorrow Afternoon — » n d ex?e^ ,. *o r . , two disastrou

frames, he did fairly well. But

Copperworks StarsPlay Colored Nine

"All Set for the Gate"•HyJIAHDIN BURNI.FY-

KechniQSEEMS To HAVE

MADE GOOD ASPILOT OF THE

BRAVESSEASON ASkNAGER. O

THE CUBS'

HAS MADEA BIG HIT*AS YANK,MANAGER.

(Pight) HASSIGA1ED MIS

1532WITH THE CARPS

Veteran Team Including EightLettermen In Starting Lineup

'oil, Stutilto, Kl«»».n and Gmtxa In BackfiHd — C*rlitl«.SiulimowiWi, Eatig, Baku, D'Zurilla, O'Brien and Gal-vanek On Lino — B«ckn«ld To Average About 155, Un*165 — Varsity and Second Team Showt Well In Scrim-mage* This Week.

Conrh Frank McCarthy's Cnrteret High School footballteam will open a new campaign tomorrow afternoon at Free-hold. After two weeks of intensive pre-»eason practice, theteam is in excellent condition for the opening game and hopeato begin the season with a victory over the Monmouth Countyschool.

In preparation for this game, thevarsity was sent through a stiffeighty-minute FcrimmaKe »galmitRoseUe on Tuesday. The followingday the second team engaged in alight workout with the Sduth AmboyHigh School varsity.

The work of both teams wda highly«r,tisfactory. The varsity forked inunison, revealed a great deal of powi l on the defence, and showed a finei inning attack. Tfie second team

To keep his job, a baseball manag-er must produce winning teamsthough, some wags have it, the St.Louis Cardinals used to practicallyreverse tha4, tradition. Above themanagers are the owners of theteam, and frequently their relativesor chums inThey really

official club capacities.pull the strings and,

when the fans clamor over defeats,

final months, dope on doomedmanagers begins to crop up. This

nlm gnve n fin« account of itself, outplaying South Amboy in nearlyevery phase of the game.

Yesterday the Blue and White as-pirants rehearsed their plays andformations and were given a talk -tyCoach McCarthy on the fundamen-ti-.ls of the game.

The team that will probably takethe field against Freehold tomorrowwill consist of eight lettermen fromlast years varnity. They are as fol-lows: Pete Baska, Anthony Siulim-owski, Jake Essig, Edward O'BrienMitch Carlisle, littte Poll, Al Stutieeand Ted Kleban.

Three new men who have madethe first team and who will probablybe called to start tomorrow areJohnny D'zurilta, Galvanek, andConstantine Grutza.

year is no exception to that rule; Although Coach McCarthy made

The line that will lUrt will aver-age about 165. Mitch Carlisle, vete-ran tackle, weighing 210, is theheftiest man. Much will be dependeduppon Carlisle this season, both of-fensive and defensively. AirainstRoselle in scrimmage the other day,'"srlislc tore some holes in the op-posing line, large enough for a truckto get through. Without question,he will he a tower of strength on t!S»Isne.

Pete Raskn and Johnny D'zurill*will bo at the wing positions. Galva-nek will hold down one of the tackleposts. Szulimlwski and O'Brien, bothlettermen, will be back in their cus-tomary positions at guard. Jake Eft-ig will probably start at center.

Carteret s probable starting lineup;Carteret's probable starting lineup:

Po.. No. WeightL. E. 17 153 BaksaL. T. 7 160 GalvanekL. G. 21 154 Srulimowski0. 12 150 EssigR. G. 4 152 O'BrienR. T. 1 2fO CarlisleR-K. (I 170 D'lurtllaQ. B. 3 160 Pollh. H. 6 155 KlebanR. H. 8 136 GruUa

|P. B. 2 165 Stutike

indeed, $he anticipated "fired" list no definite announcement as to theis longer than usual. ' starting lineup it ia Very likely that

Poor ol' "Uncle Robby" — his the backfleld will be composed ofBrooklyn Robins floundered so bad- Stutzke, fullback, Grutza and Kel-ly at the season's start that false ru- >,an halfbacks, and Poll quarter-back.

, „ . _ trames, ne did lairly well. But rLocals Seeking Revenge For those two innings the Yard garneiSetback In First Game^-Van e d enouKh r u t l B to ™ three ba

games.| After the Mechanics scored three

the first, the Yard got one run

Dusky To Pitch.

In a bitterly fought soccer contest, Cnrteret baseball fans will flock to- back in the same heat. Then cameIthe Hungarian All Stars, of this morrow afternoon to the Copper- the second and with it plenty of ac-Iborough, played to a 2-2 tie with the;works field where the U. S. Metals tion, for the Yard went on a hittingIPerth Amboy Workers at Leibig's All Stars will take on the Amboy rampage and knocked six runs in,

Colored Giants in the second of a i thereby taking the lead, 7 to 3.

mor had a petition of 25,000 fans with the exceptibn of GruUa, thisi, I circulating asking for his summary j 9 a veteran back-field, having played

they make a change regardless of | removal. Then this team made a fine together last season. The backfteldwhether it is their manager or their i winning spurt. All seemed forgiven averages about 1F>5. Al Stutzke,economy or just poor luck that is until the Robins again fluttered and weighing 165, is the heaviest man.really responsible for the team's re- ' flopped. There is a faction in the | McCarthy will depend upon Stut-verses. As each season runs into it? I BrooWlyn club lmig at odds •with zjje a n d pon fOr both kicking and

"Kobby" and—he may have to pay tossing forwards. In practice, Stu-his way into Ebbets' Field next year. ^z^e KOt opf some fine kicks, some

Pittsburgh is likely to drop Jewel o v e r fjfty yards.Ens but some there are who say that, i ,if the Pirates finish strong, his deca*Citation will be called off. "Bucky"Harris, of the Detroit Tigers, is inthe same tumbrel though he seemsto have jnore support than Ens. DanHowley, of the Cincinnati Reds, isanother who's on the same criticalspot.

Although^ Chicago fans are clam-oring for Hornsby's head as a re-sult of the poor showing of the Chi-

Hart Tops TwiLeague Batters

Boys Club Right Fielder HasSensational Average Of .611For Second Half — SkuratSecond.

|fiVH afternoon. The gameb l d seemingly

Yard col-

fiH inny f n o n g _was witnessed by a large crowd. i three game series. Amboy won the j Not content with this: From the opening to the closing (first game by a shutout, 3-0, as Ruby . comfortable margin, the

Iwhistle, the contest was savagely liryan held the factory nine without kcted another handful of runs, fourIfought with the locals taking the lead a hit. | in all, in the fourth. This final rallyI en Samu's shot shortly after the And the All Stars are out to win. shattered whatever hopes the Me-

have the visi-' For this game Mike Trosko will send chanics had of ever catching up.Igume started only toI turn tie the count in the, closing min-Ixiti's (if the first half.

