woodbridge leader - digifind-it · woodbridge leader published every fi an ^bnty-second ybaft...

6
PRESS, The Weathfr Fnlr. modrate Winds; northeast and «a«t. \ Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N. J., Friday,' January IB, 1932 CINT8 PERCOf frank Sewer to Wait Action of ! for Jobless Relief Rahway Council * ' * ...- - Collins Renamed «* township Physician Either Appointees Re- iamed. Set for Jan. 27th Woodbridge Legion and Fords to Meet in Return Uameat High School Gym—Dancing follow*. A benefit basketball game and dance to raise funds for unem- ployment wlllb© staged b r a »pe- o a i ' «ommlttee ot the General Emergency Relief Committee ot the Township In the High School gymnasium Wednesday, January .„„„ _ - - .ft. The feature game will be be- red due to the fact that Ra»V ^ wn tne woodbridge Legion net- Township Attorney Henry St. C. was authorized by the to represent the T.ship In connection with the hway Valley sewer supplement- contract. In which Wood- [e is participating. The com- on of tills work' Is being de- failed to ratiry th «.ce, and In delaying the Ot it until certain techntcall- i are corrected. The Iselin and nOaltt spur Is also awaiting fcipletlon of the disposal plant, Lavln and Mayor Ryr ~ ~"— ftboriied to request th ; be taken up at an der to relieve the Iselin and nia sections. ayor Hyun In giving his re- , on the Kahway Valley Joint ting held last week stated everything waH In readiness fliil plant, m „ ererytiilnK waH i'completion of the work, the of Rahway having Dignified Dtentlon of passing the ordl it at an early date. ; communication wan received the Pennsylvania Railroad ling the committee that it lid study the matter of inHlall •afety gates to provide better >etIon at the Avenel street ling, an requested. Urges Turin" Opposition .11, H. Merrill, of 642 L ie, ID a letter to the Town- authorities urged that body communicate with the Con- •man from this district re- itlng that he oppose the tar- en copper, which Is being Ught before the House. lfbr T stern and the Fords Firemen in a return match. The Legion baaketeers triumphed over tne Fords men lo a game two weeks The Board of Education donated the gymnasiums for the occasion. Both teams are like- wise donating their services as is the AnBonlo Club Orchestra which will furnish the' music for danc- ing between the halves and after the games. A preliminary game will staged between two teams whose selection Is being made. In ad- dition the committee wil stage a special comedy feature. Tickets for the game will he sold at fifty cents each and every cent will be turned over to the re- lief committee for the aid of the lief committee for the aid needy. The committee Is maktug l a record every effort to rol up attendance ao that as possible will be raised of 642 Linden I work which the committee i on John E Brec gill UULVIV mv m.m~. ,,_... prrill stated that many residents Woodbrtdge depended on this dugtry for a livelihood, and In event this tariff passed the r use they would probably lose Bployrutuit. He brought out in communication that raw cop- wt Is Imported into this country I b refined, large plants being 1 fl- ed in Carteret and Perth Am- Shoulu this bill meet with ess thexe plants would bave tc ontlnue operation and the ttvp.i In this vicinity would be jjittthout employment. w ,, An offer to act as dog-catcher *|^ tor this year at a fee of |900.00 M^JSNUI mail*' by the Trl-County Ant- ,-JBal Relief ARuoclatlon of Stelton. " itratloi. •I, Building prmlts to the amount 'M $6,000.00 were lssurdd dttrtng Tthe month of December. Fred building InspectoV and a ..... or $200.00 stolen goods re- Scorned to the owners. The, following resolutions re- flatting the Township physician, Jjand clerks in the different depart- ments were passed. Dr. J. J. Col- , *llns, physician. .Michael Trainer, .deputy treasurer at a salary of •arrying on. John E. Brecken- idge general chairman of tne committee which Is carrying on Wodbrldge Township's relief work in conjunction with Presidents Hoover's committee, and the State organization under the direction of Walter Glfford. Amboy Man Hurt as Car Vaults Off Bridge, Overturns Driver in Serious Condi- tion ^After Freak Acci dent Bridge Guard Rail Demolished. vou TO PUT IT Teachers Vote Down Salary Proposal by Vote oU93 1 Meeting Called Tuesday, Instead of Today, as nally Scheduled - Negative Action Kffli proval of All Other Municipal Employees. By a vote of 198 to 1, with one teacher not vottaf! the principals, teachers and janitors of the Board of Edue«,1 eation turned down the proposal made to them last Fiiday lo turn back one month's salary to the Township :freas4 ury this year at; a hurriedly called meeting Tuesday after-.] noon. . Approval by the teachers would have meant the tentiori of approximately |&8,000 in the Township Treat>| ury or a saving of thirty points in the tax rate, Upon the! teachers' Action rested the approval of the plan by the] police and all other municipal employees. j The meeting at which the decision was to have bcenj mad^w as slated for this afternoon at 8:30 P. M. in the auditorium of tVie No. 11 School., f The proposal that all Township employees donate one month's salary to the Township Treasury to effect a thirtylpoint saving in the tax rate—roughly $63,000— was presented to 800 of the teachers, principals and jani- tors of the public school system last Friday afternoon the auditorium of School No. 11. A second meeting wil be held this afternoon at 8:30 o'clock to decide on proposition. Roy Anderson, member of the Board of Education! presented the plan, its provisions Ineeting with scattered opposition from various spokesmen. The presentation oi the proposal led to the re-organization of the Woodbridg Township Teachers' Association and the election of Han Sechrist as its president. Mr. Sechrist is a mathemati< instructor in the high school. g a record much as for the Offlrera KWcUd .The other officers selected are MISH Jennie D. Qarthwalte, of I School No. ', as vice president, and Miss Ruth Numbers of School secretary, A loosely-or- association - among the has existed tor some time dus never been exceedingly No. '6, IB ganlsce'ay I teachers' but hi * active. / In -. •' teaclie \ |l,80O.0O p /Demarest . . ' ^rake, $2,000.00 i'er year. 111,800.00, Mrs. Hilda Horace Misses Helen 'Bergen, $1,320.00; Marie Qerity. 11 420.00; Reglna Behaneyfl II,- 320.00; William Heller, Janitor, at a Balary of $2,100.00 per-year Steven Gunderaeij, 54, of Me- chanic street, Perth Amboy', was painfully Injured Tuesday night shdirtly after 6 o'clock when the [Car In which he was drlnig struck the side of the bridge over Wood- bridge creek on Wooit bridge avenue, Sewaren. Cundersen's machine careened off the road, tore through the guard rail fence and overturned. He was rushed to the Perth Am- boy. Hospital In the pollen, ambu- lance by Officer Henry Dunham where it was learned he whs suf- fering from concussloh. of the brain and Jwsslble .fractured ribs. StJamesP.-T.A. Plans Movie Show at State Theatre Mothers Visit Classrooms and Inspect Work of the Children Jerome J. Rafferty leaves Woodbri4$e independent Jerome J. Itafferty, who for e past four years has ..oen business manngei' of the Woodbridge Independent will terminate hla career with that paper tomorrow when he leaves for his home In Baltimore. After a short stay .with his'family he will leave for a sanitarium on the West Coast to regain Ills health. Throng Attends Funeral Service of Mrs, Hayes County Democratic Lead- er's Wife Dies After Be- ing Stricken With Pneu- monia. outlining the plan to thu Mr. Anderson explained that ail ot the otlwr municipal ...,,_ . employees havo gtveu their sanction to thu i>lnn, con' tingent upon the Board ot ISduca Uun employees doing ihe same. Questions regarding the effect a voluntary contrlbuticn teachers' milarlea would havo on their pension provisos were raised !:y various members of the stuif, I'iiut question was the particular [tended to perinli the Township scale uown to lue level deiutuida by the times so that the cremt Have enjoyea may be ummpkir Bankers will nut IUIIU money th« best of munlclpaliues yul strict bcuaouty measure* ' air shown. This plan win rttleci _ _ to the many ot you wWf own uoiuen and pioperty uere, it,/ \ will »ave the Townsuip the cost* of bond issues and will conserve tne Interest we would Iwve to i*y on borrowed money. After ai A, 1B better tor any employee ~ ' municipality to work ten and be palu for nine at the scale that prevailed in good tban to not work at an or to tm placed in a, situation such a* w s | have Meu In Chicago and in Piu.-f adelpnla,' Mv. Anderson siateu. * Comment among the The Parent-Teachers' Associa- tion of St. James' School held Its Brat meeting of the new year on Tuesday night, in the schobl audi- torium. During plann were made for the business session, , made for a benefit movie to be held on Thursday and Friday, February 4 and 5, at the State theatre. The picture td be shown will be "Delicious," appointed chairman of menta. Mrs. Thomas Gerlty, <|ialrman ., of the refreshment committee appointed the follow? ingi members to serve on | her committee at the fext .regular Raritan Council, B.S.A., to Hold Anhua) Dinner i * i I Scouts and Executives to Witness Presentation of Beaver Awards to Two. l ieivlrtw fur Mrs, Ed- mund A. Hsiyes, ighland Park, and a natWu of Woodbrldgo, were last Monday morning at a that raised doubts in the minus of many of the audience who telt that their action might have a bad effect on their pen* HIOIIS, UH the pension iund U Je- determlned by tlit actual amouuts paid. 1 Howard 9harp\ principal of Schools Nou. 7 and '4, was the principal Bpeaker tor the teachers and the Ihst one to take the floot In oppoaition to the terms of the agreement. Mr. Sharp, whose lenmrks met with varied applause fro in A group of the teachers said that the "cut" a$ he Insisted on calling the contribution despite Anderson's reassurances that held last Monday morning m u ™». «..».«. solemn higl'i maBg at the parish the contribution was not Intended church In Highland Park, follow- as a permanent reduction of tho d b Iterment in St James teachers' salaries, should not be ed by Interment in St. Cemetery In WoodbrWfce. Mrs. Hayes, who died last week of pneumonia was the. wife ot Edmund A. Hyes county a D James | teachers' salaries, should not f be asked of t)w teachers fo'r three reasons:! (l) that It is Illegal; (2) that teachers are insufficiently who gathered in groups alter meeting adjourned to discuss iiropotitlon, indicated tuai would not be unwllimg to pato it they had not been m affected by the ^C.OBIUB ot bank here. Tne sentiment that it is 'better to forego one month u Bay than to lose nil, seeineu }.u W growing during the past week, but no concrete indlcui.on of warn action the teachers will lake luitt afternoon could be gamed. Under the plan the mayor, the cominitleemen and all otuer em- ployees will take the temporary •eduction tor a period oi uu« year In'order to scale dowu uu- tax rate. It wl.l mean, a vas-i •saving to the Towosllip and win further stablllie its credit posi- tion. Practically all of the lown- Bhip enfployees are now d oae per cent of their pay a was the. wife ot (2) that teachers are insffi Edmund A. Hayes, county attor- pala BH IS, and (3) that it la lm- ney and Democratic leader. Their proper that the tethers be called hild who were also '" ""»» to "make up a deficit." . Plans have been completed for . 7,. ,_._„„«, a , ln ual dinner two children, who wore also 111 of iMieumonla, have recovered. Mrs. Hayes has been 111 for sev- upon to "make up a deficit teacher has wr= v T RHn I l! rt- .M5f" l FI » a iI l <: Boy'sSuts oTAraericaV which is w i, ?' I i. m M V Be n ll l a - to «» n eW on Tuesday, January Mrtjhn M Kenn J aXs: K ChaSe B s 28 at ^ Eto ' C V * ^ Kenna. Mrs. H. V. HMr, Mrs. Anna Klsh, Mrs. GeorgS Krock, and Mrs, J. Barron Levl. rLrlng the evening a ham do natad by the manager of Butler's store, was awarded to MTB. Aug- ll tin- employraent relief, with the ex««i>- Uou of |tne poUce Uepaitmtjuii which is glring two per cent uttti several weeks ago voted HiM ^ „ the relief fund from tliu I'. U. A. fund. 1 ust Baumann. Refreshment were i - served by the hospitality commit-1 thls occasion, tee, Mrs. Michael DeJJoy, —'- man. Prior to the bus Calviu Derrick, superintendent of the State Home for Boys at jamesbuBg and a member of ld t Hoover's Commission Welfare) wl n be the of h0Il0r an d speaker on home in Green street with, her daughters. She Is survived, in addition to her immediate family, by her mother, her sisters. Anne Dunlgan and Mrs. James* j. Dunn and a brother, James Dunlgan, all of Woodbridge. County and municipal leaders man. nwi n, !..„ .., alon, • the various class rooms were visited and the work of the pupils for the past month was Inspected.' in. W. Thorn of Cartdret. premium of Rarltau Council, will serve as toaatmaster and he will be assisted by executive board members in carrying out the pro- Well, well, thinga in the news line, are very slow this week Everyone seems to have kept from doing any- thing........... It may be that the New Year's resolutions are still being upheld ...... Then again possibly the depression is bearing down on our actions also We wonft fight over it Hear the W. A. A. has issued a challenge to the Flea Club bowling outfit... .The Fleas have ignored the challenge What's the matter, boys? You're not afraid of losing the township bowling championship, we you? .Give them a chance Then take 'em like Grant took Richmond You should be able to do it without much trouble——Some of your stars have lived in the alleys now for a long time Continuing along bowling lines we also hear the Parkway Boys thought they had a cinch the other night. The Carteret Big , Five visited "Tony's' 1 and proved much stiffer opposition than expectedtiflLee, McCann, Osborne, Smithers, Sulli- van and Deter thought they had a cinch after winning the first game The worm turned, however, and the vis- ' itors handed out two sweet trimmings in the. next two games jborne and Lee were* the ahinig lights of the evening with jtO? and 205 : Congratulations to "the boy who thought, up. the idea of+parking in his own driveway ..... » .... ,Who is the Woodbridge jpewonage they call Ghandi? i^ .-.*.«*fc'-.., IWmtnant VOUnff lady Morrison Christie Brst to File for School Board Posts of Three Commission- ers to Be Filled at An- nual Election on Fehru ary9. Morrison Christie, of 8ewaren\, members in c y g gram of the owning, One of the mos,t interesting features wil be the presentations f the Silver Beaver Awards. 'hese will be presented to Dr. rlU Stnt Troop UH well as many of the friends (of the family from Woodbrldge at- tpnded the funeral. Youth Struck by Car, Walking on Highway Morrison Chicle, of Sewa, Is the first to file for election to tne Boardj.ot Education at "•- annual election which will held. Tuesday, February '9. Christie has already begun the be Mr his campaign tor .election. He was an unsuccessful candidate that office last year- No qther candidates have for yet •rninent yoi filed their petitions tor election which will be held to name school commlaaionera for the expired termn of Mrs. Annabelle BftkOT, of M»uilse n«alKftn_ an- parallel cases ot a policeman and policeman Is . . innually. The teacher sCarta at $1,200 per year. In five years the'patrolman Is re- ceiving $2,600. It takes a teacher fourteen 1 years to reach that figure und r the teachers' scale of sal- aries. Consider the quallficitlluftM demanded of a teacher and those demanded of an applicant for a position on the police force and judge'for yourselves whether, or not teactvers In the public schools are underpaid," ,he demanded. This Bally brought forth, a round of excited applause Trim the gath URGES US'r DEAD TIMBER AS FUEL FOR UNEMLO1 A plan to utlllfce fallen undj waste timber as fuel for 'i families In small towns and vil lages ot the state U proposed In a statement issued ID New Bruns- wick by E. L. Scovell, extension] service forester ot. the New Jer* 1 sey Agricultural Experiment Sta-j tlon. \ Many families are suffer Jill cold and exposure, he sal<5=| in woodlands within a few or excittti appiause nwui uw 6 »»'; u n woodlands within a few ML erlng, many of whom •*>*«» of their homes large Quantities signs of wanting to rise to>com- flaad gnd m m wood Ue n m hat the DroDOsaL but who remain- ». IIH «. l .. l h M A , < ,. n j..tin«« Abogg, Scoutmaster ot uuui> 6 ot Perth Amboy and tohn Tifccy, Scoutmaster ot Troop 1 of South Amboy, Both men •.re veteran scputmaeters in the Raritan organisation. Invitations have been ^ent to ill members of the Raritan Coun- cil, Hcouters, and troop commit- tees, with the emphasis that ladles >re. especially Invited, The meet- Ing la open to all friends of Scouting. Reservations should be made at the headquarters ot the Rari- tan Council, 175 Smith street, or by telephoning Perth Amboy 4- 1610. . George Chrlstopherson. 21, ot Water street, Colonla, was In- jured and Buffered from shock when struck by a car while walk- ing along the Lincoln Highway in Sunday evening, at ~" 1UI of Cojonla last Sunday evening, m 6:30 P. M. Eugene FarulU,! of New Dover road, driver ot the car, told police after taking ChriBtopherson to the Rahway Memorial Hospital, that the Memorial KUBH>»., youth was walking In the center of the road and that he tailed to see him until it was too late to avoid hitting him. , Chrlstopherson was cut about the legs and was Buttering from Ue was treated at the bat the proposal, but who remain cd In their seats'to cheer on those wh otook the Initiative. One teacher,proposed that the school year be stopped nojw and the saving be effected by mainte- nance coattt and the coBt of heat- ing th schools and that the month lost be made up during the warm- er months. Another, citing the fact that many of the teacherB stood to lese |200 by the contribution, suggested that 200 businessmen $200 t h i r share In reduc- He urges welfare „„ other civic groups to ask t owners for permission to „_.. this waste Umber, and to recr wood gathering crews among .. unemployed to eut and dlstribut the fuel to needy families. Commenting 'editorially on Scovell's plan,*New Jersey^ Culture, monthly roagaiine Experiment Station, say* ' Grove Avenue Taxpayers Want Sidewalks at Corner Efforts wil be bade by the resi- dents of Orove avenue to have sldewftHu laid at the northeast corner ot &roje avenue and Am- boy road. Thf property Is held by hospital and tnen returned to h(Mie. HARDIMAN'S Y PH'ARMACY L. suggested that 200 busn post $200 as their share In reduc ing, -the ta* rate and that the 1 wealthier residents ot th« Town- ship be called upon tor emergency taxes to meet the situation. "The first thing to be considered is the welfare ot the child," sal' Mr. Anderson, who stressed " sympathy with tl^ teachers 1B purely an emergency " that is sorely needed ' J the'burdn ot the Wo payer who U st pay taxes to " ment, the enable "many Bave more of for food anj "A cop tactful, tain Tt community Mnjited' Hardlman, formerly of| Perth Amboy the count as for lJ proyei an MEN'S SHIRTS >roAdch>th; nude extra full .body; fat color

