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Four Page Colored Comic Section ^TflfPW" e nice of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRESS 2 Cross-w6rd On Page Three NO. 20 Boy Shoots Mate f' Playing With G AIMKIIKT, N. .)., KRT1)A\ , MARCIffi,1925, PRICE THKKK CEt ppiness Girls' Club Plans Card Party [ Little Vope For Eight-year-old Lad Into Whow Body Charge of Shot Was Fired In ' • Play Nicholas l)(!Hnhin<>, nn eight-year- ¥ old hoy r,f 34 Charles street, is in thp Rahway City Hospital with a Ber^ : injury roused by a gun of the _...,., held at the home of Mips .Jo- nhinc Rirkc, of Roosevelt avenue, i^erlnrsday evening. Arrangements •re completed for the club euchre bo held, aoon. The contest tickets r the five dollar gold piece to bo vaided by the club are now being istributed \>y the Miftses Adeline onovan, Elizabeth Nannen, Marie romwell and Josephine Burke. apid progress in being made. Refreshments were served. The xt meeting of the girls will he held Miss Packard Speaks Church Damaged At Carteret P, T. A.J By Faulty Sewer County Tuberculosis Worker* 'Attorney Notifies Borough That wound inflicted by Stephen ronthjjt, the home of Miss Elizabeth Nan i ld f 32 CharleR 8treet|£ 37 L \\ w d by p I nine years old, of 32 CharleR 8tree I'The shooting wa« accidental ntid oc urred Wednesday afternoon in th( cfUnr of the Toath hoy, wher wort' playing with a shot gu ch wns discharged and Bent a loa nt- "> th(1 DcSnbino lad's abdc The shots passed through am d henenth th,e nkiri in the bad shot* were removed by Dr. II Ni'wnrk. Most of the shot pellets were d. ected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. At tl hospital today it was stated that tl by wns holding his own but it understood (hut there is not a gre; denl of hope for his recovery. fen, 37 Lincoln avenue. Great Polish Orche»tra To Play In Perth Amboy Tells of Keep Well Camp; Record,-Crowd At Meeting Miss Jane Packard, of the Middle- Settlement Is Expected; Other Incidents At Council Meeting In a letter addressed to the Bor- A. Polish residents of Carteret nnd others who love good music will be interested in the concert to be given Sunday night at 8 o'clock inthe school hall of St. Stephen's Church, State Btreet Perth Amboy, by the National PoliRh Orchestra of forty- five pieces. This orchestra recently gave a concert in the Metropolitan Opera Houle, New York, before. a capacity audience. It was the first appearance of the orchestra in this d h |r1isB Brown Entertains Members of W. A. T. Club Mis« Blanche Brown entertained group of friends at a social party t her fcome Sunday evening. Danc- ig was enjoyed to a late hour and erreshments were served. Miss Brown had as here guests iie W. A. T. Club of the borough nd many friends from Perth Am- sex County Anti-tuberculosis League, ough Council, Attor OHt , cnlnlll ., : ,„ „,„ „„:„.„„» m L ,i« was the speaker Tuesday night at a I Monaghan informed that body thnt ^ n t T y , and at the end of the con- big meeting of the Carteret Parent-'. considerable damage had been done cert tne crow(i app | aU( ) e( i f or twenty Teacher Association In Columhus to the property of the Holy Family | m | nu t fis . School auditorium. Miss Packard; Catholic Church by reason of the outlined the work that will bei done | overflowing of a sower nt that point. Rev. Father Heil To'Be Ordained Tomorrow—Will Celebrate First Solemn High Mass Hen Sunday^ Son of President of School Board First Carteret Boy To Enter ! Priesthood of Roman Catholic Church; Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; Dinner and Reception To Follow Mm In St. Joseph's Church Sunday; Bithop To Conduct Or* nation d w for children at the Kiddie Keep Well Camp to be established this year. In the drive last fall for the oamp fund, she said, about $12,000 were collected. The camp will afford a means of successfully combating tuberculosis in children. Carteret, she said, has a higher nercentage of The letter was rend nt meeting of the council Monday night. Attor- ney Monaghan, representing Father Dziadoitz, pastor of the church, nuked that the damages be adjusted fairly by the borough. council raised a whether the council in liable Members (|liestion minutes. The members . if the orchestra wear Many Pupils In Patriotic Pr< : Memory of Washington Lincoln Honored In Publi Schools Here j oy nnd' the borough. Exhibitions 1 nd farces were rende f those present. Junior Lassies Defeat Sophs. I First Inter-Class Game of Girl* Affords Plenty of Interest To Fans Here of the us to mil the street (Committee and attorney fur ;i report. The attendance at the meeting I An ordinance was passed on final] Tuesday night was so large that many j reading authorizing the laying of were unable to obtain seats. Miss;curbs and sidewalks a striking costume of white and scar- let similar to that worn by the Polish patriot, Thnddeus Kosciusko, when he came to America to help Washington free this country from English rule. Every musical critic in New York praised the orchestra in the highest For the first time in the history of he attended the school* of Carterfct P^h H i l ith fi f bi l Carteret, not only since it has hecn i d Heil, with five of bis cls l dd t i P^her Heil, wih e t . . . • • r , , , . 'mates, will be ordained tomorrow m o an independent municipality but since • ^ rf of ^ Immaculate Q,, it as a ecognized settlement a Car _ .. _ - it was a recognized settlement, a Car-1 jeption, r South Orange, by the teret boy will become a member of' Rev. John J. O'Connor, D. D., Bi Bishof the priesthood of the Roman Catholic of the Roman Catholic Diocese ot Church tomorrow when Rev. Father Newark. The chapel Is very smal tubercular children than other Towns! matter was referred to tin in the county. terms following the New York con- \ Edward Joseph Heil will be ordained and only the relatives and a few cert. 1 i n the Chapel of the Immaculate Con- friends of the Bix priests being or- ception connected with Seton Halt .daineri will attend the ordination. Alt were unable to obtain seats. Miss cus Packard expressed astonishment at j street from Carteret n\ in Emerson ciiiio to Cen- I n"d farces"werVrend 1 eredTv 11 's"ever I a1 i the attendance, saying that the usual j tral avenue. Another ordinance to f those nresent attendance at P. T. A. meetings in ! construct a sewer'm Catherine street v ' other districts is much smaller. In was introduced and passed on two the course of her remarks Miss Pack- readings. The street department also ard gave much interesting informs-'reported that cinders are being placed I tion regarding the work being done in some streets. The Board of Free- in the county for the protection of ' holders will be asked to repair asee- the health of children. At the enn- j tion of Roosevelt avenue near the elusion of her talk she was given a \ Wheeler plant, when' the pavement rising vote of thanks. 