Again toward the middle of thesecond half, the Hungarians shot a-

jhi-ad on Szabo's goal from the side.lAnil in the same manner as before,liht Workers opened a driving attack

Len Van Dusky to face the dusky | The hitting stars for the Yardforces. The rest of the lineup will bethe same as usual with Schultz,Cromwell, Casey and Miglecz in thefield, and Ginda, Hart and Burt Mul-len in the outfield.

Hopson, star from Keyport highthat soon culminated in a goal that \ school, will be on the firing line fori k d h 2 A d t h t i th i i tthe score at 2-2. And that is

|ti;> way it remained until the finJBh.The lineup:

IlhinKarianlAU Stars

Perth Amboy

,the visitors.

The probable lineups follow:AH Start Colored Giantt

were the Mullen brothers, Burt andJohn. Each made three hits.

The box score:YARD

ABComba, 2b 5

Van Dusky

ihorosi

PaulfCumba|furnyela

koSamu

eberBzabo

GoalR. F.L. F.R. H.C. H.L,H.R. 0.R. I.C. F.L. I.L. 0.

|Jy-

Score by periods:Hungarians 1Perth Amboy , 1Goals—Samu,

WorkersReddy Skurat

T. German!Lamello Shultz

Gomez |Richey CromwellDaniel j

Hatcarty CaseyKelly'

S. German MigleczDavids

Scott B. Mullen

1—2 Ginda1—2 I

•o, Riehey, Kel- Hart !

Time of periods—46 minutes.

{Houston an4 BirminghamTied In Series, 3 to 3

pitcher

catcher

first base

second base

sbtfrt atop

third base

left field

center field

right field

Hopson

Henry

McCoy

Eaton

Bryan

J. Mullen, cfB. Mullen, If, p 5Rack, lb 4Van Dusky, If, p 3S. Trosko, c 4McDonnell, 3b 4S. Schultz, ss 4M. Trosko, rf 4

38MECHANICAL

ABCromwell, 2b 4

R131200111

10 17

I Ginda, 8b 3Edwards Borchard, ss 4

Schultz, lb 4Cherry

Sorrell

Ganzy

Auto Races At New MarketEvery Sunday, Is Report

The "Little Worlds Series" be- j Automobile races will be heldJweeri Houston, winner of the Texas every Sunday afternoon during the

Balerich, If 3Kazmere, 3Donnelly, rf 3Charney, p 2Smith, c ,.... 2

Score by innings:28 3

Mechanical 300 000 0— 3Yard 160 3ftO x—10Tank Home ShuU Out Office, 3-0

Coming through with crashing ral-lies in the closing frames after being

g and Birmingham, champion remainder of'the" season, at Newmar-1 handcuff ed through the first four• of the Southern circuit, stands at ket Speedway, Stelton road near rounds, the Tank House shut out the[three each, including Wednesday's Hadley Airport, Newmarket, N. J.,' Office, 3 to 0. at the CopperworksiKimif. Houston lost the first, won according to an announcement by field Tuesday afternoon Mickeyi th , next three, and lost the fifth and Sam Little, manager of the track Mvto*. Tank House pitcher washxth . Joe Medwick playing left field • Eddie Pine, Vernon Cook, Wesley \ the hero of the contest. Besides holdIfor the Houston BuffB and batting "Wreck" Johnson, who claims the ing the opposition to a pair of base|in the clean up position, was wholly title of champion fence-buster; Tom , nits, Miglecz drove in the first runm i b l for winning one of the Leeds millionaire Tacer, Ray Comp-|of the game—the run that was. . ----.. He drove in the ran in a ton and Johnny Hannon are some ot|K'iinu that ended 1-0 in Houston's the speedsters who will race Sunday,

favor. For the rest of the series he September 27, on the half-mile dirtJs doing fairly well. track.

-DO YOU KNOW THAT--By M. R."

enojigh to defeat the Office.For four innings, the game was

one of the tightest pitching duelBwitnessed here in years, So good wasthe pitching that neither side scored.And as a matter of fact, it lookedlike the game would wind up a scoreless tie.

But Bill Casey and Mickey Miglecz saw to it that the Tank Housegot one run at least. Working to-gether in the fifth, they brought inone run. Casey singled, went to sec

i f i l dDO YOU KNOW THAT— . ____, ... .„...,

Mitch Carlisle, giant Carteret High School tackle, weighs Ond on an infield out,* and cam• 200 pounds . . . . The Blue and White will have one of ^ w °n M* 1*"",? 1^ T a n k H o u s

r — heaviest teams in history this year Line averages over w a 7 practically sure of the game.[160 . . . . Ernie Sabo won the game for Keyport against K e d j B u t f u n n y things might have hap-

last Sunday . Scored what later proved to be the Win- ptned, so they added two more in. _ run . . . . Joe' Medwick finished the season with a batting the «,ixth w clinch matt«a.leverage of about .307 . . . . Which isn't at all bad considering t i n ^ a

yr s

aO f the vL"£k gettin

p n e fact t h a t this is his second year in pro baseball . . . . I n e t w 0 hit8]"Chain system" used by the St. Louis Cardinals has proven —|to be a auccesaful venture It is merely tha t t he Card a own d H T<> p ,[teams all over the country . . . . The Carda won the flag in the 3 a c r e a n . . . S u n d{National League ; Rochester, a farm of the Red Birds, copped ( S t ^ Jowpb » Sunday| the pennant in the International League, and Houston, where ; [n a gftWe t h a t wi l l h a v e a n im[Joe Medwick has played all summer, and incidentally, also a portant bearing on the ba&ebal[Cardinal farm, captured the crown in thfe Texas League . . . . championship of this borough, th

-zimraonB and Hogan, New Y«4rGian t battery, are schedul-to pUy with the Carteret Field Club against Amboy this

With a sensational batting aver-ge of .611, Leo Hart, hard-hittingioys Club right fielder, has captured

Falcons Beat Pastry,Capture Second Place

Take Po*t-Sea*on Consent6 to 3 Score — Fin^l Team

he batting crown in the second half also.

sult of the p gcoga Cubs, the "Raj«h" has the sup-port of President Veeck and willcontinue as pilot for next season

StandingListed.