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Page 1: Woodbridge Leader - DigiFind-It · Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N

PRESS,

The WeathfrFnlr. modrate Winds;

northeast and «a«t. \

Woodbridge Leader PublishedEvery Fi

AN

^BNTY-SECOND YBAft

INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP

Woodbridie, N. J., Friday,' January IB, 1932CINT8 PER COf

frank Sewer toWait Action of ! for Jobless ReliefRahway Council*' * ...- -

Collins Renamed «*township Physician —Either Appointees Re-iamed.

Set for Jan. 27thWoodbridge Legion a n d

Fords to Meet in ReturnUameat High School

Gym—Dancing follow*.

A benefit basketball game anddance to raise funds for unem-ployment wlllb© staged b r a »pe-o a i ' «ommlttee ot the GeneralEmergency Relief Committee otthe Township In the High Schoolgymnasium Wednesday, January

.„„„ _ - - .ft. The feature game will be be-red due to the fact that Ra»V ^wn t n e woodbridge Legion net-

Township Attorney Henry St. C.was authorized by the

to represent theT.ship In connection with thehway Valley sewer supplement-

contract. In which Wood-[e is participating. The com-on of tills work' Is being de-

failed to ratiry th«.ce, and In delaying the

Ot it until certain techntcall-i are corrected. The Iselin and

nOaltt spur Is also awaitingfcipletlon of the disposal plant,

Lavln and Mayor Ryr ~ ~"—ftboriied to request th

; be taken up at an „der to relieve the Iselin andnia sections.ayor Hyun In giving his re-, on the Kahway Valley Jointting held last week stated

everything waH In readiness

fliil plant,m„ ererytiilnK waHi'completion of the work, the

of Rahway having DignifiedDtentlon of passing the ordlit at an early date.; communication wan received

the Pennsylvania Railroadling the committee that it

lid study the matter of inHlall•afety gates to provide better>etIon at the Avenel streetling, an requested.

Urges Turin" Opposition.11, H. Merrill, of 642 L

ie, ID a letter to the Town-authorities urged that body

communicate with the Con-•man from this district re-itlng that he oppose the tar-

en copper, which Is beingUght before the House. lfbrT

stern and the Fords Firemen in areturn match. The Legionbaaketeers triumphed over tneFords men lo a game two weeks

The Board of Educationdonated the gymnasiums for theoccasion. Both teams are like-wise donating their services as isthe AnBonlo Club Orchestra whichwill furnish the' music for danc-ing between the halves and afterthe games.

A preliminary game willstaged between two teams whoseselection Is being made. In ad-dition the committee wil stage aspecial comedy feature.

Tickets for the game will hesold at fifty cents each and everycent will be turned over to the re-lief committee for the aid of thelief committee for the aidneedy. The committee Is maktug

l a recordevery effort to rol upattendance ao that aspossible will be raised

of 642 Linden I work which the committeei on John E Brec

g i l l UULVIV m v m.m~. ,,_...prrill stated that many residents

Woodbrtdge depended on thisdug try for a livelihood, and In

event this tariff passed theruse they would probably loseBployrutuit. He brought out in

communication that raw cop-wt Is Imported into this countryI b refined, large plants being 1 fl-

ed in Carteret and Perth Am-Shoulu this bill meet with

ess thexe plants would bave tcontlnue operation and the

ttvp.i In this vicinity would bejjittthout employment.

w,, An offer to act as dog-catcher*|^ tor this year at a fee of |900.00M^JSNUI mail*' by the Trl-County Ant-

,-JBal Relief ARuoclatlon of Stelton." itratloi.•I, Building prmlts to the amount'M $6,000.00 were lssurdd dttrtngTthe month of December. Fred

building InspectoV and a. . . . . or $200.00 stolen goods re-Scorned to the owners.

The, following resolutions re-flatting the Township physician,Jjand clerks in the different depart-

ments were passed. Dr. J. J. Col-, *llns, physician. .Michael Trainer,

.deputy treasurer at a salary of

•arrying on. John E. Brecken-idge 1» general chairman of tne

committee which Is carrying onWodbrldge Township's relief workin conjunction with PresidentsHoover's committee, and the Stateorganization under the directionof Walter Glfford.

Amboy Man Hurtas Car Vaults Off

Bridge, OverturnsDriver in Serious Condi-

tion ^After Freak Accident — Bridge GuardRail Demolished.

vou •TO PUT IT

Teachers Vote Down SalaryProposal by Vote oU93 1

Meeting Called Tuesday, Instead of Today, asnally Scheduled - Negative Action Kffliproval of All Other Municipal Employees.

By a vote of 198 to 1, with one teacher not vottaf!the principals, teachers and janitors of the Board of Edue«,1eation turned down the proposal made to them last Fiiday •lo turn back one month's salary to the Township :freas4ury this year at; a hurriedly called meeting Tuesday after-.]noon. . •

Approval by the teachers would have meant thetentiori of approximately |&8,000 in the Township Treat>|ury or a saving of thirty points in the tax rate, Upon the!teachers' Action rested the approval of the plan by the]police and all other municipal employees. j

The meeting at which the decision was to have bcenjmad^w as slated for this afternoon at 8:30 P. M. in theauditorium of tVie No. 11 School., f

The proposal that all Township employees donateone month's salary to the Township Treasury to effect athirtylpoint saving in the tax rate—roughly $63,000—was presented to 800 of the teachers, principals and jani-tors of the public school system last Friday afternoonthe auditorium of School No. 11. A second meeting wilbe held this afternoon at 8:30 o'clock to decide onproposition.

Roy Anderson, member of the Board of Education!presented the plan, its provisions Ineeting with scatteredopposition from various spokesmen. The presentation oithe proposal led to the re-organization of the WoodbridgTownship Teachers' Association and the election of HanSechrist as its president. Mr. Sechrist is a mathemati<instructor in the high school.

ga recordmuch asfor the

Offlrera KWcUd

.The other officers selected areMISH Jennie D. Qarthwalte, of

I School No. ', as vice president,and Miss Ruth Numbers of School

secretary, A loosely-or-association - among thehas existed tor some time

dus never been exceedingly

No. '6, IBganlsce'ay Iteachers'but hi

* active./ In -.

•' teaclie

\ |l,80O.0O p/Demarest . .' ^rake, $2,000.00

i'er year.111,800.00,

Mrs. HildaHorace

Misses Helen'Bergen, $1,320.00; Marie Qerity.11 420.00; Reglna Behaneyfl II,-320.00; William Heller, Janitor,at a Balary of $2,100.00 per-year

Steven Gunderaeij, 54, of Me-chanic street, Perth Amboy', waspainfully Injured Tuesday nightshdirtly after 6 o'clock when the[Car In which he was drlnig struckthe side of the bridge over Wood-bridge creek on Wooit bridgeavenue, Sewaren.