1 has been heaved up by frost. g v f n. p y The meeting Tuesday night By resolution introduced by Coun- Steel Men Hold Lead In League As First Half Of Schedule Nears End Puddlers Seem Safe; Other Teams Showing Better Form Seminary, at South Orange. Father Heil is the son of President Edward .1. Heil of fhe Carteret Board of Education andMrs. Heil, of 615 Roosevelt avenue. As a hoy Father Heil attended the public schools of Carteret. After graduating: with high seats at the chapel have been re- served. About forty iruests fnna Cnrteret will be present. Rev. Father Heil will celebrate Uk first mass, a solemn high mnss, <m Sunday, at 10:30 a. m., in St. J*. seph's Roman Catholic Church, inUdt standing from the eighth grade here borough. This service will be attend- he attended theRailway high school'ed by a great throng. Rev. Father for two years. Their he attended the j John R. O'Connor, pastor of tit* high school of Seton Hall for two'church, wjll be the ajeh priest; ReT, years, finishing the high school course, j B. F. Fallon, pastor of the Church ot Following the completion of his Our Lady of Good Council. Newark* Standing of the Teams. pg The score: Mac itinah > Fal- Kssig, iknfii, Patriotic exercises wore held i public fdiool.s of the borough on day, February 20, in cnmmemori of the birthdays of Washingtd*! ncoln. The names of those ok individual parts in the Ion am follow: Beatrice Nadel, Catherine H Ottie Hinloens, Helen t'sck, lones, Walter Sitarr,, Mary Dm| •tclle Kreisler, William Conn . Jones. Rose Hollog, Geze ' Grammar tirade Clausen in |Q8 School—Arpod Meyers, Bkfttos, Thomas Richards, littlemen, Amelia Schwart; ohen, Kvelyn Hatpin, Mary rge Tdks.cs, William Str Uliouse, John Ognrek, bics, Helen Hiska, Stephen ephi'M Drmin, Mary Bits! bnderson, Huth Kssig, Ma Michael Itodnar, Wai falter Mi'winger, Meyer hn Kovoc.s, Belo Nemisl eko, Frank D'Angelo, Sidney Mittleman, ZoV (er, Melvin Cohen, Nichj Seymour Greenw. erirer, Girard Good Bernath, Paul Hsjdi el, Marjorie Bryer, Wai ubeth Hoksz, Ethel en Alec, Rose Kielmi aye, John Deno, Sop' Gretchen Lemke. Rose Schayda, Anl fcra Holland, Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa, IVetrano, William Lana' |Csatlos, Lauritz Gudmes' iRobinson, Norwood An [Goodman, Louis Turner, Mary Juh Nadel, Mary Stamberi kuwskit, Stephen Babica, Mary Lukusiuk. Cleveland School—. Mary Ugi, Arthur T a y l ^ ^ ip, Catherine Holl&nd^B Erdi, Thomas Thorn, Mar^H iyrak, Helen Stein, Mary Cs^H S'ephen . Ogarek, Elizabeth Subo^B i Cis- Shapiro zek, Sol Price, Stephen^Bj: ' tz. | Nathan Hale Schoot^H- i.Cin-j egi, Cyril Schwartz, ^HJ I'.rowh, Helen Hudak, Calar Kut'h, Joseph Czar, J ^^^ Leona Goldsmith, E u S ^ H . Truth, Milton Greenberg, _^H 1..miner, Helen Lysek, VeronJ^B , Otto Suto, Bertha Venook.^H l.eary, Milton Mausner, J o h ^ B i., Edith Karvetsky, Lillian D'Zurilltt, Joseph Ginda, James Rtsko, arto, Catherine Men' aty, Edward Ha«ek, rak, Andrew M»slu" Frank Hylu, Franc: ward Hasek, Jam Szymborski, Mai Diana Gordon, Syl' K»pp, Helen Mi Lauter, Elizabeth Dubrek, Dorothy lune, Dorothy MH Mary Schraml, Ralph VMS' Martin Brown, Miaa Kno Wshington Scl John Eudie, Gt'HcsBjB) Rudolph Bango, Michael , Barran, John Lyi Lillian Schwartz, ••' I- tdelyi, Rubel, Mury 1 ^ ^ Alex Kovacu, R ^ s S U. Niemec, A. Shevii Chodosh, Fran Brandon, Helen Huber, John Schi] rak, Hazel Mai ^^ Victoria, Annu _^H ! v urer, Julia Kesko, Robert ^BJ>n Christina llick, Julia Lysc' Eugene Kerett, ^Ht' ''Dper, iseph Kesko, '|^^B '' Mary Sptsak, Klis^Bli 1 (elyi, Tes- oie Kapusy, Thon^B) I, nr Michael Dnbrowolski, 1'ajHH I 1 , i ,^ Mary BVederici, Mar^Bih; Ui ,k ' Helen dak, Mary PaM j,, hn popie], A. Medveta, H.^Bj li Van Pelt, H. Dorn, E. LealjBl WPopiel. F. Kleban, John R^H Hi Elsie Jabs, B^rthj^B/ ... Kach, Stephen marked the anniversary of the Child | cilman PhillipB and adopted, proper- Welfare movement and the oriraniza- ties upon which taxes are delinquent tion of the Congress of Mothers and prior to 1924 may be put up at n i _. , _. , i« <> Parent-Teacher Associations. There tax sale. As chairman of the finance ^ lee .' & " ;S t was a huge birthday cake which was ! committee Mr. Phillips reported that 2HJ; , „ , * \i S into 250 pieces but there was not the midit will be ready at the next „ " „ £ * , o high school work, Father Heil at- tended Seton Hall College four yuars and then entered the seminary there, will be deacon; Rev. Charles Edwa»l Hunter, of Seton Hall Seminary, South Orange, and of a pastorate m ] attending the latter institution an- Providence, R. I., will be sub-deacon h four years. The sermon will be preached hyR 2 i h d h M i R ll h cut The Junior Girl's basketball quirt- Met, easily swamped their Sophomore j fund, collecting in all $20.70. The understudies, Scoring two baskets and i arrangements for the cake and other (five fouls to their opponents one of the twenty-eighth annivers-1 Consumers' Oil Company plant, was the parent organization. The appointed a special officer in response cake WBB baked by E. J. Skeffington. i to the request of the company. Many One of the candles was lit by a routine reports were presented by the pupil and other children then-took up [chairman of standing committees. a silver offering for the child welfare rr,i ,. , . , , . , , I cut mil) £»u pieces DUl mere wa* HOL me nuuit win ire (cauj " ^ me IICM I HJI^^KJ n The first R.rlR .ntorclaw game! enou(rh to £ around . There wer e meeting. t r ar ^rVrive 8 ever played in the Carteret High 1 twenty-eight candles on the cake, in-, Hugh Boyle, an employe of the | p*"~™ w'JI- henool was decided in favor of the Junior Middies, 9—3. The game , Tuesday afternoon drew a record crowd. 8 10 10 12 .889 .667 .556 .467 .444 .444 In 1921 he was given the degree Father Maurice R. Spillanc, chanceV of A. B., and two yejjrs later took lor of Trenton diocese and pastor of the degree M. A. Throughout his ] career in high school, college and seminary Father Heil always stood high in his class. He always attri- | buted his success with hie studios to the sound foundation in the element- St. Mary's Church, Lakewood. Following the services in the chunk there will be a dinner in St. Joseph's Hall, which will he attended by mor» than 300 invited guests. Later in tht afternoon there will be a reception V h h f h i' refreshments were looked after by a committee consisting of Mrs. I. Weis, chairman; Mrs, David Wohlgemuth, Mrs. Sam Harris, Mrs. C. Kiichner, Mrs. Charles Crane, Mrs. J. C. Child, Mrs. J. J. Ruckreigel, Mrs. Thomas Shapiro, Mrs. J. Brown. An exceptionally fine program was given by talent selected from the student body of the schools. There was a musical selection by Sidney Currie, saxaphone, and Joseph Sex- ton, piano; "Tribute to Lincoln" by ,v na Interclasn games are drawing much Grace Barker; recitation, "I'm Glad - ,k-, attention and causing a great deal I Am An American," by Lawrencp ench. For the winners Lilly Catri and 1 Mamie Schwartz were the star per- ! formers with five and four tallies i respectively, these two were the only : -1 scorers for the winners and Blanche :n Brown scored ft basket and foul, ac- is counting for the only three points vs for the Sophs. ,j- Both teams brought their fans and r k, a good exmple of class spirit wa« i t h exhibited in chetring. Cranf ord Gagers Defeat Carteret Local Team Fails To Square Old Grudge With Neighbor- ing School Team; Margin Close ; Id- of class spirit.- Refreshments are be- ny- ing sold at the games. nt' Jerry Harrigan officiated the affair i li thd t y g o - via pleasing methods. Th Junion David 0 -non- Catri _.0 3ol- Rubel 0 ola Carlisle 0 inna M. Schwartz 2 etu Stutzke 0 neph Szelag 0 urine Ziemba 0 John . 2 f Soph* G Van Pelt 0 F. Schwartz 0 Misdown 0 Bucksky 0 Lewandowsky 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Carteret JUgh School Rasket- eer8 failed to rewenge a recent de- feat and fell f£t» the second time be- fore the Cranfjrd High varsity squad in a game nt (Jrgnfhrd, Friday after- noon, to the t\5»« of 20—18. The local squad left Carteret with T 1 They designed and made special cos-1 * e ? im L ot downing the Cranford n!w. #„,. ^ a „„„;]„ tnVino. T, n rf rn o ! toBsers but were disappointed in the Rubel. In addition there was a pro- gram of patriotic exercises by the fourth year classes in charge of Mrs. Wisely and Miss Apgar, two teachers who deserve especial credit for the success of this part of the program. Result* of the Week Friday—Harmony Club, 2; Carte- ret Five, 1. Monday—Wheeler's, 2; Harmony, 1. Tuesday—Steel Works, 2; Business Men, 1. Wednesday Carteret Five, 3; Copper Works, 0. G»me« Next Week Tonight—Mck's, vs. Mexpet. Monday—-Mack'a vs. Carteret Five. Tuesday—Mexpet vs. Copper Wks. Wednesday Steel Works vs. Wheeler's. Friday Harmony vs. Business Men. ary studies he received under the di-'the home of the young priest's ps*-- rection of Miss B. V. Hermann while ents, 615 Roosevelt avenue Woman's Club < Honors Writer tumes for the pupiU taking part, the costumes representing the dress popu- lar in the days of Washington and Lincoln, and in other historic periods in America since the land was dis- j covered by Columbus. There were 0 songs, recitations, flag salutes and 0 i other exercises, and all were received —| with enthusiasm by the big audience. 