For Second Half

if the Twilight League race. Hart, , As to the luckier fellows, Joe Me-. .J : - to records compiled by Carthy, of the N. Y. Yanks, is judg-

| The 'Liberty captu^cd Rec-by

g s p yteve Mikics, official scorer, has hit

safely eleven times< in eighteen trips

Carthy, of the N. Y. n , s j ged as having done well for his firstseason in the American League. In

the plate. He has played in seven I that organization, Walter Johnson'

defeating the Pastry Boys, 6 to 3, atthe high school field fast Friday eve

'amen.| n j n K

Seventy-eight points behind Hart ' Senators" and Bill Killifer, the St._ Johnny Skurat whose average is Louis Browns, in pleasing Btylc. Of533. Johnny is second. Mickey Da- coursU,"Connie Mack, John McGraw)olito is third with ,&50. 'and Sergt. "Gabby" Street are fix-

Seven boast of a batting average Itures even though the latter will ben the .400 group. Smolenski heads (worried if the Cards flop agam in;he list with a .444. Jess Sullivan the World Series.md Bartys, each with .428, are tied ; • ~for second. Charles Brady is third.His grade ia .417.

The majority of hityerswithin the .800 group.

come

In the team division the Boys Clubh in a class by itself. With a teambatting ayerage of .340, the Boys

Metals Stars BlowEarly Lead, Lose

view of this, there was no playoff,In the event that another team be-sides the Boys Club would have gained second half honors, a three-gamseries would have been arranged.

The final team standing for thlub tossers are nearly fifty-points! T . _„ Q I I M J I_ <Wond I B C C 0?d ^K s h o w s \he, Boy3 iClu l

- - - * - J • To»» Away 9-1 Lead in secona | an£^,j of the second place Falcon!

in a post-seasonand Pr t ry

contest. The«ie reg-

ular campaign in a UeifpT secondplace. So in order to prove whichteam is superior, they decided toplay a deciding game.i;

The second half flag was won bythe Boys Club, which had »lso cap-tured the crown in the first half. In

ahead of the Pastry Boys whosemark is .294. The Falcons are thirdwith .281, and the Foresters are last.

TWILIGHT LEAGUETeam Record*

G AB R H Avg.Boys Club 10 241 44 82 .340Pastry Boys 9 244 55 66 .294Liberty Falcons 10 238 60 68 .281Foresters 9 206 24 52 .28&

TWILIGHT LEAGUEFinal batting averages for second

half:G AB R HAvg.

Skurat 6 15 6 8 .&33Hart 7 18 5 11 .611Dapolito 9{Safaris 1Smolensk! 10J, Sullivan 9Bartys 4Brady 9Miglecz 9PoU 6Beisel 10Mayorek 7Lauter 9Stutzke 10J. TroskoT. D'zurilla

g ,

I t theSunday The Carteret Post Office may enter a bowlingteam in the tri-county league that ia being formed . . . . Some-one auggested that the high school gymnasium be open once"r twice a week for the use of older people in town . . . . Sothat they may indulge in a little exercbe and p ay baske ball

• • Which W t a bad idea, coming to think of i t . . . -Despitef t th i i t i l l y oyerthe highthe fact that the tennia aaa&on is practically

l"-u-~1 cauitai * » BfcUl V|Qf much in mpro

p* o y h i g hThe planB to or-

town h»v# ap-

won the first game are leading theseries between the oluba. In theevent that (he Saints win, they willthen meet the Eagles for the borough

On the other hand, should the Sa-cred Hearts emerge triumphant onSunday, the series will b« evened atone each, and the third and decidingeontejt will b» ptaytd • w««k from

89

Szelar 10Kara 10Thatcher 9Leshick 7H. Sullivan 8Love 1Siekerka 10Masculin 9Barna 9Casey 8Viater 3Cutter 3Happy 9Patocnig 5A. Galvanek .... 9Bylecki :.... 1Mirtoka : 8Green 6Yustak 10Pencotty 9G. Woodhull .... 6Rubel 4,R Galvanek 10Elko 6Goyena 2B. Mullen 8B'. Balarich iKasha <Karmon 3J. D'zurilla 9S, Troako 4Van Dusky ,.x 8BaMiral 5Neder 4G. Woodhull .... 8J. Mullen 2ROBB 2

AB151820

22728

72527152523232719222628141824

325252226

77

25 1015 223

• 4168

252113

7 11 .5500, 1 .5006 12 ,4447 12 .4281 3 .4282 10 .4178-11 .4073 6 .4008 10 .4007 9 .391

9 .39110 ,3707 .3688 .3639 .360

10 .3585 .3686 .3338 .3331 .8338 .320

try Boys, in third place, are onjgame behind the Fnkona, while thForesters, occupants of the cella"berth for the second time, are thre<and a half games below third placand six-full games away from firstThat's all of the Twilight Leaguefor this year, anyway.

And Lose T o New York Of- by one and Arie-half games. The Pas-

fice In Twelf th , 15-14.

The U. S. Metals All Stars blew aneight run lead in the second inningand lost to the Ntw York Office inthe twelfth, 15 to 14, at the'Copper-works field last Saturday afternoonin a wild and wooley ball game.

The contest looked like a routwhen the locals hammered their wayto a 9-1 lead in the second inning.But due largely to the fact that the j Pastry BoysStar*' didn't do much hitting after! Foresters 1that, the.New York Office, with ral- Remtu of Wwklies of five and four runs respect-, Liberty Falcons 6

Finalhalf:

Twilight Leagueteam standing for

Boys Club 7liberty Falcons 6P B 5

W L2458

Pc.77.660.500.111

Sacred Hearts SplitTwo Baseball Games

Defeat PoK Reading St. Mich-aels, 6-2, Then Late ToWoodbridge A. A. By 4-3.

The Sacred Hearts split a twin billlunday afternoon. After taking th»neasurc of the St. Michaels of Portfading, 6 to 2, in the first game-'layed at Leibig's orchard, they re-lumod their artivitips* at the highichool field and lost to the strongWoodbridge A. A. by a one-run mar-gin, 3 to 2.

The first game was decided by one-ig rally. It was in the second when

the Sacred Hearts fell on Nagy and'hammered him for five runs. Thatrally sewed up the game, as the vis-itors could do very little with RudyGalvanek's fine assortment of curv-es..

In the second game, the competi-tion was much more keener. Runswere scarce and hard to get. Princi-pally because both pitchers werahurling fine ball.

The A. A. hopped into a two run:lead in the first on a base on ballo-on a couple of base hits. The Heartsafter going scoreless in the first tiedthe count in the second in exactly thesame manner, a walk followed bytwo hits.

An error enabled the Woodbridgeteam to score two runs in the fourthand regain the lead, 4 to 2, From,then to the eighth, nothing of parti-cular importance happened.

In the eighth Carteret succeededin getting two men on base withonly one out, but they both diedthere. Again in the ninth the localsmade a strong bid to tie the scorabut failed after scoring one run.