Cundersen's machine careenedoff the road, tore through theguard rail fence and overturned.He was rushed to the Perth Am-boy. Hospital In the pollen, ambu-lance by Officer Henry Dunhamwhere it was learned he whs suf-fering from concussloh. of thebrain and Jwsslble .fractured ribs.

StJamesP.-T.A.Plans Movie Showat State TheatreMothers Visit Classrooms

and Inspect Work of theChildren

Jerome J. Rafferty leavesWoodbri4$e independent

Jerome J. Itafferty, who fore past four years has

..oen business manngei' ofthe Woodbridge Independentwill terminate hla career withthat paper tomorrow whenhe leaves for his home InBaltimore. After a shortstay .with his'family he willleave for a sanitarium onthe West Coast to regain Illshealth.

Throng AttendsFuneral Serviceof Mrs, Hayes

County Democratic Lead-er's Wife Dies After Be-ing Stricken With Pneu-monia.

outlining the plan to thuMr. Anderson explained

that ail ot the otlwr municipal...,,_ . employees havo gtveutheir sanction to thu i>lnn, con'tingent upon the Board ot ISducaUun employees doing ihe same.

Questions regarding the effecta voluntary contrlbuticnteachers' milarlea would havo ontheir pension provisos were raised!:y various members of the stuif,I'iiut question was the particular

[tended to perinli the Townshipscale uown to lue level deiutuidaby the times so that the cremtHave enjoyea may be ummpkirBankers will nut IUIIU moneyth« best of munlclpaliues yulstrict bcuaouty measure* ' airshown. This plan win rttleci __ to the many ot you wWfown uoiuen and pioperty uere, it,/ \will »ave the Townsuip the cost*of bond issues and will conservetne Interest we would Iwve to i*yon borrowed money. After a i A,1B better tor any employee ~ 'municipality to work tenand be palu for nine at thescale that prevailed in goodtban to not work at an or to tmplaced in a, situation such a* w s |have Meu In Chicago and in Piu.-fadelpnla,' Mv. Anderson siateu. *

Comment among the

The Parent-Teachers' Associa-tion of St. James' School held ItsBrat meeting of the new year onTuesday night, in the schobl audi-torium.

Duringplann were made for

the business session,, made for a benefitmovie to be held on Thursdayand Friday, February 4 and 5, atthe State theatre. The picture tdbe shown will be "Delicious,"

appointed chairman ofmenta. Mrs. Thomas Gerlty,<|ialrman ., of the refreshmentcommittee appointed the follow?ingi members to serve on | hercommittee at the fext .regular

Raritan Council,B.S.A., to Hold

Anhua) Dinneri * i

I Scouts and Executives toWitness Presentation ofBeaver Awards to Two.

l ieivlrtw fur Mrs, Ed-mund A. Hsiyes, o£ ighland Park,and a natWu of Woodbrldgo, were

last Monday morning at a

that raised doubts in theminus of many of the audiencewho telt that their action mighthave a bad effect on their pen*HIOIIS, UH the pension iund U Je-determlned by tlit actual amouutspaid. 1

Howard 9harp\ principal ofSchools Nou. 7 and '4, was theprincipal Bpeaker tor the teachersand the Ihst one to take the flootIn oppoaition to the terms of theagreement. Mr. Sharp, whoselenmrks met with varied applausefro in A group of the teachers saidthat the "cut" a$ he Insisted oncalling the contribution despite

Anderson's reassurances thatheld last Monday morning m u ™». «..».«.solemn higl'i maBg at the parish the contribution was not Intendedchurch In Highland Park, follow- as a permanent reduction of tho

d b Iterment in St James teachers' salaries, should not beed by Interment in St.Cemetery In WoodbrWfce.

Mrs. Hayes, who died last weekof pneumonia was the. wife otEdmund A. Hyes county a

D

James | teachers' salaries, should not fbeasked of t)w teachers fo'r threereasons:! ( l ) that It is Illegal;(2) that teachers are insufficiently

who gathered in groups altermeeting adjourned to discussiiropotitlon, indicated tuaiwould not be unwllimg topato it they had not been maffected by the ^C.OBIUB otbank here. Tne sentiment that itis 'better to forego one month uBay than to lose nil, seeineu }.u Wgrowing during the past week,but no concrete indlcui.on of warnaction the teachers will lake luittafternoon could be gamed.

Under the plan the mayor, thecominitleemen and all otuer em-ployees will take the temporary•eduction tor a period oi uu«year In'order to scale dowu uu-tax rate. It wl.l mean, a vas-i

•saving to the Towosllip and winfurther stablllie its credit posi-tion. Practically all of the lown-Bhip enfployees are now doae per cent of their pay

a was the. wife ot (2) that teachers are insffiEdmund A. Hayes, county attor- pala BH IS, and (3) that it la lm-ney and Democratic leader. Their proper that the tethers be called

hild who were also '" ""»» to "make up a deficit." .

Plans have been completed for. 7,. ,_._„„«, a , l nual dinner

two children, who wore also 111of iMieumonla, have recovered.Mrs. Hayes has been 111 for sev-

upon to "make up a deficitteacher has

wr= v T RHnIl!rt-.M5f"li»FI»aiIl<: Boy'sSuts oTAraericaV which isw i, ? ' I i . m

M VBen l lla- to «» neW on Tuesday, JanuaryMrtjhnMKennJaXs:KChaSeBs 28 at ^ E to ' C V * ^Kenna. Mrs. H. V. HMr, Mrs.Anna Klsh, Mrs. GeorgS Krock,and Mrs, J. Barron Levl.

rLrlng the evening a ham donatad by the manager of Butler'sstore, was awarded to MTB. Aug-

ll

tin-employraent relief, with the ex««i>-Uou of |tne poUce Uepaitmtjuiiwhich is glring two per cent utttiseveral weeks ago voted HiM ^ „the relief fund from tliu I'. U. A. •fund.1

ust Baumann. Refreshment were i - —served by the hospitality commit-1 th l s occasion,tee, Mrs. Michael DeJJoy, — ' -man. Prior to the bus

Calviu Derrick, superintendentof the State Home for Boys atjamesbuBg and a member of

l d t Hoover's CommissionW e l f a r e ) w l n be the

o f h 0 I l 0 r a n d speaker on

home in Green street with, herdaughters. She Is survived, inaddition to her immediate family,by her mother, her sisters. AnneDunlgan and Mrs. James* j . Dunnand a brother, James Dunlgan, allof Woodbridge.

County and municipal leaders

man. nwi n, !..„ ..,alon, • the various class roomswere visited and the work of thepupils for the past month wasInspected.'

in.W. Thorn of Cartdret.

premium of Rarltau Council, willserve as toaatmaster and he willbe assisted by executive boardmembers in carrying out the pro-

Well, well, thinga in the news line, are very slow thisweek Everyone seems to have kept from doing any-thing...........It may be that the New Year's resolutions arestill being upheld ......Then again possibly the depressionis bearing down on our actions also We wonft fightover it Hear the W. A. A. has issued a challenge tothe Flea Club bowling outfit... .The Fleas have ignoredthe challenge What's the matter, boys? You'renot afraid of losing the township bowling championship,we you? .Give them a chance Then take 'em likeGrant took Richmond You should be able to do itwithout much trouble——Some of your stars have livedin the alleys now for a long time Continuing alongbowling lines we also hear the Parkway Boys thoughtthey had a cinch the other night. The Carteret Big

, Five visited "Tony's'1 and proved much stiffer oppositionthan expectedtiflLee, McCann, Osborne, Smithers, Sulli-van and Deter thought they had a cinch after winningthe first game The worm turned, however, and the vis-

' itors handed out two sweet trimmings in the. next twogames jborne and Lee were* the ahinig lights of theevening with jtO? and 205 : Congratulations to "the boywho thought, up. the idea of+parking in his own driveway.....»....,Who is the Woodbridge jpewonage they call Ghandi?

i^ .-.*.«*fc'-.., I W m t n a n t VOUnff l a d y

Morrison ChristieBrst to File forSchool B o a r dPosts of Three Commission-

ers to Be Filled at An-nual Election on Fehruary9.

Morrison Christie, of 8ewaren\,

members in c y ggram of the owning,

One of the mos,t interestingfeatures wil be the presentations

f the Silver Beaver Awards.'hese will be presented to Dr.rlU S t n t

Troop

UH well as many of the friends (ofthe family from Woodbrldge at-tpnded the funeral.

Youth Struck by Car,Walking on Highway

Morrison C h i c l e , of S e w a ,Is the first to file for election totne Boardj.ot Education at "•-annual election which willheld. Tuesday, February '9.Christie has already begun

thebe

Mrhis

campaign tor .election. He wasan unsuccessful candidatethat office last year-

No qther candidates have

for

yet

•rninent yoi

filed their petitions tor electionwhich will be held to name schoolcommlaaionera for the expiredtermn of Mrs. Annabelle BftkOT, of

M»uilse n«alKftn_ an-

parallel cases ot a policeman andpoliceman Is

. . innually. Theteacher sCarta at $1,200 per year.In five years the'patrolman Is re-ceiving $2,600. It takes a teacherfourteen1 years to reach that figureund r the teachers' scale of sal-aries. Consider the quallficitlluftMdemanded of a teacher and thosedemanded of an applicant for aposition on the police force andjudge'for yourselves whether, ornot teactvers In the public schoolsare underpaid," ,he demanded.This Bally brought forth, a roundof excited applause Trim the gath

URGES U S ' r DEADTIMBER AS FUEL

FOR UNEMLO1A plan to utlllfce fallen undj

waste timber as fuel for 'ifamilies In small towns and villages ot the state U proposed Ina statement issued ID New Bruns-wick by E. L. Scovell, extension]service forester ot. the New Jer*1

sey Agricultural Experiment Sta-jtlon. \

Many families are suffer Jillcold and exposure, he sal<5=|in woodlands within a fewor excittti appiause nwui uw 6»»'; u n woodlands within a few ML

erlng, many of whom •*>*«» of their homes large Quantitiessigns of wanting to rise to>com- flaad g n d m m w o o d U e n mhat the DroDOsaL but who remain- » . I I H « . l . . l h M A,<,.nj..tin««

Abogg, Scoutmaster otuuui> 6 ot Perth Amboy andtohn Tifccy, Scoutmaster ot Troop1 of South Amboy, Both men

•.re veteran scputmaeters in theRaritan organisation.

Invitations have been ^ent toill members of the Raritan Coun-cil, Hcouters, and troop commit-tees, with the emphasis that ladles>re. especially Invited, The meet-

Ing la open to all friends ofScouting.

Reservations should be madeat the headquarters ot the Rari-tan Council, 175 Smith street, orby telephoning Perth Amboy 4-1610. .

George Chrlstopherson. 21, otWater street, Colonla, was In-jured and Buffered from shockwhen struck by a car while walk-ing along the Lincoln Highway in

Sunday evening, at~" 1UI of

Cojonla last Sunday evening, m6:30 P. M. Eugene FarulU,! ofNew Dover road, driver ot thecar, told police after takingChriBtopherson to the RahwayMemorial Hospital, that theMemorial KUBH>».,youth was walking In the centerof the road and that he tailed tosee him until it was too late toavoid hitting him. ,

Chrlstopherson was cut aboutthe legs and was Buttering from

Ue was treated at the

bat the proposal, but who remaincd In their seats'to cheer on thosewh otook the Initiative.

One teacher,proposed that theschool year be stopped nojw andthe saving be effected by mainte-nance coattt and the coBt of heat-ing th schools and that the monthlost be made up during the warm-er months. Another, citing the factthat many of the teacherB stoodto lese |200 by the contribution,suggested that 200 businessmen

$200 th ir share In reduc-

He urges welfare „ „other civic groups to ask towners for permission to „_..this waste Umber, and to recrwood gathering crews among ..unemployed to eut and dlstributthe fuel to needy families.

Commenting 'editorially onScovell's plan,*New Jersey^Culture, monthly roagaiineExperiment Station, say* '

Grove Avenue TaxpayersWant Sidewalks at Corner

Efforts wil be bade by the resi-dents of Orove avenue to havesldewftHu laid at the northeastcorner ot &roje avenue and Am-boy road. Thf property Is held by

hospital and tnen returned toh(Mie.

HARDIMAN'SYPH'ARMACY

L.

suggested that 200 busnpost $200 as their share In reducing, -the ta* rate and that the1

wealthier residents ot th« Town-ship be called upon tor emergencytaxes to meet the situation.