9 There were 26 numbers in this pait F 0 0 0 0 « 0 1 0 I of the program. end. Manager Beraon's five made a strong attempt but failel to finish in front. Carteret High Losrt To New Brun*wfck Scrihe b Presented With Set of j The Carteret High School I ball team lost a tough contest to thsv J] - — -, School, Wed-' score was Sf Cuff Links; Primary Bill De- i to 28.' I Carteret was badly handicapped by i the size of the homfe squad, UsY |rueh bigger. nounced; Big Meeting At Women'* Democratic Meeting z m BrunswiclTboys being Th f l l f Cranford led by a six point m a r - ! ° rtM ;. , 1Iie DUB ""="» "«» — --•" gin at the end of the first half, but . the chief contenders, and from now the h,ue and white lads speeded their I ^ ^ ^ 0 %?£& "S As an expression cf their apprecia- tion the members of the Women's With the end of the first half of i D<. mocr atic Club Wednesday night the City Bowling League schedule only a week away the interest in the loop is^Jf anything, greater than it has been since the league opened. Tne Steel Workers are holding on to first place with a grip that all efforts of other teams seem to be unable to break. The Business Men are still paw and tied the home teaman the \ me " *".' " a n ^ SL^FE-i" last quarter. Carteret took the lead ha " d . er t0 hold th " r le8(L by !i basket in the last few moments •, _i _i_.. r, c i .i, i A :„ I sudden « f t-runford then dropped in ^ k t h h W to a ski l] J onK sO me teama _ In one match Fi ild ;oi we program. , f P^- pp he lhcr teama _ I n o n e match T • One of the most interesting events | two nlc « ^ as f kl ' ts a " lt .i hu " the t BCOre i this week the Carteret Five piled ur of the evening was a talk by Mias If. mB ' ned In fliv t or . of the ^ ome ^ am : |a team score of 1,008—a record that - I The home court » one of Ae finest h t ^ even ' approache() b y t h e 0 B. V. Hermann, supervising principal 01 of the schools of the borough. Mies 0 I Herman reviewed the convention of 0 , the National Educational Association 0 i last week in Cincinnati. She told of y | the magnificent high school recently 0 completed in the Ohio city and of the ' great progress in education all iver 1 1 3 the country as reflected in the reports [made by delegates to the convention. Thousands of educators f ruin all over the United States attended the cou- n Czub- r Mud- Y.P.H.A. Drops Banquet Idea; Will Hold Social Instead | Tnirty . one new members were | added to the roll of the association At the biggest meeting ever held during the evening. During the busi- by the Y. P. H. A. the plane for ness session arrangements were, made " " " ' for the next meeting to be known 'Fathers' Night," when the social program will be in charge of the male members of the association. The as- sociation will also hold a monster card in the State, but we have yet to see another referee as lazy as Davis of others. Vet it was a passing triumph in a way, for the team dropped to Plainfield, who ofhciated ut the game. ' 76S in the next ame _ -0,,,^ 8ome of Captain Lehrer starred for the , the t e a m s g e e m to lack is tnBt steadi . home combine Rosenbloom aided m j neBS o{de ij very that marks the work the scoring. For Cranford, Day and L f veterans and U9ua n y insures -f at Briscoe were the leading factors. averagea . This wijl come before the Miss McCarthy with the aid of ^ g comp i ete d. e S' 8P I a T 1 "? St l W " h T * F ' T ! ! I n t h e opening game of the week the Harmony pinners grabbed two t Fi d l t tk home for the locals hefore thi> find of the season. Carteret took two out of VrancVs l ^ e banquet in honor of the first u rthu anniversary of the organization were Mar dropped Monday night. After much discussion the club de- cided, in favor of a social gathering or a mass meeting to commemorate the event. Acnes! President Al Jacobowitz is plan- "• ning a membership drive for the club. The resignation of Miss Ethel Kahn was accepted by the members. The Y. P. H. A. will be s big fic- Evclyn Unrirarel I *-', lc * •*•"•«• """• "* " U1 K i » t - \, v tor in the proposed community cen- ma meK- ( e r j n t h e borough A11 mem bers present were urged to attend every meeting of the club since every gath- , i l. >ring will have important questions I Plans «re gfrowing and co-oper»- „. , r Party For k , Helen r * . , ki j a cob Miss Lillian Catri Joseph Theodore A m08t SU£lceBg f u i birthday surprise nee MuU- party wa8 te n fc TI!l \ jjj Sa yiliHii Catri '" V 8 F' ! at the home of Mr. and Mre. Leonard three gtarts on The Score: the home court. party on April 22. Morris-Herman Bout Called Off For Pr«ent The scheduled six-round bout be- tween Carl Morris, the local pride, and Billy Herman, of Newark, which was tohave l*een held at the Amboy boxing show Tuesday night, wus post- poned on account of Herman's in- juries and' Morris' swollen hands. The bout will no doubt be held at a later date, since both men ure ubout evenly matched and would draw a good house. Carteret fans would have turned out strong for the tight, because they haven't seen Carl in action in HUB vicinity for quite some time. Carteret G Lehrer, f-g 4 Sexton, f 1 Wexler, f 0 Rosenblpom.-f-c 3 Nadel, c 0 hodosh, g 0 Daniel, g 0 Harrigan, g 0 Cranford G Hanna, f-g 1 Storger, f 1 Tomilaon, f 0 Yob*], c-g Briacoe, g-f . F 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 18 F 1 0 1 3 Day, g-c 3 from the Carteret Five and later took one from the Wheeler outfit when the latter team figured on a clean sweep of three games. Crowds continue to pack the alleys especially when the leadin gteams are scheduled to roll. At present there is a chance that the Wheeler pinners may crawl up to second place now held by the Business Men. The Steel men have a fairly safe lead, if they 5! hold their heads and shoot carefully. With sixteen wins and only two losses :hey are sitting pretty. Several high individual scores have been marked up during the week and a dock of doubles were shot The scores: * Copper Workt. 0 presented Julian Pollock, journalist, with a set of diamond cuff lirjku. The presentation took place at the month- ly meeting of the club held in the parlors of Fire Company No. 1. There was a short business) session, after which a social and banquet were held with Mr. Pollock as the guest of honor. The links were presented by Attorney Francis A. Monaghan, in behalf of the club. Mr. Pollock made an appropriate speech of acceptance. C. C. Sheridan was among those present and spoke at some length de- nouncing the new primary bill re- cently rushed through the legislature at Trenton. The bill is a nuisance, he said, and makes n lot of trouble and expense for municipalities all I over Ihe State. It was put over to serve the aelfiBh purposes of a hand- ful of tricky politicians and was not a benefit but rather a hardship on the genera] public of both parties, he declared. Brief talks were given by Edwin Casey and Attorney Mona- phan. The meeting wan largely at tended. A card party followed the formal part of the evening's program. Many prizes were won. The next meet- ing of the club will be held in April in Fire House No. 2 in the Chrome section. g Au Hti wilt cCar The game was full of Btion. A r* turn engagement is waited on ths : home coui±. Miss McCarthy's bine- and white tossers are convinced tMt' : ,MI tlWy^ould register a win playing at: ,|| home. Wexler and Sexton starred for tha home team. Lehrer, Sexton, Wexler,. Harrigan, Nadel, Rosenbloom