Jost was the hitting star of the(rame. He had » perfect day at bat,setting four in four chances. ForCarteret, D'zurilla gathered two hits-

The box score! \WOODBRIDGE A. C.

AB RAnderson, cf 3Bodnar, c 3Jost, If 4Yaf>, 3b 4Delaney, ss 4Hughes, 2b 4Zega, lb 4Lukasiak, rf 4

8 .3207 .3188 .3082 .2862 .2857 .280

Powoby

40817313110122110110000

1000 00 0

,267.266.250.26fr.250

6 .2605 .2383 .2312 .2226 .2224 .2221 .2003 .2002 .1822 ,1671 .1182 .1261 .1112 .1060 .0000 .0000 .0000 .000

ively in the eighth and ninth innings,not only caught up to what had pre-viously looked like a mountainouslead but had taken the lead by onerun, 13-12.

The All Stars rallied to tie thescore in their half of the round,Then came the tenth and the visitorsagain scored a run to assume com-mand. Again the locals managed tolock the score.

The eleventh proved eventless butin the first half of the twelfth theNew York Office pushed what prov-ed to be the winning counter overthe plate.

The game was marked with hitting

Liberty Falcon!Pastry Boys 3

Win' Second Pl.ceIn a game tfyat, at/ times resembled

Keating, p 2

EOaaaOr

ov

32 4SACRED HEARTS

AB RMayorek, ss -4

7 0)'

a kid's contest, the Liberty Falcons F. Poll, pC. Poll, 2b 4

won seeond plBce in the TwilightLeague race by defeating the PaHtryBoys at the nigh school field lastFriday evening, by a 0 to ;! store. Thegame was called in the fifth becauseof darkness. It was the closing con-test of the Twilight League season.

The Falcons scored one in the firstand five more in the third to clinchthe contest. The Pustry Boys did alltheir scoring ip the last half of the

when {hey collected three':. i '" ' J

Beisel who ordinarily per-

fourthruns.

Billgalore, The New York Office collect-1 forms at first base tried his hand ated twenty-one hits, the locals nineteen. Between them, they made f )rtybase blows.

TJfer, of the New York Office,Casey and Rack of the Star^, werethe hitting stars ot the day.-

The box score:NEW YORK OFFICE

AB RBlack. IfKrauSSolg,UfevReill;Hill,Nolby

Muni

3b, p2b

(8 IB 21CPERWORKS STARS

2b, p

(•••8 1

pitching and turned in ,a classy per-formance for the Falcons, He per-mitted only two hitt; while his op-ponent George WoiodhuH jreilded six.

The box score:LIBERTY FALCONS

AB RYustak, 2b .-•.. 2 2Barna, c .-. 3 1Beisel, p 3 1Kara, cf . 2 1Dapolito, SD : 2 0Mitroka. 8b 2 1Bazaral, rf .- . 2 0Hart, l b - ; ••• 1 «Karmon, If 2 0Happy,"2b .'-•.: 0 0

IBPASTRY BOYS

ABMayorftk, as — — 2A. Qalvanek, If .^^ 2H. SuWanTlb'Z~'ZT. 2Skm( , 3b uf< 1G, Wkjdhull, 2b, p ...^.j I

6 6 t

J. Vli er,

H00100ro0000

19 S 2

4M. Poll, 3b, If 3Roman, cf 2D'zurilla, c 3Galvanek, If, 3b 4Baksa, l b 3Ciko, rf 2

H11011201I

E.1I0)-10)0110

29 3 8 &.Score by innings:

Wuodbiidge 200 200 000—4Sacred Hearts 020 000 010—3

The summary—Two baae hits: Ro-man, Ciko, Jost. Struck out by Keat-ing, 4; by F. Poll, 6. Bases on ballsoff Keating, 3; off F. Poll, 5. Umpire,Miglecz.

SACRED HEARTSAB K

Mayorek, 4C. Poll, 2b 4F. Poll, ss 4M. Poll, If 2Roman, cf 2D'zurilla, 3b 3Galvanek, pBaksa, lb 1Dutko, rf S

26ST. MICHAELS

ABRakoai, cf 3Minucci, If 3T. Kollar, ss 3E. Kollar, c 2Kutcyak, lb 8N. Kollar, rf 3

O'RUMO, 3b0 , Simon'ee, 2b

N p00000

H021011101

7

H122000100

Ea00

a0I0I

1

Ea»a0aI

o23 2 6 8

•Score by innings:St. Mieluiels 000 1Q0 1—8Sacred Hearta 061 000 x—(J.

0 | The summary—Two base hjta: B»-0 koai, Minucci, Struck oat by G»lv»n-- . «k, 4 ; by N»gy, 6. Baiee on b»Hi off1 QaWanel. 2; off . ..agy, 4. Umpiress

g t k fed Mi) •

»r» * • •"* •

PAGE SIX FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1981

HicmmannsRemindtrs

*\f uou loue mea« I lovi* flower*-\htrt ne'ermill lie lucklove a?

Her Birthday?TELL US THE DATE, WE'LL

DO THE REST

FLOWERS FOR

ANNIVERSARIES

WEDDINGS

AND

EVERY OCCASION

POTTED

PLANTS

etalFLOWERS FOR. ALL OCCASIONS

M E M B E R F.TD.GREENHOUSES, ST.GEORGE5

&>HAZELWOOD AVE'S" , RAHWAY, N.J.

Prvone* RAHWAY xn i i 7-<niiESTABLISHED 1865

LARGE

"Little Stories£r Bedtime

bO ThornfonW;.c/ Jhxrgess

WIDER SHOULDERS

PETER RABBIT KEEPSGUARD

The Paulus DairyEstablished 1890

Main Office: 189-195 New St.Phone: 2400 New Bruntwick, N. J.

Paulus* Positively PerfectlyPasteurized Milk

Raw milks produced by tuberculin and blood testedcows: Walker Gordon Certified, Golden Guernsey,

Suydam's Special, Rutger's Special

Distribution Covers: New Brunswick, Highland Park,South River, Sayreville, Parlin, South Amboy,

Perth Amboy, Wood bridge, Carteret, Fordsand Metuchen, N. J.

NOW there or* some people whothink only of themselves and In

tlrnoK of danger have no thought ofothers. Hut I'eter Rnbblt l i not thntkind. When I'eter l> frightened h«alwajm tries to warn other* who ma;be near. He does It by thumping theground with those rtont hind feet ofhis. Those thumpi can be heard along way hy those whose ean are nearthe ground.