"The first thing to be consideredis the welfare ot the child," sal'Mr. Anderson, who stressed "sympathy with tl^ teachers1B purely an emergency "that is sorely needed ' J

the'burdn ot the Wopayer who U stpay taxes to "ment, the

enable "manyBave more offor food anj

"A coptactful,tain

Ttcommunity— Mnjited'

Hardlman, formerly of|Perth Amboy

the countas for l J

proyeian

MEN'S SHIRTS>roAdch>th; nude extra

full .body; fat color

Page 2: Woodbridge Leader - DigiFind-It · Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N

The Woodbridg* Le«der. Friday- January IS, 1932

I*

TWO

News Review of CurrentEvents the World Over

japan Succeeds in Pusliin^CKitva Out of Manchuria—Plana for Unemployment Relief and -

Government Economy.

By EDWARD' W. PICKARD

a resolution looking toward aconference ot the nation*. '

tariff

TAPAN, Ignoring the orders nt the« LtagDe of Nutlons" nnd resent-fol ly dlsrcEimllnK tlie notes fromthe United States nnd other povvenf

Id apparently tohnve her own wayin Manchuria, Con-veniently dubbingnil opposing forces"hamllts," she senther armies forwardfrom Mukden .<lur-ing the week in (in

that was

O.n.MaChar,

i*Wl

by the President, the purpow of theconsolidations Is to cut ihe cost offederal government, curtail .thegrowth or independent hureaeliminate overlapping and promoteefficiency. While refusing to set tdefinite figure Indicating t h e »nvings which w>nild follow the eohsolIdntlons, M r Hoover, MI Id the groupIng lmt .rear nf all veterans' activ-it ies , under ihe veteran^' adminis-tration It expected to anve from110,000,000 to $15,000,000.

Chairman Cochran of the house

SENATOR CARKY«of „Repjtbllcnn, nnd his »ul>coiiimlt

tee on bnnking amended the housebill to Increase the enpltnllintlon nfthe federal land banks by addingthe m m of $25,000,000, to he usedIn granting (vMrtnonementji nn. fnrmpayments. This Additional tntnIs to be repaid to the „ fetlerntreasury by the bnnk«, when theirneed for the money has passedSenator Cnrey believes the ' amendnient will permit a moratorium andat the *nme- time, avoid weakeningthe bank!,

A fitvornble report on the meatlure with tho amendment was deci*

Knights of Columbus ActivitiesWoodbridgeNew JerieyMiddlesex Council

No. 887

mm.at

ndvniieedestined to rench

it

f

Oilnchow. Resistmice was met atvarious points lmt

•?""\~~ ~ wni overcome with''Wiiimcil trains, bombing plnnes nnd.*#tftlt-r.v, nnd the Chinese stcndlly

bad;.F U u l l ; Marshal Chans' Hsueh-

decldtil It was better to giveno further excuse for

the warfare Into North.ordered all his forces

to wl th3H%wlthln the Great Wall,•did this movement was begun Im-mediately, accompanied by muchconfusion and the flight nr thepanic-stricken civilian population ofthe region. Thus the Japanesegained complete control of Manctmrin and the gallnnt fight put upby General Ma Ohnn and by thetroops directly under command ofMarshal Chang has been In vnln.

In .Nanking the new coalitiongovernment was organized and anew cabinet nppotnted'wlth ISugeneChen, leader of the Cnnton factiona s minister of foreign affairs, Itwas thoufiht that Chen might beable to negotiate a settlement withJapan on the basts of guaranteestor fulfillment of treaties In ex-change for military withdrawal ofthe Japanese.

M OSCOW charges that Czecho-slovakia has been plotting to

provoke war between ' Russia nndJapan, presumably to promote thesale of wan munitions. The storyw a i that a Czech diplomat hnd triedto Instigate the assassination ofKokl Hlrota, Japanese ambassndorto Kfoscow, nnd the man accusedturned out to be Carl Wanek, sec-

Chairman Cochran fexpenditures committee, which will

dl the onsolidation legislation,expenditures committee, whchandle the consolidation legislation,Is In accord with most of the ChiefExecutive's recommendations.

DURINGsenate

the holiday recesscommittee

two bills that call for tlieprlntion of federal fund-! to c:ire fur

t h e unemployed,and heard test!mony and argu-ments from socialworkers from Chicago, New York andother cities. One ofthe measures. Introdueed by Stor La Follette of

Senator

ure wmi uiu m«c..u. -ed upon by the committee1.

BOTH federal reserve and com-mercial banking officials are (se-

verely criticised for their coursewith respect to the stock market

collapse In the fullof .1020 In nn np-pcndlx to the re-port bolng compiledby the sonnte bank-ing mul currencycommittee's sub-committee which laInvestigating thenational nnd fed-eral reserve bank-Ing systems.

The committee,headed by Senator

Card party held Friday January8th was a succea ln every angle.Socially and financially It wancompletely successful and aft anIllustration of the continued co-operation of toraraltteee, It spokefor Itself. The chairman JohnRyan Jr., was diligent and everymember ot his committee workedhard with him. It might be add-ed that, three day* hiter al thefollowing meeting a complete re-port was handed to the council.

The special meeting January 7and the regular meeting held Jan-uary 12 hare convinced all tho»who attended that the officers are

'• striving only to have the organlx-[atlon function as they should anddo those things which the major-ity want done. Ot course no onecan never know what the major-ity want done If the meetings arenot attended. So far ke have hada representative turn out at eachmetetng,

neax and compltoneBs of the re-port. Every ticket Is acountedfor, whether paid or unpaid. EveryUMU received as donations is Betforth. All expenditures, arc set outand III other word*, the report Iscomplete In detail It every re-spect, It Was accepted and thecommittee as a whole given . a

ote of thanks.

-?s3K33m5 * 4 refrwhmeBts.

ocrat, of Virginia, who waa spon-sor for the Federal Reserve act Incongress, Ss particularly critical, ofwhat It holds to have been theb n n k . g ^ participation Int h e s e c u r , t y m a r k e t g a n d 0 ( tf)e

. . m l s c W e v o U 8 e t t e c t g » 0_ l o f t n s m a d e

t0 brol£ers "for acC(mDl ot ° t h e r s ' "

Tlie trustee reported that tbv)'have been working diligently tortwo or three . months, spendingseveral nights a week with theFinancial, Secretary in order toproperly audit thl» officers booksso that the seml-anual audits maybe made.. Past Grand KnightGeorge O'Brien reporting tor theRetreat Commltteen decrlbed theorganization meeting of theRetreat Comtnlteee, described themen's Retreat League t)f New Jer-'sey and announced that his com-organisation meeting of the Lay-10 o'clock mass ln the club,mlttee would meet Sunday afterLecturer reported the success of'social events held In the past andannounced the dance Friday, Jan-uary 15 ln charge of which 1H acommittee headed by Michael

The committee on procedure tohe followed at the wake of a de-ceased brother- advised a certainprocedure which was adopted,

A second card party wan an-nounced and a committee appoint-ed of which Dftvld T. Qaflty Ischairman, for the conducting otthe party. .

After 8 years there has been re-vived among us our" old friendthe Columbian Club, On January'12, Columbian club was org&nlied

The following officers were dulyelected: Andrwr D. Desmond,president; William Pen ton, vice-president; William Coll, treasur-er; DvrtA F. Cfcrtty, McreuryjJacob Orauiam, John Mullen andOtorge O'Brien, directors A greatdeal of discussion wai held at thtomeeting regarding economy, andthe President was authoriied toappoint a committee to sAtle theaffairs between Council «»d theColumbian club and between theColumbian club and the puildtngaasoelatton.

David F. Qerity, reporting farthe Membership committee of thecouncil, stated that h» wpuW oallhis committee together, and M-auest«d «Mh *nd «rtry memberto forward to him the names olproipeoUTB mmnfrm,

Tho PlnancUV Secretary tog*certs that aoove all thtngs youkeep your present duet and «Hes»-nunts paid and make an effortto gradualljr pay up t n e . b M *dues. The best way to have youraccount straightened out ti to teehtm personally.

' Obnt forget the dance, Fridaynight. The committee will bewaiting to welcome you and agood time It guaranteed.

2 $by Senator

UUUaO U\j iravfi* _ _ __

corporations, Investment trusts andothers ln making such loans, At the

time, the report shows the naare opposed to new

the „ _. . .Mr. Costlgan told the commit-tee that notlilng short of govorument help could provide nec-essary relief for the unemployed.Some of the witnesses heard esti-mated that as much as $700,000,000would be needed tor relief during1932 nnd that the funds from etnte,city and private sources would notbe sufficient to carry the loadthrough the winter,

President* Hoover 1B now, as al-ways, opposed to a direct appropri-ation from the treasury for unem-ployment relief purposes, holdingthat It would be In the. nnture of a

and would be a d:ingerousprecedent.

ETS In the house. ofIt

repre-are

S5 »S» Zreferendum proposal

large European .counts- among his associates themilitary attaches of severnl alliedcapitals,

modification of the Volstead act topermit the manufacture and saleof light wines and beer,light wines and beer.

Representative Ralney of Illinois.Democratic floor leader, said tne

MahatmaGandhi

*„ Bombay fromMIW> conference In London, told nvoit.throng of bis followers that hewould not flinchpern sacrificing the

'lives of a million-people as the price

liberty for In-and he/warnedl that! In theIng conflict with

le British theyr Ight have to ,tece

"ballets Instead ofslaves. His utter-ances plainly indi-cated that he Is•bout r e a d y toabandon his policy 'of passivei resistance.

' : "If the fight is Inevitable, 1 will^ ' c expect every son and daughter of" ^ " H i ^ w ,nd|_ t 0 contribute his

>, ue said. "However, 1 wills^v. abandon attempts to save the

nation from a fiery ordeal. If, on

A t i e other hand, there Is no single•-fay of hope I shall not hesitate to

( ,c*ll upon you• to bear any amount\Vt •nirerlng."

He counseled his-follower* to,,,,," (wen their hend,i, despite the bloody

" **" the northwest frontier, ,.v^, the arrest of Pandit

dll._ai.uivuharla! Nehur and deportation(nd, of Abdul- Qraffur Khan, leader of(m * the "red-Bhlrt" tribesmen,"<J" The trouble on the northwest

frontier of which Oandhl spoke Isgiving Viceroy Lord Wllllngdongnat concern. The antl-Brltlsh red-1

tnlrt organization staged violentrlott near Peshawar and fought

i with the troops, many being killed( ' t i n n .Vail

te

Into# Bhowtn ABTE and extravagance In theNor thulr federal government must be

lottult o.ed, In the opinion of President! Kb Hchoy,flPi aDd many othen as well,

With v l t w a g announced at the White„(• pkyi*iie that the President wai pre-'tucked ^ * ipw"*' m w t n « e t(* cw>!

8l , e r mo.ai i reconiniendlng the consollda-takV1*™*1^" departments and bureau*.toariEjIt waDts Immedtate legislative a twin if loon providing for grouping all con-

The [irwilon ai'tlvltie* of Ihe govern-touinb in an font one tiilnilnlsiratlve head£(**<» - of the shipping

LHownian ., — DruwX merchantforward ••?

$* •-. *—™.—. 3eohrlst

i>ovt favorably on either measure.•The wets will nave to bring thebill to the floor through the peti-tion' of 145 members," he said."That is • ttie only way ln whichtiiey can ilo lt. They will hnve hutone vote and that either on a refer-endum or light wines and' beer.They can't have both. Thej rules ofthe house will pa. so Interpreted.

He said be felt the referendumhnd the better chnnce for "gettingby" "because many drtfs, htnreelf1 In-cluded, would vote for It.

» . '•

N EITHER reparations nor wardebts will be finally settled at

the European' conference t whichGrent Britain has called to meetJanuary 18 in Lau-sanne, If the pro-g r a m i "nctlcallyagreed u p o n byBritish and Frenchtreasury experts Isadopted. They suggest a new three-y e a r > morntorlumfor Germany on theconditional repnra-tlons and that Germany be requiredduring that periodto pay the uncondi-tional reparations' Into the Hank forInternqttonal Settlements, suchamounts to be Immediately re-loaned by the bank to the Germanrailways or re-Invested within Ger-many, thus avoiding all ensh .trans-fers abroad t«y the rfelch.

The creditor powers would undertnlie to concede to Germany anImpartial re-examlnatlon of her ca-pacity to pay reparations towardthe close of tlie moratorium period.