sna,.. Daniels composed the Carteret litw- itf up. Find Ground Glass In Jar Of Jelly When the three children of Mrs. P. Martuzewski, of Christopher street* returned from school Wednesday she gave each a slice of bread and jelly. Soon the children began to complain, and the mother, who had taken some. * of the bread and jelly, herself, felt pain in her mouth and found that her mouth was bleeding. Investigation revealed that there was a auantity of glass broken into small fragments m the jelly. The jelly had just beem purchased in a glass jar at the stort of John Gural, it is said. The label indicated that it wae packed by Max Aims, incorporated, of New York Dr. J. J. Reason attended tin woman and the children, and Dr. H. L. Strandberg of the Board of Health reported thu incident to the hoard. The latter body has started an investi- gation. Fighting Bill Coughlin May Head Ball Team Kohlenberger '131 F. Donnelly 156 Sieesel 150 Koetenbader 150 B. Donnelly 184 151 187 174 161 178 c B tri, j tn Broekui., jwas a rea i 8UCCeas. Saturday evening. Plans for i were very w jj )gill an( j it Jo- -William Dowljj Kubicka, Mar Yokimoff, Jenj IA Veronica Grades A e Catri home was beautifully decorated in a pink and white color scheme. A supper warn nerved at midnight. Dancing and games were enjoyed. Exhibitiona were given by Miss Anna Leslie and Bert Levin of Perth Amboy and William (linden and Abe Bender, also of Ainlmy. Those present were: Tillio Weiss, Brtijitt Chmtensen, Utwiy llurrid, Mildred Brown, Klamlu: Brown, Mary i Schwartz, Anna Lilli Cti , y Ik-rt Levin, Such, John Emma' Nuncx, '. Brockue, Andr^ Michael Skerc"' li ijerithal, A. ling, Charles ,,_ JohamiM M*nn, Mary '•I'lnne Pollack, Lydia B»v Chalk / 1 Mike Toppo | fa1 . A. Twm Schwarz, A , Lillian Cutri, Ruth Itrown, Bella Catri, Jack Johution, John ConUui, Mickey Dzurillu, Joint bowling, Henry Harrington, John Culderhead, Leonard Casper, Stephen Kovaca, William Ginden. Abe Bender, Loui^ Bro'wn, Sidney Brown, Al Jucobwit*, Kd Zier, Ed Sbspiro, Mr. and M». A Cstri, Mr. and Mrs. W. Ilnnia, A. Cfttri, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Catri and will W»»lty- Fir.t Pr**bytarian. CarUret, N. J. Cbirlee Bejiewt Mitchell, minister. Sl lUAt 9:45 s. "Don" Wilson, Fullback, Visits His Parents Here Harry "Don" Wilson, the famous fullback of the Army football teum in 1925, spent the week-end in Cur teret. Wilson, who hag gained much credit for the A r my victories with hU long ruiiB, spent Saturday and Sun- day with hia purenU, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wilson, of RooUBVt'H avenue. Hurry is u West Puint Cadet. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson huvu made their home in the borough for several months during WiUon's xtay at the Conutructiun Company head of the i k py steel and iron worktsr*. Wilson trained his by hm playing now famuun i Notjru Damn. Woodbridgn Midget* D*df» Match With Local T«an Lust night the St. Joe Midge disappointed when the Woowf Midgeta failed to appear on Uw ft J^ court to play their ktdulfd Referee—Davis, Plainfield. Boy Scout Notes Calvin Coolidge, Jr., Troop No. 2, B. S. A. will meet as usual on Fri- day evening as preparations will be made for u demonstration of scout work to be given on Sunday after- noon, March Hth ut tbe Hungarian Reformed Church in ('artefet at 4 o'clock in connection with the for- mation of a niw troup ut thin place. On Sunday morning, March 8th, the scouts of troop no. 2 will meet at corner of trolley tracks to . services at the First Presbyterian Church ut lU:4f> A. M, The parents of alt the boys of thia tiuop are re- quested to usbitst in having the bojs 'participate in these monthly church parades. f . The m'outtnastt'r hats urrsnged to have w.eekly tests ut his home for the convenience of those buys who are ready to take their testa. Four scouts took the various tettta on Tues- day evening, March 3rd ut tho homo of the scoutmaster and pulsed them 771 871 Carteret FIT*. Sabo 168 161 Arva 155 193 Adams 196 190 Horvath 149 243 177 135 163 148 13d 762 118 164 153 129 831 1008 763 Rumors are to the effect that Bill Coughlin, old time baseball btar, will have a semi-pro baseball nine torep resent the borough thin beson. Nothing could be more pleasing than to see our.oLl time "Bill" gut this team together, mm:* Coughlin has the ability to do the trick and j Party For Morris Nadet Mr. and Mrs. R. Nadel were t|» host and hostess at u Bar Mitzvaa (confirmation) party given in honor of their son, Morris, at their horn* on Union street Sunday afternoon. ' Saturday services were held in thsi >. synagogue und were followed by a • dinner at which all the local friends friends of the family were pre&eniu Sunday afternoon a supper was serv- ed to relatives and close friends. Dancing wus enjoyed to melodious, tunes. The home was very beautifully de*-- iiti j d. Solos were rendered by , hag himself bueu in the game for j young urtists. At the supper tabll quite some yenf, during which time Cowalsky Chumra Bodnar C. Sullivan MedtfeU Dzurilla Harmony Club :.:.. 162 171 123 g uvenue near parade to church I it Pi .. 139 1»7 792 Carteret Fiv« 140 Adams 144 J. Sullivan - 143 iMedwick Sabo 146 Horvath 172 D y y , Scouts John tho«j Eudie pusslng were for 1st Class, Cl Howard Nannen, Hrold, Cbrlstensen aad William Duncan for 2nd class. The ttuop has over 80 boys at pres- ent and several applications are at headquarters awaiting return. ' "Leisure is ths great hasant In the | lifd pi »»""•" 187 197 136 173 182 876 175 187 139 175 109 119 158 138 140 158 176 147 187 172 182 Coughiin was unce offered a posi- tion in the major leagues. The old shortstop has been a real drawing card and with the fighting ability \w possesses ought to null together a machine that would be eligible to fight for state and county honors. Baseball fans have shuwn their desire for this thing and would be very much jjleaued tt> see it go through. 745 785 878 Hurmony Club 133 139 Cowalaky C. Sullivan Charara - O'Donnell 117 Medveti :... 166 Pwrills ' 186 108 lA 168 170 174 167 Bows . Moore 7*8 1m US 813 97 116 174 182 ~708 Crossword A. C. Ready For County Loop The Crossword A. (,'., the junior baseball team tltot will represent Cm- teret in the County Light Heavy League, is nearly organized. Steve Comba, organizer of the team, has completed his liutt-up. teret has always been well represeii ed and it is expeeted that the Croat- word's will live up to the borough reputation. Comba announces thut the borough fans are aiding in the live dollar gold piece award to raise funds for the club. Man Toppo W3 Dubrpw 142 Monti Burns 174 Waring , , 166 Casaleggi ..: 180 178 188 m •hort addresses were made by popuk ocal men. Until a late hour tl fiK'sLs were entertained by amaten ii'tiutii. Those present at the Sunday :>er were: L. Kmgley and daug" Mildred; Mr. and Mrs. Louis R ivitz and daughter, Helen; Mrs. _. Kkibjnovitz, Mrs. F. Nadel, Bettt; Jack und Robert |Nadel, Mr. a a l Mrs. II. Pentel and children, Ida ant William; Morris Ulman, Jack an^. Irving Ulman, Nettie Nadel of Ntm York City; Mr. and MIB. lienjamhl Ulman and family of Huyonne, 1 Hollinger and Harry Thaxtei »f Eli*- abeth, Miss Mae (JiTuiistein uf Gar- field, Lew Chusinuii of Newark, Max Abrams of Patei^un uiul J. Wlisa> Sam Carpenter, Fred Shapiro, Charts! Hnrvath. Mr. and Mrs. David U and daughter, Huclie; Mr and .Thomas Shapiro. Mr. and Mm. J, Daniel and family, Morris Carpenter and family, M. Cohen, Rev. H, Ube*- stein, Kev. A. Krotingur, Mr. anl Mrs.- It. Nadel and family. Party ForMarion GreenwaM A splendid birthday party was given in honor of Marvin GreenwaU at the Ureenwald home, Sunday aft- ernoon. Many friends were indent, dano- inf was enjoyed, gamea were jilujrel and refreshments were nerved. On hand W«|rej m, Robert Brown, 796 9001 ton Green! a M*- 'I u

CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

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Page 1: CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

Four Page ColoredComic Section

^TflfPW"

e nice of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more

CARTERET PRESS2 Cross-w6rd

On Page Three

NO. 20

Boy Shoots Mate f'Playing With G

AIMKIIKT, N. .)., KRT1)A\ , M ARCIf fi, 1925, PRICE THKKK CEt

ppiness Girls' Club

Plans Card Party

[ Little V o p e For Eight-year-old

Lad Into Whow Body Charge

of Shot Was Fired In ' •

Play

Nicholas l)(!Hnhin<>, nn eight-year-¥ old hoy r,f 34 Charles street, is in

• thp Rahway City Hospital with a Ber^: injury roused by a gun

„ of the _...,.,held at the home of Mips .Jo-

nhinc Rirkc, of Roosevelt avenue,i^erlnrsday evening. Arrangements•re completed for the club euchrebo held, aoon. The contest tickets

r the five dollar gold piece to bovaided by the club are now beingistributed \>y the Miftses Adelineonovan, Elizabeth Nannen, Marieromwell and Josephine Burke.apid progress in being made.Refreshments were served. Thext meeting of the girls will he held

Miss Packard Speaks Church DamagedAt Carteret P, T. A.J By Faulty Sewer

County Tuberculosis Worker* 'Attorney Notifies Borough That

wound inflicted by Stephen ronthjjt, the home of Miss Elizabeth Nani ld f 32 CharleR 8treet|£ 3 7 L \ \

w d by pI nine years old, of 32 CharleR 8treeI'The shooting wa« accidental ntid oc

urred Wednesday afternoon in th(cfUnr of the Toath hoy, wherwort' playing with a shot gu

ch wns discharged and Bent a loant- "> t h ( 1 DcSnbino lad's abdc

The shots passed through amd henenth th,e nkiri in the badshot* were removed by Dr. II

Ni'wnrk.Most of the shot pellets were d.

ected by the boy's ribs and thud tf^pinc w»n not penetrated. At tlhospital today it was stated that tlb y wns holding his own but itunderstood (hut there is not a gre;denl of hope for his recovery.

fen, 37 Lincoln avenue.

Great Polish Orche»tra To

Play In Perth Amboy

Tells of Keep Well Camp;

Record,-Crowd At

Meeting

Miss Jane Packard, of the Middle-

Settlement Is Expected;

Other Incidents At

Council Meeting

In a letter addressed to theBor-A.

Polish residents of Carteret nndothers who love good music will beinterested in the concert to be givenSunday night at 8 o'clock in theschool hall of St. Stephen's Church,State Btreet Perth Amboy, by theNational PoliRh Orchestra of forty-five pieces. This orchestra recentlygave a concert in the MetropolitanOpera Houle, New York, before. acapacity audience. It was the firstappearance of the orchestra in this

d h

|r1isB Brown Entertains

Members of W. A. T. Club

Mis« Blanche Brown entertainedgroup of friends at a social party

t her fcome Sunday evening. Danc-ig was enjoyed to a late hour anderreshments were served.

Miss Brown had as here guestsiie W. A. T. Club of the boroughnd many friends from Perth Am-

sex County Anti-tuberculosis League, ough Council, Attor O H t , c n l n l l l . , : ,„ „,„ „„:„.„„» m L,i«was the speaker Tuesday night at a I Monaghan informed that body thnt ^ n t T y , and at the end of the con-big meeting of the Carteret Parent-'. considerable damage had been done c e r t t n e c r o w ( i a p p | a U () e ( i for twentyTeacher Association In Columhus to the property of the Holy Family | m | n u t f i s .School auditorium. Miss Packard; Catholic Church by reason of theoutlined the work that will bei done | overflowing of a sower nt that point.

Rev. Father Heil To'Be OrdainedTomorrow—Will Celebrate First

Solemn High Mass Hen Sunday^Son of President of School Board First Carteret Boy To Enter !

Priesthood of Roman Catholic Church; Wai Educated hi

Carteret Schools; Dinner and Reception To Follow M m

In St. Joseph's Church Sunday; Bithop To Conduct O r *

nation

d wfor children at the Kiddie Keep WellCamp to be established this year.In the drive last fall for the oampfund, she said, about $12,000 werecollected. The camp will afford ameans of successfully combatingtuberculosis in children. Carteret,she said, has a higher nercentage of

The letter was rend nt meetingof the council Monday night. Attor-ney Monaghan, representing FatherDziadoitz, pastor of the church, nukedthat the damages be adjusted fairlyby the borough.council raised awhether the council in liable

Members(|liestion

minutes.The members . if the orchestra wear

Many Pupils InPatriotic Pr<

: Memory of Washington

Lincoln Honored In Publi

Schools Here

j oy nnd' the borough. Exhibitions1 nd farces were rende

f those present.

Junior LassiesDefeat Sophs.

I First Inter-Class Game of Girl*

Affords Plenty of Interest

To Fans Here

of theus to

mil thestreet

(Committee and attorney fur ;i report.The attendance at the meeting I An ordinance was passed on final]

Tuesday night was so large that many j reading authorizing the laying ofwere unable to obtain seats. Miss;curbs and sidewalks

a striking costume of white and scar-let similar to that worn by the Polishpatriot, Thnddeus Kosciusko, when hecame to America to help Washingtonfree this country from English rule.

Every musical critic in New Yorkpraised the orchestra in the highest

For the first time in the history of he attended the school* of CarterfctP^h H i l ith fi f bi lCarteret, not only since it has hecn i

dHeil, with five of bis clsl dd t

i P^her Heil, wih e t• . . . • • r , , , . 'mates, will be ordained tomorrow m oan independent municipality but since • ^ rf o f ^ I m m a c u l a t e Q,,

it as a ecognized settlement a Car _ .. _ -it was a recognized settlement, a Car-1 jeption,rSouth Orange, by theteret boy will become a member of' Rev. John J. O'Connor, D. D., BiBishofthe priesthood of the Roman Catholic of the Roman Catholic Diocese otChurch tomorrow when Rev. Father Newark. The chapel Is very smal

tubercular children than other Towns! matter was referred to tinin the county.

terms following the New York con- \ Edward Joseph Heil will be ordained and only the relatives and a fewcert. 1 in the Chapel of the Immaculate Con- friends of the Bix priests being or-

ception connected with Seton Halt .daineri will attend the ordination. Alt

were unable to obtain seats. Miss c u sPackard expressed astonishment at j street from Carteret n\

in Emersonciiiio to Cen-

I n"d farces"werVrend1eredTv11's"everIa1 i t h e attendance, saying that the usual j tral avenue. Another ordinance tof those nresent attendance at P. T. A. meetings in ! construct a sewer'm Catherine street

v ' other districts is much smaller. In was introduced and passed on twothe course of her remarks Miss Pack- readings. The street department alsoard gave much interesting informs-'reported that cinders are being placed

I tion regarding the work being done in some streets. The Board of Free-in the county for the protection of ' holders will be asked to repair a see-the health of children. At the enn- j tion of Roosevelt avenue near theelusion of her talk she was given a \ Wheeler plant, when' the pavementrising vote of thanks. 1 has been heaved up by frost.g v f n . p y

The meeting Tuesday night By resolution introduced by Coun-

Steel Men HoldLead In League

As First Half Of Schedule

Nears End Puddlers Seem

Safe; Other Teams

Showing Better

Form

Seminary, at South Orange.Father Heil is the son of President

Edward .1. Heil of fhe Carteret Boardof Education and Mrs. Heil, of 615Roosevelt avenue. As a hoy FatherHeil attended the public schools ofCarteret. After graduating: with high

seats at the chapel have been re-served. About forty iruests fnnaCnrteret will be present.

Rev. Father Heil will celebrate Ukfirst mass, a solemn high mnss, <mSunday, at 10:30 a. m., in St. J*.seph's Roman Catholic Church, in Udt

standing from the eighth grade here borough. This service will be attend-he attended the Railway high school'ed by a great throng. Rev. Fatherfor two years. Their he attended the j John R. O'Connor, pastor of tit*high school of Seton Hall for two'church, wjll be the ajeh priest; ReT,years, finishing the high school course, j B. F. Fallon, pastor of the Church ot

Following the completion of his Our Lady of Good Council. Newark*

Standing of the Teams.

pgThe score:

Macitinah> Fal-Kssig,

iknfii,

Patriotic exercises wore held ipublic fdiool.s of the borough onday, February 20, in cnmmemoriof the birthdays of Washingtd*!

ncoln. The names of thoseok individual parts in the Ionam follow:Beatrice Nadel, Catherine H

Ottie Hinloens, Helen t'sck,lones, Walter Sitarr,, Mary Dm|

•tclle Kreisler, William Conn. Jones. Rose Hollog, Geze 'Grammar tirade Clausen in

|Q8 School—Arpod Meyers,Bkfttos, Thomas Richards,littlemen, Amelia Schwart;ohen, Kvelyn Hatpin, Mary

rge Tdks.cs, William StrUliouse, John Ognrek,

bics, Helen Hiska, Stephenephi'M Drmin, Mary Bits!bnderson, Huth Kssig, Ma

Michael Itodnar, Waifalter Mi'winger, Meyer

hn Kovoc.s, Belo Nemisleko, Frank D'Angelo,

Sidney Mittleman, ZoV(er, Melvin Cohen, Nichj

Seymour Greenw.erirer, Girard Good

Bernath, Paul Hsjdiel, Marjorie Bryer, Waiubeth Hoksz, Ethel

en Alec, Rose Kielmiaye, John Deno, Sop'

Gretchen Lemke.Rose Schayda, Anl

fcra Holland, Mary Silsntor, Stephen Baksa,

IVetrano, William Lana'|Csatlos, Lauritz Gudmes'iRobinson, Norwood An[Goodman, Louis Turner,

Mary JuhNadel, Mary Stamberikuwskit, Stephen Babica,Mary Lukusiuk.