At Peter sat near the pond of Paddythe BeaTer, deep in the OSreen Forest,thinking over all the things whichHonker the GOOBB hnd told of theGreat Woods of the Far North, and

H* Could Just Sec What Looked LikeTwelve Blacker Shadow*.

of those who live there, he didn't for• single little minute forget to keephis ears open. He knew that he wouldbe safer In the dear Old Brier t'ntch,bnt be wanted to see more of Honkerand perhaps In the morning, after agood night's rest, Honker would tellmore stories. Now Honker was nsleepout there in the pond of Paddy theBeaver. ISnstcr Hear lmd gone abouthis business for the nl 'lit. So hadPrickly Porky. Jumper tho Hare hadgone also. Only Paddy was awake«nd he was too busy to tulk.

So I'eler sat as still ns still ran

lie, thinking ovnr wlmt he hnd heardabout Glutton tlie Wolverine and Flot-horns the Moose, nnd wondering whntIt would be Ilko to lie nlile to fly likeHooker the Onosp. He looked upthrough the treetops at the twinklingstars and tlicn over at the pond wherethere seemed to be A tars, too, twin-kling tn the wiitcr. Where the BlackShadows hnd stretched themselvesacross the water he could Just seewhat looked like twelve blacker shnd-ows. He knew thnt they were Honk-er and his followers.

"It must be great to be a leader likeHooker, and have all the rest obeyyou," thought Peter, who, ion know,'never has licrn a lender In his life."He must fp<>l very nnxlons when hepicks out a plneo to upend the nightwhen he Is mnklng thene long Jour-neys. Tt Isn't like stopping In plnce*that you know nil about. Now he nev-er hns RtopiiL'il here before, so howdoes he know whnt dangers thefe maybe? Of course Hunter Bear and Pad-dy hHve told him that he will be per-fectly safe here for one night anyway,nnd of course sleeping out there onthe water, there Isn't anybody hefears. It Isn't like sleeping on shorewhere some one may creep up andsurprise you."

A long time Peter sat there. ByMid by he noticed that some of thosesleeping geese were drifting nearerthe shore. Tt trouble him, he didn'tknow Just why. Then quite suddenlyInto his head popped a thought. Sup-pose, Juet suppose, Old Man Coyote orGranny or Beddy Fox should happen tocome along and find one of themasleep closo lo shore! Peter all atonce felt that he ought to keep guard,which means to watch for danger.

"(If I were In a strange place,"thought he, "I surely would feel betterif some one who knew all the dangerskept watch while I slept Of courseHonker won't know until he wakes opthat I have kept watch, aim perhapsI won't tell htm then. I'm not doingIt for his thanks or so that he'll thinkany the more of me, but because—be-cause—wall, because I Uke that feelingInside •w**never I've done somethingfor some one else. Hello! What Isthat moving over there?"

(OS tiy J. O. Lloyd.)-*-WNU Bunrlc*.

— P1«UK> intmuuii this paper to ad — Classified Ads. Brintr Results —vertisers: it helps you, it helps them. • •—r^T"-. , Tf

It helps your paper. — — A Classified Adv. Will Sell It —

t i l l Ml • I H I i m m l H IJM Ml Ml MI MX IJM BUI 1M 1MMI IMt IM Ml 1*1 Ml IMHM IJM HH Ml MlIJM

DON'T YOU WANTFRESH VEGETABLES

FRESH FRUITS, FRESH EGGSFOR YOUR TABLE?

YOU MAY GET THEM ALL FROM THE

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Smith Street, Cor. ElmJUST WEST OF C. R. R. BRIDGE

Perth AmboyFruits, Vegetables, Poultry ^iid Eggs fromnearby farms under the Most SanitaryConditions at the Lowest Possible Prices!

All

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Tuesdays - Thursdays

Saturdays

ALL YEAR ROUND

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Comfort Stations

Concrete Walk*

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Foodsti Lot in season and not grown in our state

A new drop shou'.Oer yoke gives thewider shoulder Unit tn this Jacket suitIn caronle brown spongy woolen withoverblouse of green wool mesh andskirt blouse of white crepe.

New AppU Pie.Wash, core and slice new apples I

mix one-half tcaspoonful of cinnamon,one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, onefeaspoonfnl of cornstarch and fwotableapoonfnis of lugfir. Line a piepan with qul^' pie crnst and sprinklewith the snenr and spice, add theapples and cover with a half cupfulor more of sugar. Dot with butter,using a tnblespoonfal, and cover withthe upper crust, Bnke In a hot oveofor t»n minutes, then lower the heat.In adding sugar to any fruit pie, espe-cially apple, sprinkle the sugar In al-ternately with layers of apple to In-sure an even sweetening.

((& l » l l , Woatnrnjy»lrip«n«r Union.)

— Please mention this pajKsr to ad-vertisers; it helas sou, it helps them.It helps your paper. —

GET YOUR COALNOW

BEFORE PRICES GO Up

IT'S A LONG TIME UN-TIL SPRING. SEVERALM O N T H S OF COLDW E A T H E R A R EA H E A D , AND THEMERCURY WILL SHIV-ER DOWN TO ZEROMORE T H A N ONCEBEFORE THE FLOW-ERS BLOOM AGAIN.

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FOR YOUR WINTER COALPhone Woodbridfo 8-0728

Henry FrahmeSURGICAL APPLIANCES

AND SUPPORTERS

Now In Our Own Building

20 West Scott PL Elizabeth, N. J.Opposite City Hall

C o n t i n u i n g O u r F a l I S a l e o f Q u a l i t y F o o d s

LOWESTPRICEINYEARS!* FANCY U. S. NO. 1

POTATOES EASTERN DIVISION

Not only will this great sale enable youto stock i>p on the very choicest potatoesat an extraordinary saving . . . but it willhelp the farmers of the country marketthe surplus potato crop. All of thesepotatoes are U. S. No. 1 graded . . .exceptionally smooth, uniform in size,and high in food value. Order yoursupply at your A&P today.

15 ib, 195

•k U. S. No. 1 trad* p«tato*t or* tto'Umwt quoMy

7 C

SALE ENDS THIS WEEK!ANN PAGE—FRESH PACKED—PURE FRUIT1

STRAWBERRY PRESERVES, 16 oz.

r iar 17 3 jars 5Oc6 jars 99c

This is the lowest price on record for »uch fine quality preserves mode from .ptrr»fruit and cane sugar. This price is possible only because we have producedsuch tremendous quantities. Regular price 23c a jar.

CROSBY or GOLDEN BANTAM

FANCY QUALITY CORN3 No. 2

cansGit from selected ears ond packed wrjen the corn is young, tender and flovof-ful. This grade of com is regularly sold elsewhere for 15c to 19ca can.