H ( | | |

e close of tlie moratorium period.On tills side of the wat_r Seuu-

tor Cordell Hull of Tennessee comesforward with a call for Interna-tional action to lower tariff barriersas the first Btep In s o l m g the debtproblem.. l1i« former (hglrmas ofthe Democratic dational committeeaayi payments can be made onlythrough the restoration of healthyinternational trade, that tariff walls,have strangled trade and that It Is"fatuous" to Insist on debt pay-ments and nt the same tlnie haveworld commerce hampered. Thesenator, who it a member of the

tie" policy committee In•ays he purposes to offer

Acting under a resolution by Sen-ator Glass to "make a completesurvey of the nattonal and federalreserve banking systems," the sub-committee Is expected to bring abill to revise those systems In someparticulars.

PRESIDENT HOOVER announcedI the appointment of the fourthmember of the American delegationto jthe disarmament conference ntGeneva, the man selected beingNorman H. Davis of New Vorkwho was nnder-secretary of state, inthe Wilson administration and chieffinancial adviser to the Americandelegation In the, negotiations thatresulted ln the treaty of Versailles.

Later In the week the remainingdelegate was appointed, be beingHugh Gibson, ambassador to Bel-glum, a veteran ln uuch negotia-tions. As alternate In case anydelegate cannot serve, Hugh Wil-son, minister to Switzerland, wasnamed.

Arthurv Henderson, former for-eign secretary )n the Labor govern-ment of Great Britain, told correspondentsun Parla that he expected to preside'over the arms con-ference, although he no longer I; Inoffice, \

MEMBERS of the "progressive"groVp IQ the senate -are again

talking about a third party in thocampaign of 1932, and ore,said to

,*be considering three possible candidates—assuming as they do, ttimPresident Hoover will be denom-inated by the Republican conven-tion, and also assuming' thaj thePemocrats do_not .select.a candi-date to tlie Ilklug. of the group. Thethree the Independents are talking

..pbout are Senator'Borah of Idaho;Senator Hiram Johnson of Cali-fornia, who Is sometimes too "regu-lar" to suit a tew ot them, and Gov.Giffond- Plnchot of, Pennsylvaniawhose lightning rod Is always upSenator Norrls of Nebraska will notlet bis nanie be considered,

The Republican Independents, ItIs believed, would be satisfied withFranklin D. Roosevelt as tlie Democratic nominee, but his selection Isno more certiiin now than It linsbeen lor months, Newton I). Rukeriinnounced In Cleveland flint h«would not be a delegate-to the Demacratic convention, but neglected usay whether or not he would nccept the nomination If It were of-fered him, ' Both hje and floosevoltwere, declared "nvalluble cumlldates" by Josephua Daniels instatement given out In New VoikThere wns a recrudescence of thestory that'Alfred B. Smith wouldneuln ask for the honor of lendingIlls party, and a'spokesman for"Al-fulfil Bill" Murray, spectacular governor of Oklahoma, said that gentlemun might be a candidate. Andthe •eliauees of Gov. >Albert C.Ritchie of Maryland mtlst not Voverlooked..

L1 INLAND had a national refer" endura on the question of abolUliing the country's prohibitionlaws, and on the -basis of early re-turns It \yis estimated that the 90per cent of the Finns voted wet.'

A RCHBISHOP DIAZ, head of the* * Catholic church In Mexico, hasInstructed his prletU and all otherCatholics to disregard the new lawpassed by congress which limits to2r> the number of priests in the fed-eral district So the chances forrenewed trouble there are good.

(0,193!. Wactirnlfewipantr Union.)

T A T EE R V I C ET ATI ON

JOSEPH KOSSER, Proprietor

395 Amboy Ave., Woodbridge, N. J.

Make HOOVER Cleaninga New Years Resolution

B e modern In 1932. Be tint and efficient and .

enjoy yourself. Don't do anything yourself that , . .

electrickv can do for you. U.c a Hoover electric .. ,

cleaner on all your floor coverings. I t pick* up . _lint and threads, shakei the duit loo»e and drawl

it up into the bag. • •

$79.50,ther model tt $6330.

Terms prio«ta little higher

$5 down $5 a month

$5,000 (or $10.00| F YOU were one ot tlie million or more^ersona who are in-

jured in automobile accidents In this'country tvery year,> * you would-welcome the liberal payments ot aft AetnaSpecial Automobile Accident Policy.

AETNA BPKC1AI, AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT, POLICYPAYS I'AiimeiiU for liias uf

PAYMENTS |{ } .o u ^ mjured time a n d mc<Ucal, tor loss of ( a ) ^ g oper_Ung, expense

driving. demonstrat- Total' DisabilitytMf 15 ooo ing, adjusting, crank- $25 per week, notBoth SVes. Both ' ing or repairing a exceeding 29 week*.

-- ** - " private phwenger BU- Partial Disabilitytomobile; $12JO per week, not(b) while riding In a exceeding 4 weeki.public fcr private auto- Haopital and Graduatemobile; Nurse Benedts.(c) ln consequence of $15 per week, not ex-the explbelon or bum- ceedlng 4 weak*.

WakeUp Your Liver Bile-Without Calomel

— Byes, BothHawto. Both _VAAI ' 6 OOO

I Hind and Foot 5,0001 Bye i'800

Hand or Foot ,•and Eye I 5.

Arm or U lir i~» 8 000- tha explbalon »r tturn- ceeaing * wHand or Fool 2,600. Ing ot ah automobile: Non-Diwbllng Inurles

run down by an, auto-, Identification IndamMO mobile. . nity J100.

ehuifleurs, anto meehulei, UKT certain other pertoatwkll* CHgmged la their - "- '

\ . J\ —8KB—

fJ. PlGERlTY & CO.

fMAIN 8TBKET GBB1TY BLUG.

T1IKPHONE 8-0283

WOOUBR1UUK

AidYoaH Jump Out of Bedthe Morning farm' to Go

H you f«el war and tank u d ti*worU looki punk, don't mXkm t lotof stlbV^nenJ wit«r, oil, karih*caady or dwwbtg pm tad cxptetthflm to ttvkjB yco toddfls^f BMtland buoyant u d foQ of aonUta.

Pjor they can't do i t They ody*moye the bowels and a mare move-ment doean't get at the. causi Theyea^on for your down-end-out feedingK your liver. It should pour out twopounds of liquid bile into your bowrii

»iy-

B __hMat*••»•••*« tndj, j^rfc«

ttl*,MI1iMi>««>'«*fcWl

nwmUymTtay eostala woadwM. barala* tmUvwtabh otnete, tmulnf wh« It tamm maUai tlw bttaflo* tndr.

But don't uk lor l l w piUa, AA fo> CarttrtUttl< U T « PtIU. Look torV* ""4 ^UtUi Uitt Pilli an UM ted Ubtl. H«wt •

U O1»}1CUC«.

TYPEWRITERSSold— Rented — Repaired

L, F. CAMPION104 MAIN STREET

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.PHONE WOODBRIDGE 8-1400

SNTDER'S GARAGE

S\% C0L0N1A Si%BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION

« - . o ,.Pays divUtwdt' of 8Va% per annum on PAID UP,SHARES from date of i*»ue to data of withdrawal.

PhoneWoodbridge

8-0265

Snyder's Garage i» equipped to meet all em«r-gencie* that happen during the colder m0"*1";When in need of towing remember our phonenumber. W« will be out in a f**?"1"1**':.*?wnere you are .tailed, anywhere withui • ' • « « •of fifty mile*. For storage during the winter,for oil and gatotine, for rep«iw Wid » « r « ^ » J j 2for a complete reasonable MroeeSnyder's Garage,

Towing Service Re>W

Page 3: Woodbridge Leader - DigiFind-It · Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N

The Woodbridge Leader, Friday, January IB, 1932 THREE

publtsi

The WOODBRIDGE LEADERPUBLISHED EVKRY FRIDAY BY

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, Incorporated104 Matt) St., Wuottbiliige, N. J. Entered at llio Post Office st

I Weodbridse, N. .1 , na Surond Claim Mull Mutter

KOUKUT T. WAI.SH, Editor arid ManagerLAWHKNCE 1'. CAMIMON, A»»wliUe UdUor1'flANCtrtH. ISItOWN, Advertising Mntmgor

ii ?Ur>'t) :i V<ur, l*ayabli> In Advnnrn '

Phone Woodbridge 8-1400l!i>iiiU)liriiiii>n of rmw» und odltorinl mstwiri thoaecjjiuiiniH is p.Minima provided crodlt Is given to'l'lin "\VtKidl»idKf l>«H(lor., Ciiiruspomlonte .from,it!itdttre, uxiirurtiinu oitlnlons on topics at ^Dteresiiu«. solicited,' but no anonymous letters wl l lb*

Woodbridge, N. J., Friday, January 15, 1932

HELPING THOSE WH6 HELP YOU '*Coding of one rrtonth'fl, wtigGs to the township treas-

ury, k< bring,about ft reduction irt taxation,,hy all Town-ship employees, depends today upon What action wiH betaken liy school teachers, principals, and janitors at ameeting this afternoon in tha No. 11 School. When the•proposal, which has been given the approval of vhe policeand oihor municipal employees, including the executives,,\yas first presented last Friday it met with some oppositionon the part of school teachers who claimed that they arealready paid little enough for the work they do (find thequalifications demanded lor their positions.

Upon their action this afternoon hangs the fate of theproposition, the success of which will mean a vast savingto the Wood bridge tax-payer and will further mean astrengthening of the Township's credit. Like most otherAmerican cititis Woodbridge is faced with the adoption ofemergency measures to charter it way through the de-pression which is'now entering its third year. This pro-posal is the sanest of all the cures which have been de-vised, to the best of our knowledge, in this state.

this controversy on the Democratic party and incapacitateit in all other respects," say$ the senator.

In support of his position Sen. Hull then quotes thewords of Woodrow Wilson: "The questionR involved (inlocal option) are social and moral and not susceptible ofbeing made parts of a party program. I do not believethat party program—(should be) hopelessly embarrnBsedby making a political issue of a great moral question whichis essentially non-political and non-partisan in its nature,"said Wilson.

Which might aound AS though the late u Presidentagreed with Sen. Hull. But take note that when Wilsonuttered those words,"ho »was governor of our state andthat those words found birth before Prohibition had be-come a national issue. " .

We believe those words of Wilson hold true today—that Prohibition is not a subject fir o Rationaf politicalplatform. But Prohibition has most certainty been inject-ed- itfto-national politics by none Other than our dry re-

wh t m b l l g believing that legislation can

—LBQAL ADVHRTIBBMBNT—

<uiriurr« SALEIN CHANCERY OP NEW JER8KY-

vtvmm JBtunnr MORTOAOB AM>TITUI GUARANTY COMPANY, ncorporation, Complainant, amt 8TAN-LKY ZOCHOWBKI, « Hi.. Deftnd-»nl. n F» for Mta of mnrtgafadpramliwi dtl«d November 36. INI. 'By virtue at the sbnvr atat*d writ, In

me directed and delivered, t will *x-poM to mle at public rundu* unWEDNESDAY. THB TW»NTlteTH

DAY OF JANUARY. N1WCTBRNHUNDRED AND THIRTY-TWO

•t two g'cWk Standard Tlmp in th<afternoon of (t» 'until Joy ru ihr SlierItt'i Otflr* |n the City i>f Now Hum--.wieK, Ni J.

All the following tract* nr parccli n[land-and premiM* htftlntfter particu-larly described, lituat*, lylni and b«-Inj In the Townittlp of Woodbrldft, in jthe County or MIddUMx «ml- Stutr ofN«w Jwwy. " • \ |

frt TRACT.i m

•Ineeri of Perth Amboy, N. J., Jun*25th, 1912, filed In the office of theClerk of Middlesex County.

BtINO a portion of the aame prom-Uei conveyed to Stanley lothowtkt anoSophia Zoehowakl hi* wife, by deed(rum FTank ffrytlntkt uid Mary. Bryllnokl. hli wife, bearing date of I b y10. tfaa.recorded Hay ft, IMS In Book9t» of Drtdn for Mlddlepex County atpage 88

Decree for Second Tract amount insto approximately M.930.00.

Together with all and ilnguhr ther l M i prlTtlHw, twredltiiwnU tnd

p p u n o e e thereunto belonflnc nrIn anywlM Mwertalninf.

NRNAttD H

LBAVITTHt.it

GANNON.

tALLSY.Solicitors.

12-MS1 1

formers who stumble along believing that legislation canevent© a Hea'ven on earth. And state it is in our Confettilution tfow can Mr. Hull say that Preaident'Wilson's wordsproperly characterize the subject until it hafrbeen removednnd the liquor question left in the hands of the individualwhore it belongs.

And how, praise the Lord,' does the reverend Mr. Hullexpect anyone to s61ve the matter unless the Democraticparty takeB the initiative and removes this greatest barrierio our economic recovery. Repeal of Prohibition and thethe proper manufacture and sale of liquor would not onlybe in itself a great economic help, but it would have thepsychological reaction we need to blow us out of the holewhich busybody reformers have dug for us.