Cleveland School—.Mary Ugi, Arthur T a y l ^ ^ip, Catherine Holl&nd^B Erdi,Thomas Thorn, M a r ^ H iyrak,Helen Stein, Mary C s ^ H S'ephen .Ogarek, Elizabeth Subo^B i Cis- Shapirozek, Sol Price, Stephen^Bj: ' tz. |

Nathan Hale Schoot^H- i.Cin-jegi, Cyril Schwartz, ^ H J I'.rowh,Helen Hudak, CalarKut'h, Joseph Czar, J ^ ^ ^Leona Goldsmith, E u S ^ H . Truth,Milton Greenberg, _ ^ H 1..miner,Helen Lysek, VeronJ^B , OttoSuto, Bertha Venook.^H l.eary,Milton Mausner, J o h ^ B i., EdithKarvetsky, LillianD'Zurilltt, JosephGinda, James Rtsko,arto, Catherine Men'aty, Edward Ha«ek,rak, Andrew M»slu"Frank Hylu, Franc:ward Hasek, JamSzymborski, MaiDiana Gordon, Syl'K»pp, Helen MiLauter, ElizabethDubrek, Dorothy

lune, Dorothy M H MarySchraml, Ralph V M S ' MartinBrown, Miaa Kno

Wshington SclJohn Eudie, Gt'HcsBjB) RudolphBango, Michael

, Barran, John LyiLillian Schwartz, • • ' I- tdelyi,Rubel, Mury 1 ^ ^Alex Kovacu, R ^ s S U..Niemec, A. SheviiChodosh, FranBrandon, HelenHuber, John Schi]rak, Hazel Mai ^ ^Victoria, Annu _ ^ H ! v urer, JuliaKesko, Robert ^BJ>n Christinallick, Julia Lysc'Eugene Kerett, ^ H t ' ''Dper,iseph Kesko, ' |^^B ''Mary Sptsak, Klis^Bli 1 (elyi, Tes-oie Kapusy, Thon^B) I, nr MichaelDnbrowolski, 1'ajHH I1, i , ^ MaryBVederici, Mar^Bih;Ui,k ' Helen

dak, Mary P a M j , , h n popie],A. Medveta, H . ^ B j li Van Pelt,H. Dorn, E. LealjBl W Popiel. F.Kleban, John R ^ H HiElsie Jabs, B^rthj^B/ ...Kach, Stephen

marked the anniversary of the Child | cilman PhillipB and adopted, proper-Welfare movement and the oriraniza- ties upon which taxes are delinquenttion of the Congress of Mothers and prior to 1924 may be put up at n i _. , _ . , i« <>Parent-Teacher Associations. There tax sale. As chairman of the finance ^ l e e . ' & " ;S twas a huge birthday cake which was ! committee Mr. Phillips reported that 2HJ; , „ , * \i S

into 250 pieces but there was not the midit will be ready at the next „ " „ £ * , o

high school work, Father Heil at-tended Seton Hall College four yuarsand then entered the seminary there,

will be deacon; Rev. Charles Edwa»lHunter, of Seton Hall Seminary,South Orange, and of a pastorate m

] attending the latter institution an- Providence, R. I., will be sub-deaconh four years. The sermon will be preached hy R

2 i h d h M i R ll h

cut

The Junior Girl's basketball quirt-Met, easily swamped their Sophomore j fund, collecting in all $20.70. Theunderstudies, Scoring two baskets and i arrangements for the cake and other

(five fouls to their opponents one of

the twenty-eighth annivers-1 Consumers' Oil Company plant, wasthe parent organization. The appointed a special officer in response

cake WBB baked by E. J. Skeffington. i to the request of the company. ManyOne of the candles was lit by a routine reports were presented by the

pupil and other children then-took up [chairman of standing committees.a silver offering for the child welfare

rr,i ,. , . , , . , , I cut mil) £»u pieces DUl mere wa* HOL me nuuit win ire (cauj " ^ me IICM I HJI^^KJ n

The first R.rlR .ntorclaw game! e n o u ( r h t o £ a r o u n d . T h e r e w e re meeting. t r a r ^ r V r i v e 8ever played in the Carteret High 1 twenty-eight candles on the cake, in-, Hugh Boyle, an employe of the | p*"~™ w'JI -henool was decided in favor of theJunior Middies, 9—3. The game

, Tuesday afternoon drew a recordcrowd.

8101012

.889

.667

.556

.467

.444

.444

In 1921 he was given the degree Father Maurice R. Spillanc, chanceVof A. B., and two yejjrs later took lor of Trenton diocese and pastor ofthe degree M. A. Throughout his ]career in high school, college andseminary Father Heil always stoodhigh in his class. He always attri-

| buted his success with hie studios tothe sound foundation in the element-

St. Mary's Church, Lakewood.Following the services in the chunk

there will be a dinner in St. Joseph'sHall, which will he attended by mor»than 300 invited guests. Later in thtafternoon there will be a reception Vh h f h i '

refreshments were looked after by acommittee consisting of Mrs. I. Weis,chairman; Mrs, David Wohlgemuth,Mrs. Sam Harris, Mrs. C. Kiichner,Mrs. Charles Crane, Mrs. J. C. Child,Mrs. J. J. Ruckreigel, Mrs. ThomasShapiro, Mrs. J. Brown.

An exceptionally fine program wasgiven by talent selected from thestudent body of the schools. Therewas a musical selection by SidneyCurrie, saxaphone, and Joseph Sex-ton, piano; "Tribute to Lincoln" by

,v na Interclasn games are drawing much Grace Barker; recitation, "I'm Glad- ,k-, attention and causing a great deal I Am An American," by Lawrencp

ench.For the winners Lilly Catri and

1 Mamie Schwartz were the star per-! formers with five and four talliesi respectively, these two were the only

: -1 scorers for the winners and Blanche:n Brown scored ft basket and foul, ac-is counting for the only three pointsvs for the Sophs.

, j - Both teams brought their fans andr k, a good exmple of class spirit wa«ith exhibited in chetring.

Cranf ord GagersDefeat Carteret

Local Team Fails To Square

Old Grudge With Neighbor-

ing School Team;

Margin Close

; Id- of class spirit.- Refreshments are be-• ny- ing sold at the games.

n t ' Jerry Harrigan officiated the affairi l i t h d

t y g o- via pleasing methods.

ThJunion

David 0-non- Catri _. 0

3ol- Rubel 0ola Carlisle 0

inna M. Schwartz 2etu Stutzke 0neph Szelag 0urine Ziemba 0John . 2

f Soph*G

Van Pelt 0F. Schwartz 0Misdown 0Bucksky 0Lewandowsky 0

05000000

The Carteret JUgh School Rasket-eer8 failed to rewenge a recent de-feat and fell f£t» the second time be-fore the Cranfjrd High varsity squadin a game nt (Jrgnfhrd, Friday after-noon, to the t\5»« of 20—18.

The local squad left Carteret withT 1 They designed and made special cos-1 * e ? im

L o t downing the Cranford

n ! w . #„,. a „„„;]„ tnVino. T,nrf rno ! toBsers but were disappointed in the

Rubel. In addition there was a pro-gram of patriotic exercises by thefourth year classes in charge of Mrs.Wisely and Miss Apgar, two teacherswho deserve especial credit for thesuccess of this part of the program.

Result* of the WeekFriday—Harmony Club, 2; Carte-

ret Five, 1.Monday—Wheeler's, 2; Harmony,

1.Tuesday—Steel Works, 2; Business

Men, 1.Wednesday — Carteret Five, 3;

Copper Works, 0.

G»me« Next WeekTonight—Mck's, vs. Mexpet.Monday—-Mack'a vs. Carteret Five.Tuesday—Mexpet vs. Copper Wks.Wednesday — Steel Works vs.