CAMPBELL'S

Tomato Soup 3 n 20 'QUICK Of REGULAR, MOTHERS or

Quaker Oats 3 25'ENCORE

M a c a r o n i DOODLES0' •*•• 5 l

HECKEB 5. GOLD o> CE8E5OIA

Mb « " T t 34Sbag A / tb.bog

24MIb. bog55C

SUNNYFIELD

Flour • .PIAIN or IODIZED

Morton's Salt . i*s 7*LUCKY STWKti. CAMUS. CHESTERFIELDS. OLD COLDS

C i g a r e t t e s tarton °f 10 p><9*-V29

GUEST

Ivory Soap .

UNEEDA BAKERS, BUTTER or

Cheese Wafen . fc29e

UNEEDA BAKERS, OlD-FASHlONQD

Ginger Snaps . «**17C

WHOU WHEAT HAKES

Wheaties .MADE OF CORh4-WHEAT-OATS

Quaker CrackelsFOR THE LAUNDRY

Rinso . . . .THE HEALTH SOAP

Lifebuoy • -OLD DUTCH *~

Cleanser . .DOG otPUPPX, FOOD

Ken-L-Ration

3«*"17C

3 9

3

QUALITY MEATS AT A&P MARKETSPRIME RIBS OF

SIRLOIN STEAK °SZ

CROSS RIB POT ROASTFRYINO CHWKJ8N9 ^

SMOKED HAMS : r

BEEF*39c

"29c* 3 5 c

CUT FROM FIRST 6 MBS * . 2 5 *

LOIN LAMB CHOPS • *35<SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS 25 .

FRESH PARK SMAADDl 'ST *• ^

SALMON mm*** *i9t

i^it

FRTDAY, SfcPTKMBftR 2 8 , 1 W 1

R. K. 0 . RAHWAY THEATRE NEWSR.K.O. LAF TRIO RE-UN1TED

ALL WEEK SHE WAITSFOR THIS HOUR

ll'i th« hom when her son comes home from a dis-tant city—by telephone.

How excited and happy she was the first time hecalled her. It was something to remember for doyiafterwards.

Now this happiness comes to her every week at aregularly appointed hour.

And heT son? For the price of a movie he gett some-thing no money can measure — hit mother's voice—•a touch of home.

Long dittance Tales are low. You can telephone 1OOrnil»t for <w little as 60 cents; and-station-to-stationrates at night ore about 40 p«r cent lower.

"Caught Plastered"At Rah way Tonight

"Dirigible" and "Bad Girl"Slated For Early Showing!—Good Double Feature*.

Tonijrht and tomorrow brines tothe screen of the R.K.O. fUhwayTheatre R. K. O. Radio's laugh triore-united in their funnient offering:,"Caught Plastered." This time, Rob-ert Woolnoy 11ml Bert Whaler willt.e found in the local drujj store thatlays the nnckftround for the bireestevening's enjoyment you have nadin many moons, They nro "Maddierand Merrier" than ever! Really thescreen's three ring circus, don't missit! Bring the family,

Sunday, September 27, brings tothe patrons of the popular Irvingstreet playhouse what the manage-ment claims to be the best double

feature program it hm yet offered, mnnd Lrfiwe and Loll Koran InEddio Howling in A pictnriTntmn nf "Tmnnatlantic" with Myrna Loy andhis musical comedy aensstion, "Hon Inlin Tlalliday on the same programeymoon I«nr" with June Collyer, Charlie Rugg'*" in "The Olrl Habit."Noah Beery and Ray Doolpy. Ro- i Other attraction promiaed formanro that will keep mi laughing i early in October include Jack Holtwith tears in your eye*—-a tender j and RAlph Graven in "Dirigible,"

WHEELER, WOOLSEY, DOT LEE and DE WITT JENNINGS »boul tobre»k in on the plaiting in "CAUGHT PLASTERED" at the R, K. O.Railway, Friday and Saturday, September 25 - 26.

ove story in a setting of sparklingomedy. On the sRme progTRiri will

be found Ramnn Novarro in "Son ofIndia," bringing you now the hreathof real romance, his greatest rolesince "The Pagnn," with ConradNagel ami Marjnrie Ramhean.

Monday and Tuesday, September2R and 2!>, brings to the screen ofthe R. K. 0. Railway "The Star Wit-ness" with Walter Huston and

Chic" Sole in his world fnmnuscharacter of (iran'pa Stitnmerill.Author of the "Specialist" this fam-ous stage sitnr now ride, to fame inhis first talking feature Tlie sort ofstory that every man, woman andchild -should see. A hiiilt to order of-fering for every real American.

Wednesday, September 30 andThursday, October 1st. brings another double feature program—- Ed-

RichardFlight."W

Barthelmess in "The LaitHelen Tw«lvetre*s In "A

lFligh. H e nWoman of Experience," Clarke Ga-ble in "Sporting Blood, Jame« Dunnin "Had Girl" with, Sally Eilers, WillRoger* in "Young Aa You Feel,"Warner Banter in "Their Mad Mo-ment," Constance 8enn«U In "TheCommon l*w" and Maurice Cheva-lier in the "Smiling lieuUnanL"

666LIQUID OR TABLETS

• Haadaca* or NnnlfU \m30 mlant*«, eh««ka a Cold tk« t n tday, and ckock* MkUri* lad«T».

666 Salvo for Baby'i Cold.

ON THE AIR ISunday Evening*, 9,15 o'clock

W A B C - W C A U"KrWc Along th .Wlr t i"

CALLfry Number

WHEN YOU CANit's Quicker*

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE CompanyA M E * JE1SEY INSTITUTION BACKED BY NATIONAL RE50UKCES

Hoover Cleaning KeepsRug Colors Bright

l i U S T and lint make a rug look faded. Ground-indirt spoils the nap nml makes the rug look worn andold, but a thorough Hoovercleaning will make a bigimprovement.

The Hoover loosens andremove* embedded dirt. Itsweep* up the dust andtakes up threads and lint—beating, weeping and•action cleaning at thesame time. It straightensthe nap and makes the rugColors bright and freshagain.

Hoover deluxe modeltells for $79.50 cash and asmaller model is priced at$63.50. A nuall carryingcharge is added if you pur-chase on terms of $5 downand 55 a month.

CHARLIE RUGGLES

Don't SulkThere Is really no profit in sulking.

—American Magazine.

The UnansweredLetter

i : By DOUGLAS MALLOCH i:

EDMUND LOWE and LOIS MORAN

HandicapIf nil men tlimmlit twice before they

poke eorot woiilil hwnm« Jthrough hnhlt.

.—Please mention this paper whenbuying from advertisers—

(Suggested by Q. M., Springfield, Maw.)