If the Democratic party's leaders prove themselvesso spineless as to be influenced by Mr. Hull's reasoning—if we may make use of the word to describe this latest drybrainstorm—then we feel there is little need for the party'sholdig a national convntion to select a Presidential candi-date. It will be unnecessary. If Prohibition reform isside-tracked any longer, the people of-this country will

I undoubtedly take the matter in hand and follow the lead

frlRSt TRACT.BfeOlNNINO at a point m the Writ '

«rtjr line of William atreet dlatant tW,.'hundred feet (300) amitherly from theSoutHtrly line of New ,Brun»wlok avc-nue; thence WeMerbr at rjght MIKIPIIto William ' Mreet' One " hundred feettlOO'l h

WtlOO'OO1) to

raflel '

We will never return to the. prosperity of former aays|o f t n e i r forefathers who swept this virgin land clean oftyrrany and oppression in 1776, secure in the belief thatthey were creating a new and free land.

||/ unless steps such as have been taken in Woodbridge areadopted throughout the country a-nd the leading nationsof the world. What is chiefly needed is the re-establish-ment of credit and the creation of confidence. The tax-' payer today is faced with luxes which seemed hot so bigtwo and three years ago, but in the light of present con-ditions, are enormous.

For the ultimate victory over poor business .every-thingthing must be scaled down to a lower plane than thehigher levels which wo have been traveling. .Commoditycosta have come down. Business and industrial organiza-tions are making their way by cutting salaries in everydepartment and m laying ott men. Businessmen and mer-chants, have takei^ terrific, losses during the past twoyears. Their losses arc reflected in the total taxes paid.We have built up a system that increased with our wealth.Now that out' wealth has receded, it means either cuttingdown the. personnel employed toy'the public or reducingthe salaries of all.

It is certainly better to have the same number of in-dividuals sit work at a reduced salary than to-have theequivalent number of people out of work. It is betterfor the school teacher, as a temporary measure, to workten months and paid for nine than not to work at all.

Woodbridge has paid its teachers with the annual in-crement steadily since the founding of the, school sys-tem. Through the past two years of the depression, whentheir employers were taking: ten, tWcnty and fifty per .centcuts in salaries and income?, the teachers' salaries weremaintained. Now the time has arrived when the schoolteachers and other employees of tlieJJoard of Educationmust co-operate with the*-public.

The .complaint was voiced at last Friday's meetingthat in comparison with tlie police, the school teachers,we greatly underbid. In this it mus"t be rememberedthat the lot of the policeman and the school teacher varygrejitly. The school teacher works from 9 in the morninguntil nocin, and then fmtn r to ' i t o'clock. Whatever addi-tional work im\y be required at homfe can mean but occa*aional hours. The schqor teacher is free on Saturdays and

jd_ftys, all holidays, the Christmas recess and has a t\Vots* vacation in the summer. There is plenty of time

ted for extra work, such as teaching in night and.ier schools, tutoring 'and sumtner work.The policeman works at all.houra, eight hours stead-

every day except one every1 week, outside in alj kindsweather, exposed to hazards that are far removed iron?lot of the school teacher, and has but a ttan-day vacation

nliually. He is WcalLat all times fcnd is faced with a job'that has many unattractive angles. Moreover it must beremembered that khile there are but little more-thanl ien ty men on the local fo'ree', there are tn tims thatnumbr of s'choorteaeners,, principals, janitors *nd otheremployees of the Board ,oi Education..

It is to i>e hofced atid krongly urged that* the teachersm the light of sane reasoning",'will- npproVe-the proposalthis afternoon. ' ' \

PROHIBITION AGAINThe tricks of the drys, who are bound above all things,.

apparently even above the preservation of the country, tokeep the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act inth Constitution, merit the condemnation of every right-thinking man and, woman. By trickery, bribery and dis-honesty they force,d the Eighteenth Amendment into theconstitution. By. the same tactics they are endeavoringto keep it there. I j •

Finland s action last week leaves-us, supposedly thegreatest tiation on earth, the greatest collection of outrightdamn fools yet in existence. And we can come out fromunder that stigma by-following but two courses-witherrepealing Prohibition .and getting down to a sane controlof the liquor business or by continuing with this hypocrit-ical luxury and running the United States of America onthe rocks for good. .

The Republican parly, hiding behind the skirts of Mr.Hoover's smug platitude-V'The law must be observedand the now-famed "noble experiment—has been thumb-ing its nose at the people of what was founded as a freecountry. ..While holding one hand, figuratively to then-elevated noses, with the other hand thew have been, gar-nering the bootlegged stained profits of ihe illicit liauorand beer trade. And now, though undoubtedly frigktenedby the condition that their Frankenstein has created, theyfear to desert the dry ship lest they lose the votes of thedrya—who in bur humble opinion are greatly overesti-

' mated. ' .« The only apparent hope for the American people in

f the'- peaceful Solution of the Gordian knot which Prohibi-tion has tied for us lies with the Democratic party, whose

j liberal views and whose consideration for the rights ofthe individual have always impressed us. But eY«n "*the Democratic party stand the Southern drys to assert thepaepodneas of the, aaered dry cpw. •

- ' ot arttis#iimbatitUi1t«iHftnto Jhon

m M r t O n e hundred feeta point: thence nonthn-ly and

live feet (W) to a point thence emtn Vand parallel with the flrat rourse one Ihundred feat (100) to laid Westerly Iline of William itreeti and thence 1northerly Lalong said Weiterly line of IWilliam street twenty-five feet (36) K>the point and place ol Beginning.

BEJNO known ai and by Lot No. 1i l l aa laid out anil ahnwn un a certainmap entitled, "Map of Ooodrldge Park.3«a Building Lola altuated at Fords,New Jersey, the property of the He-tuchen Realty ft Improvement Co.,"Mirveyed by Mason A Smith, Civil Kn-gineers, of Perth Amboy. N. J., Juno16, 1912, tiled in the office ot theClerk of Ulddlesex County.

Being a jfortton of the same premlveBconveyed to Stanley Zochowikl ana So-phia Zochowskt, hlo wife, by deed fromFrank Bryllnakl Md Mary Brylinskl,hl» wife, bearing Jato May 10, 1923.recorded Hay 23, TO8 in Book 919 ofDeeds for Middlesex bounty a l Pageoo»

Decree for Flrat Tract amounting toapproximately f8,930.00.

SECOND TRACTBEQINN1NO at a point In the West-

erly line of William street distant TwoHundred twenty-five feet (325') south-

LKGAL ADVERTISEMENT

SHERIFF'S SALE—In Chancery ofNew Jenny, Between The Mer-

chants Building ft Loun Association,ot We.tt Hudson, a corporation of NewJersey, Complulnunt, and John K.Glester, et, ul., Defendants. Fl Fafur HUIO oK mortgaged premlHe« datedDecember 12, 1931.

By virtue of the above stated writto me directed and delivered, I willexpose to sale at public vendue onWEDNESDAY, THE 27TH DAY OF

JANUARY. A. D. 1932nt two o'clock standard" time In thenfternoim of the said day at theSheriffs Oltlce In the City of NewBrunswick, N. J.

All the following tract or parcel ofland and premises hereinafter parttcu-lurly Ascribed, situate, lying uhd be.ing in the Township of Wpodbrldge,In the County nf Middlesex and Stateof New Jersey.

Designated us lots Number nine (9)ami'ten (10), In Block number fourteen(14) on a map entitled "Map of lotasituate in the Town of Woodbrldgfe,N. J.. property of William ZieglerEsq., and known us Demorest-on-tht-Hilltop;*, surveyed • January, 1891, byJ. M. Trowbrldge," and ftle.d In theOffice of the Clerk of Middleaex Coun-ty. N. J., on the twenty-fourth (24)day of September, 1891, as Map No.196,

Premises located at Demoreat avenue,Woodbridge Township.

Decree npiOunting to approximatelyto R'iOj

Together with all and singular therights, privileges, hereditaments andappurtenances, thereunto belonging onIn anywise appertaining.BERNARD M. GANNON, Sheriff.BENJAMIN' NEWMAN, Solicitor.

12*30-l-8-15-22-4t

erly from the sou}! line of New

sex and State of New Jersey.BEGINNING at a point In the west-

rly side of Berkeley Court, distantsoutherly one hundred twenty-five feetsouth of Green street and two hundredand twenty feet east of Benjamin ave-nue; running thence (it southerly andparallel with Benjamin avenue fortyfeet; thence (2) westerly and parallelwith Green street ninety-five feetthence (S) northerly parallel with Ben-jamin avenue forty feet to the north-east corner of lot No. 83 on said map':thence (4) easterly and along the south-erly line of lota Noe. 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11in Block 373N on the aforesaid mapninety-five feet to the point or placeot BEGINNING.

Decree amounting to approximately(4,890.

Together with all and singular theright*, privileges, hereditaments andappurterfanceg thereunto belonging orin anywise appertaining.IM.20. 12-24-31-1-7-14BERNARD M. GANNCfN, Sheriff.HYER & ARMSTRONG, Solicitors.

uMierlyBrunswick avenue: thence Westerly atright angles to William street, one hun-dred feet (100') to a point; thencniSoutherly and parallel with William'street twenty-five (26') to a point;thence easterly and parallel with thefirst course one hundred feet (100') tosaid Westerly line of William street;and thence northely along said wester-ly line of William street twenty-five(2E') to the point and place of Begin-ning.

BEING known AS and by Lot No.110 an laid out and shown on a certnlnmap entitled, "Map of Goodrldge Park,28a Building Lots situated at Fords,New Jersey, the property of the Me-

•tuchen Realty and Improvement Cn,,"surveyed by Mason & Smith, Civil En-

Not a "Luxury"bentiMry is not i "Luxury," but a vital "JSecwsity.1

wiiftn position* or "jobs" are scan* It Is the man nrwoman with the good appearance who la preferred , . .nnd good-looking teath a n the dominant feature of animpreiehre personality.

A Vital "Necessity"Come to us and have your teeth oleaned . . . those yel-lowed or biaokened tooth "ttumpi" removed or thosaufteightly "gaps" closed op.

1ft can improve your appearanoe'. . , make you morehealthy . . . Increase your efficiency . . . better able tocope with the present deprewlon.

Our PricesAre the Lowestin Our History

Ve perform all brinche* otdental work—Fillings, Extrto-ttoru, Plate and Bridge Work,

tGnwna, Pyorrhea Treatment,X-tay and Dental Cleanings.Ml at tfet lowest possible cost.

Nervous Peopleand ChildrenOur Specialty

72 BROADELIZABETH,

666666 Liquid or Tabletn lifted Internallyand S6A Salve externally, make a com-plete and effective treatment for C<ild«,

$5,000 in Cash PrizesAuk Your Orueglut for Particulars

n wmi TOD ABB INDB. MALLAB' OFFICE

ADTSBTISKKKNT

IH CHANCERY OF NKW JKK8KVBetween SAMUEL FREEDMAN, Com-

plainant, and WOODBRIDGE FEED& COAL COMPANY, u corporationof New Jersey, PefendanL On Bill.ptc NOTICE.TO THE CREDITORS OV WOOD-

BRIDGE FEED & COAL COMPANY.PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that In

pursuance of an order made on ue-.cember 30, 1931. in a cause wherein iSamuel tfrcedman Is complainant, andWoodDrldge 'Feed ft Coal Company, aicorporation • ot New Jersey Is wiea-dant. notice la hereby glwn to th»creditors of saidto

ditorsALBERT G.-DeRiStein, Hannocb &

y, to piNDE. Receiver,Lasser, 17 Aoad-

emy Street, Newarh, New Jersey, theirseveral claims and demands againstsaid Company, duly verified under oathof affirmation, within one month fromthe date hereof, or they will be ex-cluded from the benefit bf such divi-dends as may hereafter be made anddeclared by suld Court from the assetsof said Company.

Dated; December qo, 193V

tys^ mm ns&m.Solicitous of Complainant,rYl Academy St.. Newark, N. J.

12-31-l-8-16-32-«

-LE6A1, ADVEBtlBEMBNT—

SHERIFF'S SALE-In Chancery • ofNew "Jersey. Between Industrial

Building and Loan Association of Ban-way, N. J., Complainant, - and HenryAamodt, Mrs. Henry Aamodt, BmilKoyen. Frank Van Syckle, and LeoSlonim, Thomas A. Flanagan and Til-lie B. Flanagan, Detendants, Fj Fa.for sale of mortgaged premises datedDecember 1, 1981 t I . .