Wheeler's.Friday — Harmony vs. Business

Men.

ary studies he received under the di-'the home of the young priest's ps*--rection of Miss B. V. Hermann while ents, 615 Roosevelt avenue

Woman's Club <Honors Writer

tumes for the pupiU taking part, thecostumes representing the dress popu-lar in the days of Washington andLincoln, and in other historic periodsin America since the land was dis-

j covered by Columbus. There were0 songs, recitations, flag salutes and0 i other exercises, and all were received

— — — | with enthusiasm by the big audience.9 There were 26 numbers in this pait

F0000«010

I of the program.

end. Manager Beraon's five made astrong attempt but failel to finish infront.

Carteret High Losrt

To New Brun*wfck

Scrihe b Presented With Set of j

The Carteret High SchoolI ball team lost a tough contest to thsv J]

• - — -, School, Wed-'score was Sf

Cuff Links; Primary Bill De- i to 28.'I Carteret was badly handicapped byi the size of the homfe squad, UsY

|rueh bigger.nounced; Big Meeting At

Women'* Democratic

Meeting

z mBrunswiclTboys beingTh f l l f

Cranford led by a six point m a r - ! ° r t M ; . , 1 I i e DUB""="» "«» — --•"gin at the end of the first half, b u t . the chief contenders, and from nowthe h,ue and white lads speeded their I ^ ^ 0 % ? £ & " S

As an expression cf their apprecia-tion the members of the Women's

With the end of the first half of i D<.mocratic Club Wednesday nightthe City Bowling League scheduleonly a week away the interest in theloop is^Jf anything, greater than ithas been since the league opened.Tne Steel Workers are holding on tofirst place with a grip that all effortsof other teams seem to be unable tobreak. The Business Men are still

paw and tied the home teaman the \ m e " *".' " an ^ SL^FE-i"

last quarter. Carteret took the lead h a" d . e r t 0 h o l d t h " r l e 8 ( L

by !i basket in the last few moments •,_i _ i_ . . r, c i .i, i A :„ I sudden«f t-runford then dropped in

^ k t h h

W to askil] JonK sOme

teama_ In one match

Fi i l d;oi we program. , f P ^ - pp h e l h c r t e a m a _ I n o n e m a t c h

T • One of the most interesting events | t w o n l c« ^ a sfk l ' t s a " l t . i h u " t h e

tBCOre i this week the Carteret Five piled ur

of the evening was a talk by Mias If.mB'ned I n flivtor. o f t h e ^ o m e ^ a m : |a team score of 1,008—a record that

• - I The home court » one of Ae finest h t ^ e v e n ' a p p r o a c h e ( ) b y t h e0 B. V. Hermann, supervising principal01 of the schools of the borough. Mies0 I Herman reviewed the convention of0 , the National Educational Association0 i last week in Cincinnati. She told ofy | the magnificent high school recently0 completed in the Ohio city and of the

— — — ' great progress in education all iver1 1 3 the country as reflected in the reports

[made by delegates to the convention.Thousands of educators f ruin all overthe United States attended the cou-

n Czub-r Mud-

Y.P.H.A. Drops Banquet Idea;

Will Hold Social Instead | T n i r t y . o n e n e w m e m b e r s w e r e

| added to the roll of the associationAt the biggest meeting ever held during the evening. During the busi-

by the Y. P. H. A. the plane for ness session arrangements were, made" " " ' for the next meeting to be known

'Fathers' Night," when the socialprogram will be in charge of the malemembers of the association. The as-sociation will also hold a monster card

in the State, but we have yet to seeanother referee as lazy as Davis of

others. Vet it was a passing triumphin a way, for the team dropped to

Plainfield, who ofhciated ut the game. ' 7 6 S i n t h e n e x t a m e_ -0,,,^ 8 o m e o fCaptain Lehrer starred for the , t h e t e a m s g e e m t o l a c k i s t n B t s t e a d i .

home combine Rosenbloom aided m j n e B S o { d e i j v e r y that marks the workthe scoring. For Cranford, Day and L f v e t e r a n s a n d U 9 u a n y i n s u r e s -fatBriscoe were the leading factors. a v e r a g e a . This wijl come before the

Miss McCarthy with the aid of g c o m p i e t e d .e S ' 8 P I a T 1 " ? S t l W " h T * F ' T ! ! I n t h e opening game of the week

the Harmony pinners grabbed twot Fi d l t t k

homefor the locals hefore thi> find of theseason. Carteret took two out of

VrancVs l^ e banquet in honor of the firstu rthu anniversary of the organization wereM a r dropped Monday night.

After much discussion the club de-cided, in favor of a social gatheringor a mass meeting to commemoratethe event.

Acnes! President Al Jacobowitz is plan-" • ning a membership drive for the club.

The resignation of Miss Ethel Kahnwas accepted by the members.

The Y. P. H. A. will be s big fic-EvclynU n r i r a r e l I *-',lc * • * • " • « • """• "* " U 1 K i » t -

\ , v tor in the proposed community cen-ma meK- ( e r j n t h e b o r o u g h A11 m e m bers

present were urged to attend everymeeting of the club since every gath-

, i l. >ring will have important questions

I Plans «re gfrowing and co-oper»-

„ . , — r Party Fork, Helen r * ., k i jacob Miss Lillian Catr i

JosephTheodore A m 0 8 t SU£lceBgfui birthday surprisenee MuU- p a r t y w a 8 tenfcTI!l\ j j j S a yiliHii Catri'" V8F' ! at the home of Mr. and Mre. Leonard

three gtarts onThe Score:

the home court.

party on April 22.

Morris-Herman Bout

Called Off For Pr«ent

The scheduled six-round bout be-tween Carl Morris, the local pride,and Billy Herman, of Newark, whichwas to have l*een held at the Amboyboxing show Tuesday night, wus post-poned on account of Herman's in-juries and' Morris' swollen hands.

The bout will no doubt be held at alater date, since both men ure uboutevenly matched and would draw agood house. Carteret fans wouldhave turned out strong for the tight,because they haven't seen Carl inaction in HUB vicinity for quite sometime.

CarteretG

Lehrer, f-g 4Sexton, f 1Wexler, f 0Rosenblpom.-f-c 3Nadel, c 0

hodosh, g 0Daniel, g 0Harrigan, g 0

CranfordG

Hanna, f-g 1Storger, f 1Tomilaon, f 0Yob*], c-gBriacoe, g-f .

F10010000

2 18

F10

13

Day, g-c 3

from the Carteret Five and later tookone from the Wheeler outfit when thelatter team figured on a clean sweepof three games.

Crowds continue to pack the alleysespecially when the leadin gteams arescheduled to roll. At present thereis a chance that the Wheeler pinnersmay crawl up to second place nowheld by the Business Men. The Steelmen have a fairly safe lead, if they

5! hold their heads and shoot carefully.With sixteen wins and only two losses:hey are sitting pretty.

Several high individual scores havebeen marked up during the week anda dock of doubles were shot

The scores: *Copper Workt.

0

presented Julian Pollock, journalist,with a set of diamond cuff lirjku. Thepresentation took place at the month-ly meeting of the club held in theparlors of Fire Company No. 1. Therewas a short business) session, afterwhich a social and banquet were heldwith Mr. Pollock as the guest ofhonor. The links were presented byAttorney Francis A. Monaghan, in

behalf of the club. Mr. Pollock madean appropriate speech of acceptance.

C. C. Sheridan was among thosepresent and spoke at some length de-nouncing the new primary bill re-cently rushed through the legislatureat Trenton. The bill is a nuisance,he said, and makes n lot of troubleand expense for municipalities all Iover Ihe State. It was put over toserve the aelfiBh purposes of a hand-ful of tricky politicians and was nota benefit but rather a hardship on thegenera] public of both parties, hedeclared. Brief talks were given byEdwin Casey and Attorney Mona-phan. The meeting wan largely attended.

A card party followed the formalpart of the evening's program. Manyprizes were won. The next meet-ing of the club will be held in Aprilin Fire House No. 2 in the Chromesection.

g AuHti

wiltcCar

The game was full of Btion. A r*turn engagement is waited on ths :

home coui±. Miss McCarthy's bine-and white tossers are convinced tMt':,MItlWy^ould register a win playing at: , | |home.

Wexler and Sexton starred for thahome team. Lehrer, Sexton, Wexler,.Harrigan, Nadel, Rosenbloom sna,..Daniels composed the Carteret litw- itfup.