TUB mnllmnn comes, the mailmangoes,

The postmuu pusses by,And someone only ran suppose,

And walr, and wonder why.Today no letter, and tonight

A silence hnrd to hear.We wonder If thev rnnnot write,

Or Bltnply do not rnrei

Tne little note la laid awny,The letter put aside.

Tet someone hoped to hear todayAn answering voice denied,

l ou may he busy, well we know,So many things you're at.

You mny be busy—:i re you, though,As busy us all that?

Oh, keep tlie tree nf friendship greenWhen friends are far apart.

Bow much a word of yours may meanTo,eheer some r.lisent heart!

Tlie rose unwnterH droops and diet.Yes, dies In son.f sad hour;

The letter that unanswered liesIt love's unwutered flow'r.

No matter what you pre-fer — Reef, Um'n, Pork,Veal or Poultry you'llalways find WAGNERQuality better and priceuniformly lower—

ROASTING CHICKENS3 % to 3 ^ lbs.

each 29;PORK LOINS

21choice wholeor half

clb

TOP or BOTTOMROUND or <ytc

boneless / i l kRUMP ROAST U ' I P

Shoulders Genuine

LAMB 12M.LOIN LAMB

CHOPS29c lb.

Buy...$ 5 CUMULATIVE

PREFERRED STOCK(NO PAK VALUE)

PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATORm = OF NEW JERSEV

Cash or Instattment

ASK ANY PUBLIC SKRVICK EMPLOYE

VICE

Shoulder LambChop*

Milk-Fed Fowl3J to 3J lbs.

eachVery Best Pure Pork

Sausage Links 25c lb.IWterhouwTSteak 43c lb.Chuck Steak 19c lb.

Armour'* Star, Swift'sPremium or Cudahy'sPuritan HamsWhole or Half 23c lb.

Boston Lettuce2 for 9c

Celery Hearts2 for 23c

Large HoneydewMelons

25c eachYellow Turnips

4 lbt 10cIdaho Prune*

4 lbs 39c

WAGNERMARKET

SHOW MONTH

To-Nite andTo-Morrow

They're Off Again InDizzy Whirl Of New

Nonsense

Screen's Merry "Cuc-koos" running a wide

open Drug Store!

H0GHIJMTCUED

SUNDAY, SEPT. 27th2 BIG FEMURES2AND WHAT A SHOW!

The lave He HadDreamed About! the merry man of

romance,EddieDOWLING

in love with rareand ravishingJuneCOLLYER

you'll shiver withdelight atNoahBEERY

I Brand New Story!Grand New Laughs!

Swell New Romantics!

brings you now the breathof r e a l romance, in thiscolorful, thrilling love story,

India

unil UuiKh yourselfuntil the floor at

1&:1DOOLEY

a pint-sized packageof cockiness,RaymondHATTON

lout's his heart tomotherlyMaryCARR

a

with

CONRAD NAGELMARJORIE RAMBEAU

MADGE EVANSC. AUBREY SMITH

the sweetest lovestory ever told!N o w on t h escreen.

As you read the title you'llrind yourself throbbing to itssweet romance! HappUy hum-m i n K "Honeymoon Lane!"From the stage play that awak-ened a nation to love!

2 - BIG DAYS - MON. AND TUES. -• SEPT. 28 - 29D R A M A ! C O M E D Y ! T R A G E D Y P A T H O S !

The Last Five Years Of Screen Pro-duction Have Been Leading Up To

This Startling Climax!

THE STARWITNESS

America will hail it as the Rebirth of a Nation!with

WALTER HUSTONCHAS. "CHIC SALE

DICKEY MOOREGrant Mitchell

F R A N C E S S T A R RRALPH INCE—SALLY BLANE

E N T E R T A I N M E N T F O RT H E E N T I R E F A M I L Y .

WED.-THURS. I BIG FEATURES

2K

SEPT. 30-OCT. 1stCHARLIE(HIGGLES

THE,GIRLHABIT-

D

"DIRIGIBLE"

PAGE BIGHT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1981

Stinwi Weatlwr Fluctuation!

lli.lh ln>o anr] vnrvrn nr(> mutp wlt-n^.ics to wcntlipr flui'tiintifins. Wryold iroi'» »l»iw Itiick nud tliln rliur«.Layers nf rlny, cnllPd vnrvps, found InDie fnrmor f>pttn of nnclont Ink™ tvihy IHPIIITIK Irp shirts, form nnottiprrpcnrd. These hiycra nre ilnn lo tlif>nnnunl deposit of spillwftit. Thli"Klayers were (li-pnultpil In wnnn xum-merg whon melting was riipld, mid thinlayers In cool mimmi-r*.

"AN ORDINANCE FOR THEatDEWAI.KING, CURBING ANDCRADING OF ATLANTIC STREETBETWEEN CARTKRET AVENUEAND TERMINAL AVENUE. TN THEBOROUGH OK CARTERET, AS ALOCAL IMPROVEMENT."

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE MA-YOR AND COUNCIL OF THE BOR-•lUGII OF CARTERET:

I. Thnt Atlnntio Street, from Car-torct Avpniif to Terminal Avenueshall bo •sidrwnllcpd, curbed andjrracM and nil other work incidentalthereto, <in<l the grading of saidutreet nil in accord with plans andspecifications of Cornelius A. Sheri-dan, Borough Engineer, on file inthe office of the Borough Clerk,which are hereby expressly approv-ed.

Said sidewalks shall be curbed orrecitrbed with romhineil curbs andgutters six inches thick in sectionsfix feet long, according to said plansand specifications prepared by saidBorough Engineer, and shall be pav-ed with sidewalks constructed ofconcrete not less than four feet in

w;dth, th« mi f r _„,. ., three foot (niide of tfee[laid !n Ihe p*tsfcl!«Wd tiil"wslk-! (frarfi', allowing » n«r nf one quarI t<*r nf an inch to the foot from yhrJ curhtinc tonnrif the property l»n«*I The roni-rtt* «i<le»i«lk< "hall he runstnirted of an rtf^' """h cruder subba«e nnd a Oirre and one Vmlf in<+base of lr2-4 roncrrtp »n«t imp Vmlfinch one to OTW »ntl our h»lf i w » t «finish: all work 'hull he Horn1 nndrrthe supervision nnd »Jtrrrt>on of th<-strppt committe*' »nd th«> born i|jlieriRinepr.

The roudlH"'! «' 'he «trpot shall hpRracled in arc<ir<lanr<> with t>ie grsdrrst«hlish«i umi shown on plan- showreferred to.