By virtue of the above stated writto me directed and delivered. I willr dexpose to on

*

OJ1

|at two o'clock, standard ttaw In theafternoon of the aatd day at the Sher-iff's Office in the City of New Bruns-WAll the following tract or parcel ofland and premises hereinafter partlcularly described, situate, lying. *jd be-ing in the Township ot Woodtrtdge, Inthe County of Middlesex and State of

Being known and designated as lotsNos. 84 and 81 In Block S73 N on aimap of a portion of Berkeley Terrace,situate tn Iselln, In the Township ofWoodbridge, In the County ot Jlidnle-

CONSOLIDATION

STAN'S AND WEARWttL

Clothes Combine

RIDE A HORSEFOR REAL.SPORT

We httve tlyon at the

walttng for

WoodbridgeRiding

Academy188 ,U1*P1B MAIM

WOODBRIDQB, ,N.

rraax

ST.,i.

StJITS, TOP COATSand OVERCOATS-

Sweeping Reductions

MetfsSaturday Jan. 16thSale will continue as long as the present stocklasts * • ^ • • . •

All Top Coats $9.50 All Over Coats

This merger will give the public an opportunity to buy at prices ever un-heard. All garments are GUARANTEED ALL WOOL, PRE-SHRUNK,FAST COLOR and LATEST MODELS, and sold direct through factory toyou.-

ALL WOOLBOYS' SUITS

Long 1 Short

MEN'S CAPS

Leather SweatsUnbraaliable Vitors

ALL WOOL MEN'STROUSERS — Worriers,

Serges and Cashmeres

!.75

MEN'S FELT HATSin all the shades and

shapes »

MEN'S LEATHERCOATS and JACKETS

Wool Lined; GenuineHorsehide

Store Open EveningsMEN'S SHIRTS

[Broadcloth; made extrafull body; fast color

Page 4: Woodbridge Leader - DigiFind-It · Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N

A 'Get Acquainted'The Woodbridge Leader, Friday, January IS, 1932

It jTTT T 17XTT\MILL LJN U322StateSt.,JustoffSmithSt.

Perth Amboy, N. J.

Our great purchasing power—buying of ends and samples direct from the mills for 8 stores has enabled us to give the publicamazing values in White Goods, Curtains, Window Shades, Upholstery Goods, Percales, Cretonnes, Blankets by the pound,yard or by the piece. We always have the latest styles, colors and designs at the very lowest possible prices* Our sales areusually the talk of the town, so you really owe it to yourself to stop in and see us. Here are just a few specials for comparison.

Ti - -

Fruit of the Loom MuslinReg. 17c, Our Sale Price lie

With Other Purchase

Unbleached SheetingHeavy, 40-inch; regular 14c; our price

9c yd; 12 yds. for $1.00

A. C. A. Feather Ticking5 Yards for $1.00

Imported Feather TickingVery fine quality; red and blue; regular

45c yard; our price

33c yd; 3 yds. for 95c

Linen Finish TowelingRegular 12 Vic yard

Our Price 8 \ Yard' IMPORTED EWTRA HEAVY PURE

Linen Dish TowelingRegular 27c a yard

Our Price 19c

Dish Towels—Linen FinishAll Sizes—Very Good Value

45c a Pound

Napkins-All WhiteLinen Finish

63c a Dozen

PercalesFancy Colors and Designs; Reg. 15c a yd.

Our Price 9c Yard

All Kinds of RemnantsALWAYS ON HAND

Very Reasonably Priced

Upholstery SquaresUty. coloring and designs;

Sale S tar t s—FRIDAY JAN.15Continues FOR TEN DAYS

Pequot and Mohawk Sheets81x90; regular $1.29; our

Special price 88c

Colored Bordered Sheets81x90 and 81x99; slightly imperfect; reg-

ular fl.29

Special 69c

B. X SheetsHeavy quality; 81x90; regular 79c

Our Special Price 59c

Seamless SheetsFine quality; 54x90; regular 69c

Very Special 48c

Crib SheetsPlain and hemstitched; regular 33c

Very Special 15c Each

Pillow Cases—Fine QualityWell known brand; value 44c a pair

Our Special 6 for $1.00

VERY FINE QUALITY

Pillow CasesRegular 49c a pair

Our Special 37c a Pair

Crinkle SpreadsFull size; regular $1.29; slightly imper-

fect; while they last will sell at

65cA Lot of Sample CurtainsValues 98c to $1.98; will close out at

39c and 59c a Pair

Window ShadesLinen finish; standard makes and sizes;

green, blue, white and ecru; reg. 79c & 89c

Special Price 48c

CretonnesVery nice colors and designs; good values

8c, 10c 12c and 14c a Yard. EXTRA HEAVY

Double Faced CretonnesBeautiful colors.and designs; regular 39c

Our Price 23c per Yard

AND MANY OTHER THINGS IN HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES FOR YOUR DAILY USE TOO

NUMEROUS TO MENTION AT BIG SAVINGS—DO NOT DELAY—YOU CANNOT AFFORD

TO MISS THIS WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY—DO NOT FORGET THE RIGHT ADDRESS

THE MILL SHOP

Babies' Rubber Pantiesin 3 sizes; regular 25c a pair; while they

last will sell at

5c a Pair

Red Star DiapersSanitary packed; regular $1.39

A Dozen, Special $1.00

White Outing Flanneli

Heavy quality;8/2cper yard

Striped Outing FlannelHeavy quality; 36-inches wide

10c yd; 11 yds, for $1.00

Part Wool BlanketsFull size; reg. $1.29 each; our special price

89c; 2 for $1.75

Part Wool Double BlanketsFull size; regular $2-49

Special $1.79AH Wool Blankets

Dark Army standard; good for autoists

Special 60c a PoundTABLE' CLOTHS, SPREADING AND

BLANKETS BY THE POUND AT VERY

BIG SAVINGS

DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY MATER-

IALS; VERY GOOD SELECTION; BY

THE YARD, POUND OR REMNANTS AT

VERY REASONABLE PRICES

Rubber SheetingFor Babica and Sick Room

39c a Pound

Page 5: Woodbridge Leader - DigiFind-It · Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N

The Woodbridg* U»d«r, FrUUy, Jmuary 1». 1932 AriTTTTTtTTT»TTXTTrr«»TTTTtTttTTTIItTTTIIIIIIltXtXIXIITrrtIXZTmiIIiriTITtTTTTTTTf(

e so e s e x

i,.

Statement:

Recent statistics compiled by the Federal Reserve Bankindicate that there are millions of dollars out of circula-tion, lodged in secret hiding places, by continuous with-drawals from financial institutions. The reason for thesewithdrawals is the timidity of depositors in NationalBanks, Trust Companies, and Savings Banks throughoutthe United States, caused largely by the circulation of un-confirmed and false rumors by thoughtless persons.

The Legislature of the State of New Jersey has wiselyenacted a law to prosecute and punish persons circulatingfalse rumors which jeopardize the standing of all banksthroughout the State. The law is as follows:

"An Act to amend an act entitled, 'A further supple-ment to an act entitled' An Act for t h e punishment ofcrimes (Revision of 1898). Approved June fourteenth, onethousand eight hundred and ninety-eight' which said sup-

plement was appro ved April twelfth, one thousand ninehundred and seven."

BEIT ENACTED by the Senate and General As-sembly of the State of New Jersey.

1. Section one of the act to which tins act isamendatory be and the same is hereby amended toread as follows:

1. Any person who shall wilffully or maliciouslyinstigate, make, circulate, ortransmit to another orothers any statement, untrue in fact, derogatory tothe financial condition or affecting the solvency orfinancial standing of any bank, banking institution,trust company, or building and loan association do-ing business in this State, or who shall counsel, sad,procure, or induce another to start, transmit, or cir-culate any such statement or rumor, shall be guiltyof a misdemeanor. ,

Th$ Associate Banks of Middlesex County are determined to stop tins pernicious gossip and propoganda.They have called and will call upon the authorities to investigate all false rumors relating to the solvency of thebanks throughout the county, and hereby offer a reward of ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS ($1,000) tcj any personwho can furnish eyidence that will lead to the arrest and conviction of any one who circulates these false rumors.

• r -

First National Bank, Perth Amboy, N. J. National Bank of New JerseyNew Brunswick Savings lnst.

& • ' • •

LiJ^a

l • ! •»

. VI .

Perth Amboy National BankRaritanTrustCo.,PerthAmboy,N.J. Peo^les N a t i o n a i B ^Perth Amboy Savings lnst.Carteret Bank & Trust Co.First National Bank, Carteret, N. J.First National Bank, Cranbury, N. J.

New Brunswick Trust CompanyCitizens National BankMiddlesex Title Guar. & Trust Co;

PerthAmbciy Trust O>. :;Metuchen National BankFirst National Bank, Milltown, N. J.First National Bank, So. Plainfield, N. J.First National Bank, South River, N. JSouth Amboy Trust Co.

First National Bank, Jamesburg, N. J. First National Bank, Highland Park First National Bank, South Amboy, N. J.Commonwealth Bank of Metuchen Fords National Bank First National Bank, Sayreville, N. J.

Jersey(MIDDLESEX COUNTY)

KRESS, Secretary

Page 6: Woodbridge Leader - DigiFind-It · Woodbridge Leader Published Every Fi AN ^BNTY-SECOND YBAft INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF W00DBR1D0.E TOWNSHIP Woodbridie, N

SIX The Woodbridge Leader, Friday, January 15, 1932

Fords Firemen toMeet So. AmboyNet Team TonightFord Batketeert Confident

of Ringing Up AnotherVictory on School No.14 Court..

FORDS, Hnd< In wltuihffc.kitnin, the I-'ONIH (•'iremvjil team will encounter

another totiKlt" f<»*> tnnlgtit at (lieflehool No. 14 rnijrl here whcnMttake* ^he floor to comliat (He Sue-red HflnrlB, of South Amboyj In nroturn pmbrotsllo. A*nt\* Friday,thfl Firemen took the innm'uiv ofthe crack Coinhiunilj Club, of

< Mltltown, and Handcrhan'a forcesare mire of ilunllratlni: ihi> IMformariee.

To do thU. however, llio localsWitt be called upon to rtlaplny 1 In-same brand or ball they < xhibltfdagalntt the MllltownerH an onlythat type of hall will InBiiro vic-tory ovor tlio Amt)oyi\HH who re-present one of HIP mont formid-able twin™ tn the county.

The HI'UHH have In their make-up ituch himliiiirlcH IIH "OHIH"Orr, Stun Koxlownkt, lOdi*» I'Yiwi-•Oti, Prank Barkcy Walter t'rbun-

1 Ik, Joe Banaranownkl und TomRyan, trouble enough "for anyteam. -

Fords will lineup with mil• Handorhnn, Rankin and Jensen,

forwards, Llndhe.rg, renter, andthe ever relinhle 'Hob Handorhanand Fujerton In the baekrourt,Dancing will be permitted UH us\ialbefore and after Hie name, withrflUJtic hy tlip Club Aimonln <it-chefttra.

New Licentt Plate IsIssued to "So Fee" Cars

A new llcKTine |>ltit<< withthe rluirticterH " N F " preceei l -Ing the niiiTiPralK, ban • • up-. •prurort on a VtmlK-rt jiumtierof earn Keen throughout theHtntr 'nine* the flrtil of the*year. The new Heidi; nationban evoked much rbtnment..

lt« m.vKterlniiH iiH|>wts re-mnlprd iitti>\|)lnln(>d until tltUweek when. Motor Vehletc'HoHlstrnr, Arthur Dtijibnm, /ilenijg-n teH a "no tee" II-Afen,"* and l« IHHIIOII hy t h e /revenled, thnt the now1 pllte

. Rtatu to the lied Cr««n. the.SalVatlon Army and UKC'oharittible, and philanthro-pic rtrjfanlXntlnnd.

Mr. Duliam denied thnt Hieblnck ontlook for ' bnnlne**luid Inaplrpd. the Mofor Ve-hlrle • Department to selectthe fum-real eolorn for theplate* wltleli iidnrn New Jer-ncy Hwellinn numbers nfmotor vehlrleR,

Mist Vivian V. HousmanWeds Daniel Ormsby

Mr. and Mm. George Hoimniati,Sr.. of Main street, have announced

lie marr i iw of their daughterVivian Vn-ii, to Daniel Ormshy, ofltnhwnr The ninrrlajjp. took placeTuemlny. Mnrch 17. 1031. in Phi-ladelphia: Mr, and Mrs. Ormshvwill reside with the bride's pat-ents. -.