'.!. If »n nwTier or o*n»t= of larilfrontine upon ?aid =trept brtwor-nthe points, ?h»ll choose to do theirown siflnwulkinK and rur'une infront of that land «t hi«, h<-r or Theirown expense, written notice of =wrhintention shall be filMl writh the I?or-mi(;h Clerk within ten d»y- afterthe passage of thi* ordinance andsurh work o to bv don«- ?hall becompleted within 30 d»y* aft#r thepassage of this ordinance, or elsesuch land owners shall be liable to »nAssessment for all ro«l.« and expensesincurred in the prosecution am) com-pletion of rtid curbs and sidewalk?.

3. The sum of $3000.00 is here-l>y appropriated for "aid improve-ment of Atlantic Street.

i. In order to temporarily financesaid improvement and to meet thecosts of same, the Borough of Oar-leret shall borrow n"f «uch person orcorporation. «•> the Mayor and Coun-cil shall determine, an amount not

1 mi

exceed the sum herein appropri-d nn<t '•Hall insi]e temporary im-Afment hondt therefor, not ex-d'ng the csul amount which shalli int<!(^1 nt a rnte not excee<l-

in ]«>! rent per annum. AH. i mntteiv in respect to such

ba|l be determined by theMsycT. Borough Clerk, Borough' .^Vrtui or Treasurer, who arei•'M i 'iv auHiori7f-d to issue, execute

dflivet- '-nid temporary bonds.I"|>i.n the nmtiirilv of said bonds'i<\ 'imv from time to time be re-newed tiv (he Mayor and Council pro-

4vide<i thai n" renewal bond shall ma-1:v.r in more than siy years fromthe date when the purpose for whichHiey are i^ned has been carried out.

.> Thr« ordinance is to take effectn< provided by law.

Introduced September S, 1931Passed on first and second read-

ings, September 8, 11(31.' Advertised September 11, Ift3t.i Passed on third and final readings,1 adopted «nd approved September 21,

11(31.Advertised as adopted, Septem-

ber 25, 1H31.i H VO. PLAIT,' Borough Clerk,jApproved: JOSEPH A. HERMANN,' Mayor.

efti

NOTICEThe above ordinance was regular-

ly passed and adopted at a regular; meeting of the Borough Council on'September 21, 1931 and approved bythe Mayor of the Borough of Carter-

i €>t on the same date.I HARVEY VO. PLATT.

Borough Clerk.

Thrills PromisedFor Racing Fans

Popular String Of Driver*Cnrded To Drive At Wood-bridgf Sunday.

Auto racing fans have been prom-ised an afternoon of thrills Sundayat the Woodbridge Speedway whenFred Frame, popular ace at thetrack, makes on effort to run hisstring of victories to five straight. Aclassy field will he lined up after theforty entries have been cut down bythe three eliminations and) a consola-tion event to produce the ten driversin tho twenty mile final. In additionto this big evont there will be thefinish of the uncompleted twenty-five mile sweepstakes, called off Sun-day when rnin made the track slip-pery.

Frame expects most trouble fromLou Moore, Billie Winn, who has dog-ged his trail all season at Wood-bridge and took him twice on thesame day in Middletown and is anx-ious to prove to Woodbridge crowdsthat his double victory was no fluke..

Others to worry Frame will be Al(Leedfoot) Theison, who is holderof some of the best records in theWest and who turned the track in22 2-.r> seconds with his clutch slip-ping. He has boasted he'll clip thetrack record Sunday.

A third competitor will be ShortyCantlon, n newcomer nnd dark horse

2^Annual National

dme Turnishinp

STYLESHOW

in the race, who'll bear watching.Hurt. KarnaU'R Miller Special, in theparlance of the traeksidfi, is "run-ning hot" and cannot, bo overlooked.

SVeke Meyer, just hack from Syra-cuse, expects to take the course withsome breath taking and hnir rnisingbursts of speed.

Event one will be eliminationtrials for time. Then will follow thefive mile elimination trinls for thesix fastest earn on the track. Twomore eliminations at five miles eachwill be run for the next twelve fast-

est cars. After which will follow the,e run of last Sunday's twenty-fivemile sweepsdake, making _ the pro-K1-«m a d..»bln header. This In turnwill be followed by a ten-mile con-solation, for non-prize winners, thewinner of this event, qualifying forthe main event. The grand finalewill he a forty lap race over the halfmile track. One of the largest crowdsor the senson is expected.

There will be forty entries fromall parts of tho country^

Before the Civil wm . ,.'most immial opldemie,,',but nine* ldwo henin, ,.,,gradually Improvedf e w epldpnrl

Not »«ctlT« Si,On« reason why „,,,,,

Uve for some folks Istry to mbrtltnto it r,,r ,bow awa»e.Pn

11 il

'rv

September 29 to October 3 - anExhibit of More than

Unusual Interest

Dining Room SuiteONI'J of tho newest designs in furniturefor the tastefully appointed Dining Room. . . .walnut top tuble, extending to B feet. , . complete with fi Jacquard chairs, only 198 .00

This Style S h o wpoints th« way tocorrect room inter-iors . . . it is an ex-position of all thatis new and modern.

Here is a Suite for

Modern BedroomsABOVE is shown a smartly designed Bedroom Suite,new and correct in every detail . . . . at an attractivelymoderate pricing! All pieces are large, roomy, andwell proportioned.

Carefully made of Walnut and Americangumwood. Rich two-tone effect. Our Pricemi.ludi.-s Bud, Chest, and (fhoice of Dresser orVanity, at „ ,......'..,

V..

$ 83

Here are Newest Lamps

$2.49latest designs, just unpacked. Mod-erately priced up

Coffee TableA GRACEFUL do-sign, shown for thef i r s t time. SolidWalnut top

Jacquard Living RoomSuite

AS shown above, Includes Sofa and choiceof either Chair. Prettily upholstered in three-tone Jacquard. Pull sprin* conBtrnotiftp, withfriete reversed loose cushion ........;

$ 99

m

Let Your Next PermanentBE! A

/TEAMAnd Note the Difference!

Does not bake the hair. GentlySTEAMS the hair into softflowing waves with ringletends that last.

Guaranteed,

STEAM WAVESpecial ForJMonth of September

Long Bob $1 Extra

SHAMPOO and FINGER WAVE $1.00Call Perth Amboy 1110 For Appointment

SALCN262 Madison Ave. Perth Amboy, N. J.

Open Mondays and Thursday Till 7 P. M. '

AUTO RACESAT THE

WoodbridgeSpeedway

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

SEPT.27

6-Big Events-6AND ADDED RACE

A. A. A. SANCTIONEDLOU MOORE - FRED FRAME - WINN • CARTER

THHSEN - LARZELERE - S A U L S P A pAND A HOST OF STARS

REMAINDER OF LAST SUNDAY'S FEATURE RACE W E BE RUNOFF AFTER TIME TRIALS :

Regular Prices Time P-

^*,»-*dMi