IKOAI. ADVERTISBMKNT

1932 TOWNSHIP BUDGETW OHIHNAMK ItKl.ATIXli TO TA.XKS KOIt TIIK VKAH

XINKTKKN lUMHIKI) A.\I» THIIlTV-TWOHi- It OMnliicd bj the Tmvn»hl|i ConiinlKee of I lie TttmiHlilp til

ilwsAo 1)M> < uiinij of .MhUlewi \ :"I. TheJ* Hluill he iiMsi'swd, ralfod by taxation and collected l'o>-

the flwciil year Nineteen Hundred Thirty-two, exclusive of ..franchise.tnil gr«i*H receipt ta \es . the Hum of Three liundred forty-seven thous-and Hfven hundred ^llnety-foiir Dollarn two cents (;147,794.O2)fni t h^ ]iiii'|>o»e of mecttiiK aiiproprliillniiB set forth Under the heading"lur 1!);T2'." In tho'following statement of HevomicH and Approprla-ilonfi fnr the.fuilit "flHCal yenv: i

\V(M»l)HltllKiK rnWNKMII' IH IK1KT FOIt UWi1'flM < (ItHKNT H M \ | . I>1 Itl'dHKSOTHKlt THAV

rt8,2"SIII,»IUK Uevenue T ( 78,7-Ort.lJ 1 *" $', G2.Rftf.15

• •. ' • -. '" • • ". U K V K M i K W .• ' , ' •'ue Appropriated • ,..$'78,000.00' $ 62,000.00

1931

Uulldlntt Department Fees .'.Health Dept, and fluinbing Feex-Heroriler'H Fines .,.IVanchijii' Taxes „......'(ttORS Receipts Ta.\e»Interest and Costa „ _.,Wntei* Ilon,| llovenued ..„,.:MUcellniieouB Ucenien J.fo i l TaxeRiiiiH Tux Refund ,_..„.... _.>niclal Tax Reneareli „-,.nti'reiit on AuMWBmcfitB ;•»us Tnx :

GEORGE R. MERRILL

CIVIL BNOINEKH

8TIRVEY0I1

Woodbndrge, N. J

}iHOLM £ (MAPMANUcmtmi JVw Yttk Sit*.*Urntw Vm Tmk Curt toiixi

268 MADISON AVENUE,PERTH AMBOY

Phone P. A. 2500 - 2E01

THOMAS MEACHAMManager

"Ycs'-tlu'y uhvuys waitupon mo us if n»y trade wasappreciated, THK W00D-niHDGE DELICATESSENis iV ftlH! Shop."

\

THE WOODBRIDGEDELICATESSEN

102 MAIN STREET

(4 IIKVRNVKS' 1,000,00

' 1,500.00• • 4,000:00

80.000.0020,0*0.00

, 40,000.00' 7,000.00

1,600.0«1,|00.00

' ' lt/STO.OO1,000.00

40,000.00i 7.0M.00

a.ooo.ooa.&oo.oo•j.ooo.o-o

7f!.0OO.0O20,000,0040,000.00

- 6,000.001.B00.001.GOO.00

15,000.002,000.00

48,000.007,BOO.00

AM o r NT TO riK RAISED BY TAXEB.il»93,770.»4

„.... 847,7»4;021277,000.00

347,975.79

Township Salaries ...'. „..,Township Vrlntint,', Adv., etcMemorial Dulldlng Maintenance...^..Assessment) and Collection of

Taxes DeptPolice Department .....

oltce Pension Fundloeovder's Cotwt ':.. _..;

Ilulldlns Department r..Heiilth Department -.'•

oor Departinont » '.Road Department „'.,. ,.._Sewer Mtrintcnancc . .Z.....•....,.:.;..•••--••••Rtreot Signs — «-iCont Indent : ».~.~.Elertlcns -. , . 'Audi* -. - -••Mt'li iui-lal D a yKoiid Ofiedemptton „'.Interest, on Not"-! and Honds "

t Def. and Hond Expensent on Taxes !._>' Fund ' •»•-

' . |641,564.Ml!APPItOl'IHATIOXH

•• •. . 1932»13,54O.00

5,000.00

lOmernoany Notes ....Def. Anticipated Hevenuiai'nespended JJalance AocottntOverexpeniHtures 1930 .'.Overexpeudlturea 1931 .._ ,.Sinking Fund RequirementOxerexpenditures 1029 „..Tax and Assessment Abate-

ments 1931 und Previous YearsFire Hydrants .'.Def. Anticipated Revenues 1930.-A. E. lierry Over and Short

Account ,.. i.;

WARNING!CHANGE THAT OIL NOW

If you still have summer oil In your crankcase, make your automo-bile engine safe trpra the col l days tb come—drain It 'before

any damage-la done and refill wlth'Wlnter lUehlube oil. *

HAVE YOUR BATTERY TESTED

We Will Call For and Driver Your Battery FREE \

BATTERIES CHARGED AND REPAIRED" I ^ W E • S E L L t . .'. • '

WitLARD BATTERIES'^tnd.KELLY SPRINGFIELD TIRES

RICHFIELD GOLDEN GASOLINEALCOHOL-jPRESTONE—GLYCERINE—MOBO

GERN'SSERVICE STATION

s-' OPPOSITE v. n. n. STATION

445 PEARL! STREET WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

TELEPHONE WOODBRIDGE 8-1266

SLEDGE HAMMER HEADACHES. THAT TORTURE THE BRAIN

BECOME THINGS OF THE PASTWhen tick headich«t came auoh

ttrrible agony that It teemt aithough a slodyo hammer pounded•galnit your brain, no ordinary tab-(eti or powdon can hope to quietyour «uff«ring and calm your tor-

.. tured nerve*. What your whole ayt-t«tn needs It a thorough an'd oom-plote Inteatlnul oleinting auah • •

f i# t i *v«n In dt*p«r«ttfe»>ei whert everything # J M h|i| ) i n tried in vain.

Thouwnd* of man and vyomen"10 hav* for ytara iuffer«d agony

a retult of frequtntly rtourrlngek headi«h«i can now mak« tha^ftrlntf • tbingof th» natt. Th«yU tto longer hav* to reaort toKill , p<wd.pa, pJUi «nd oldfiih-

ith«tdpmor«do ai

Alagar, the plpaaant-taatfng, pink,creamy emulsion, atimulatea anditrengtheni th» Intettlnsi at thetame tln\e that It molateni and toft-ena the bod/a dally accumulationof waate ao that tha polaon-formlngmaterial that oauaaa alok headacheeI* expelled aa Natura Intended.

Yew will wonder why you ever al-lowed sfok freadaohea to ruin aomany of your diya and nlghte andbaek wtll ooma that up-and-dolngfreahneea and vitality that wlna sue-ceaa to-day. AJagar haa become ahoutehold word for "blened relief"In thouaanda of modern homee. Qetrid of tha CAU8K of thoee horrible

I elck haadaohea with Alagar., Look, for tha two red diamond* on the

Ubel—the algn of tha genuine

B.PO.OO

16.687.00104,000.00

3,880.002,602.1302,034.00 '

10,400.0.0li.32S.0049,300.00

3,000.00None

1,500,003,250.002,600.00

. 250.0022,00.00

110,000.0089.0T3.9)

2,000.00None

7,000.0026,270.5754,122.72

NowS.I44.437,698.48

678.00. None

36,062.fi736,000.0017,844.83

• 21.19

$(»24,!t7ri.79

1931$14,825.00

6,500.00(i,500.00

19,140.00.112,S00.00

3,086.003,000.002,400.00

12.700.0011,000.0078,000.00

4,000.00l.oao.oo

10.000.00

4U.000.00101,000.00

72,802.912,000.002,700.00fi.ooo.oo

3:1,541.2935,076.01

:t,82ft.7418,000.00

(178.0011,528.71

4.S84.13

HEAR the Golden Voice ofLAWRENCE TIBBEH

Star of Metropolitan OIMTI* anil Concert

ON THE VOICE OF

fvery Monday Night-8:30 O'CIock

MUNICIPAL SERVICE STATION, Inc.GAS OIL G8EASIN8- TIRES BATTERIES _BRAKE LINING

RAHWAY AVENUE AND MAIN STREET. WOODWIIDGE, N. J.. PHONE 8-1280

4

Rutgers Mermento Swim AgainstU.ofP.Natators

1641,661.86 J624.fl75.79_ 4 - —

2. Tills budget Hliajl a)so constitute the Tux 6rdinanco andsliall take eKect as provided by law. ' J

Dated January 13, 1932. •To be,advertised Jan. 15th, 1932, and Jan. 22nd, 19S2.

• . NOflCE-Notice Is hereby given'that the Township Committee kil l hold

a meeting at the Memorial Municipal Building, Woodbridge,\ciu Jan-uary Jiath, 1 9 3 2 t a t 3:30 o^clock in the afternoon to consider thefilial pussage of tne foregoing proiiosed .budget and tax ordinance for1032, i t which tim.e ^.nd place (ibjectfons thereto may be presentedby any taxpayer of the Township..

I n. J. DUNlOAN,1 Clerk.

Wo'Deliver

P . A. 4-2103eWe Ikllver

,, A 4 - a l l w

Sheffield Milk5c can

L i m i t H t<> 1,;IISU>11H'V

SUGAR5 lbs. 18c

With l'UKhast' of -1.00 or Ovci

TENDERj BEANS,6 lbs,..! 25cHISRMAN'S MELLOW

COFFEE3 lbs. 49c

BEST COUNTY ROLL' DAISY BRAND

BUTTER29clb.

GUARANTEED EGGS,3 dozen., 69c

Fairy Face Soap,5 cakes 18c

Ohio Matches6 boxes 15c

Large box Rinso,19c

Internationa!Salt, 3 boxes 10c

MAZOLA OIL,gallon 92c

Farm Market224 SMITH ST., PERTH AMBOY

Dorsey MotorsI N C O R P O R A T E D !

"Peaches" Heenan, of Am-boy, Gets Forward Poston Varsity Net Squad.

Victories aver Lelilgh by aneore of 38 to 30 in their open-Ing meetrthe Rutgers swimminglearn will face the University ofPennsylvania natators and waterpolo sextet here tomorrow after-noon In the first contest of theIntercollegiate swimming aneoei-iitIon reason.

Pennsylvania wltTi fifteen letter-,,1Pn available, expects Its best sea-son in years in both swimming andwater polo. Early season predlc-tions list the Red and niue teamwhich wan in a tie for the titlelast season, as league championsthis year.

Walter Spenca and NormanKramer will lead the Scarlettankmen against the invaders intheir first titular engagement. Themeet will probably see the startof Spence's race for the swim-ming league's individual, scoringhonors, W,itk nine letermen lostby graduation, the Rutgers teamwtll be forced tb rely on a groupof Inexperienced men for theleague campaign.

Among the visiting Penn starsare-Walter tfrandy, intercolle-Kiate diving champion two yearsago'and third last season; Cap-

lain William StlnRon, a, Hnrlnter!and water polo star who stands*six feet four Inches In his Btock-iiiiK toft and tlpH the beam at 220!pounds; Norman Wolf, Atlantic!City H»rint star, and Evert Week*, Ihrenat stroke ace.

The scarlet basketball team willengage Union at the Rutgerscourt tomorrow utght In their!third contest of the season, TheScarlet, quintet Is favored to de-

MAIU.'IIOS 25c ItKAUTV 8HOPPKMarcel Finger Wave Shnrapoo

Manicure, Hair Cui Hot OilKyt- «row Arch,^Facial

EACH 26c\Cheap Prices But Not Cheap

Work at MAHG1KS477 Kahway Avfr.,

foat the visitor* who have lost toSt. Lawrence, W««ley»n. St. John'sand Cnleate. Mort O'Connell willremain at center, but Frank Hec-nan will probably be paired withaeorge Chllson In the forwardpouts, Heenan's former guard po-sition being filled by Red Dem-urest, end on the football -team,I'renchy Jullen, veteran guard andwpark plug of the combination, willround out the team.

Broadcasting at

279 H0BART STREETTELEPHONE 4-4559

S1XMR CURED Hl'MI"COUNED BEEF, Ib,

17cKOARTING POKK, lb.

10cHOASTING VEAL, Ib.

10cKOHKQl ARTKRS LAMB, lb.

121 Ac

KHK8H KILLED 801!I1

CHICKENS, lb.

16cLEGS OF SPRING

, lb.

21cJERSEY DRESSEDFRESH HAMS, Ib.

12\II

TENDER CHUCK ROAST,lb.

\2\

All Lamps and Shades• f

«

/\\

Reduced' r • * • / . •

inPrice' * • " r . i

. ; THIS substantial discount inakei it wellworth your while tb choose' new lamp*now. Every lamp is up-totdate in styla\

i and finish, and the shades come in ait thtaew. styles, i: '

You need not buy the Iwafoutright. Choose the one youwant, Pay just a small lintdown and the balance m»y btmet in small amounti over fperiod of teveVal montlaf, , _