Find Ground Glass

In Jar Of Jelly

When the three children of Mrs. P.Martuzewski, of Christopher street*returned from school Wednesday shegave each a slice of bread and jelly.Soon the children began to complain,and the mother, who had taken some. *of the bread and jelly, herself, feltpain in her mouth and found that hermouth was bleeding. Investigationrevealed that there was a auantity ofglass broken into small fragments mthe jelly. The jelly had just beempurchased in a glass jar at the stortof John Gural, it is said. The labelindicated that it wae packed by MaxAims, incorporated, of New York

Dr. J. J. Reason attended tinwoman and the children, and Dr. H.L. Strandberg of the Board of Healthreported thu incident to the hoard.The latter body has started an investi-gation.

Fighting Bill Coughlin

May Head Ball Team

Kohlenberger '131F. Donnelly 156Sieesel 150Koetenbader 150B. Donnelly 184

151187174161178

cBtri,j t nBroekui., j w a s a r e a i 8 U C Ceas.

Saturday evening. Plans fori w e r e v e r y w j j ) g i l l an (j i t

Jo-

-William DowljjKubicka, MarYokimoff, Jenj

IA

Veronica

GradesA

e Catri home was beautifullydecorated in a pink and white colorscheme. A supper warn nerved atmidnight. Dancing and games wereenjoyed. Exhibitiona were given byMiss Anna Leslie and Bert Levin ofPerth Amboy and William (linden andAbe Bender, also of Ainlmy.

Those present were: Tillio Weiss,Brtijitt Chmtensen, Utwiy llurrid,

Mildred Brown, Klamlu: Brown, MaryiSchwartz, Anna

Lilli C t i

, yIk-rt Levin,

Such, JohnEmma' Nuncx,'.Brockue, Andr^Michael Skerc"'

li ijerithal, A.ling, Charles

,,_ JohamiMM*nn, Mary

'•I'lnne Pollack,Lydia

B»vChalk

/ 1

Mike Toppo |fa1

. A. Twm

Schwarz, A ,Lillian Cutri, Ruth Itrown, BellaCatri, Jack Johution, John ConUui,Mickey Dzurillu, Joint bowling,Henry Harrington, John Culderhead,Leonard Casper, Stephen Kovaca,William Ginden. Abe Bender, Loui^Bro'wn, Sidney Brown, Al Jucobwit*,Kd Zier, Ed Sbspiro, Mr. and M». ACstri, Mr. and Mrs. W. Ilnnia, A.Cfttri, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Catriand will W»»lty-

Fir.t Pr**bytarian.CarUret, N. J.

Cbirlee Bejiewt Mitchell, minister.S l lUAt

9:45 s.

"Don" Wilson, Fullback,

Visits His Parents Here

Harry "Don" Wilson, the famousfullback of the Army football teumin 1925, spent the week-end in Curteret. Wilson, who hag gained muchcredit for the Army victories with hUlong ruiiB, spent Saturday and Sun-day with hia purenU, Mr. and Mrs.A. L. Wilson, of RooUBVt'H avenue.Hurry is u West Puint Cadet.

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson huvu madetheir home in the borough for severalmonths during WiUon's xtay at theConutructiun Company head of the

i kpy

steel and iron worktsr*.Wilson trained his

by hm playingnow famuun

i NotjruDamn.

Woodbridgn Midget* D*df»• Match With Local T«an

Lust night the St. Joe Midgedisappointed when the W o o w fMidgeta failed to appear on Uw f tJ ^ court to play their ktdulfd

Referee—Davis, Plainfield.

Boy Scout NotesCalvin Coolidge, Jr., Troop No. 2,

B. S. A. will meet as usual on Fri-day evening as preparations will bemade for u demonstration of scoutwork to be given on Sunday after-noon, March Hth ut tbe HungarianReformed Church in ('artefet at 4o'clock in connection with the for-mation of a niw troup ut thin place.

On Sunday morning, March 8th,the scouts of troop no. 2 will meetat corner oftrolley tracks to .services at the First PresbyterianChurch ut lU:4f> A. M, The parentsof alt the boys of thia tiuop are re-quested to usbitst in having the bojs'participate in these monthly churchparades. f •. The m'outtnastt'r hats urrsnged tohave w.eekly tests ut his home for theconvenience of those buys who areready to take their testa. Fourscouts took the various tettta on Tues-day evening, March 3rd ut tho homoof the scoutmaster and pulsed them

771 871Carteret FIT*.

Sabo 168 161Arva 155 193Adams 196 190Horvath 149 243

17713516314813d

762

118164153129

831 1008 763

Rumors are to the effect that BillCoughlin, old time baseball btar, willhave a semi-pro baseball nine to represent the borough thin beson.

Nothing could be more pleasingthan to see our.oLl time "Bill" gutthis team together, mm:* Coughlinhas the ability to do the trick and j

Party For Morris Nadet

Mr. and Mrs. R. Nadel were t |»host and hostess at u Bar Mitzvaa(confirmation) party given in honorof their son, Morris, at their horn*on Union street Sunday afternoon. '

Saturday services were held in thsi >..synagogue und were followed by a •dinner at which all the local friendsfriends of the family were pre&eniuSunday afternoon a supper was serv-ed to relatives and close friends.Dancing wus enjoyed to melodious,tunes.

The home was very beautifully de*--iitijd. Solos were rendered by ,

hag himself bueu in the game for j young urtists. At the supper tabllquite some yenf, during which time

CowalskyChumraBodnarC. SullivanMedtfeUDzurilla

Harmony Club:.:.. 162

171123

g uvenue nearparade to church Iit P i

.. 1391»7

792Carteret Fiv«

140Adams 144J. Sullivan - 143iMedwickSabo 146Horvath 172

D y y ,Scouts John

tho«jEudie

pusslng werefor 1st Class,

C lHoward Nannen, Hrold, Cbrlstensenaad William Duncan for 2nd class.

The ttuop has over 80 boys at pres-ent and several applications are atheadquarters awaiting return. '

"Leisure is ths great hasant In the| lifd pi »»""•"

187197

136173182

876

175187

139175109

119158

138140158

176147

187172182

Coughiin was unce offered a posi-tion in the major leagues. The oldshortstop has been a real drawingcard and with the fighting ability \wpossesses ought to null together amachine that would be eligible tofight for state and county honors.Baseball fans have shuwn their desirefor this thing and would be verymuch jjleaued tt> see it go through.

745 785 878Hurmony Club

133 139CowalakyC. SullivanCharara -O'Donnell 117Medveti :... 166Pwrills ' 186

108lA 168

170174167

Bows .Moore

7*81 mUS

813

97116174182

~708

Crossword A. C.

Ready For County Loop

The Crossword A. (,'., the juniorbaseball team tltot will represent Cm-teret in the County Light • HeavyLeague, is nearly organized.

Steve Comba, organizer of theteam, has completed his liutt-up.teret has always been well represeiied and it is expeeted that the Croat-word's will live up to the boroughreputation.

Comba announces thut the boroughfans are aiding in the live dollar goldpiece award to raise funds for theclub.

ManToppo W3Dubrpw 142MontiBurns 174Waring , , 166Casaleggi ..: 180

178

188

m

•hort addresses were made by popukocal men. Until a late hour tl

fiK'sLs were entertained by amatenii'tiutii.

Those present at the Sunday:>er were: L. Kmgley and daug"Mildred; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rivitz and daughter, Helen; Mrs. _ .Kkibjnovitz, Mrs. F. Nadel, B e t t t ;Jack und Robert |Nadel, Mr. a a lMrs. II. Pentel and children, Ida antWilliam; Morris Ulman, Jack an^.Irving Ulman, Nettie Nadel of NtmYork City; Mr. and MIB. lienjamhlUlman and family of Huyonne, 1Hollinger and Harry Thaxtei »f Eli*-abeth, Miss Mae (JiTuiistein uf Gar-field, Lew Chusinuii of Newark, MaxAbrams of Patei^un uiul J. Wlisa>Sam Carpenter, Fred Shapiro, Charts!Hnrvath. Mr. and Mrs. David Uand daughter, Huclie; Mr and.Thomas Shapiro. Mr. and Mm. J,Daniel and family, Morris Carpenterand family, M. Cohen, Rev. H, Ube*-stein, Kev. A. Krotingur, Mr. anlMrs.- It. Nadel and family.

Party For Marion GreenwaM

A splendid birthday party wasgiven in honor of Marvin GreenwaUat the Ureenwald home, Sunday aft-ernoon.

Many friends were indent, dano-inf was enjoyed, gamea were jilujreland refreshments were nerved.

On hand W«|rej

m,

Robert Brown,796 9001 ton Green!

aM*-

'I u

Page 2: CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

Is,PAGE TWO

p•(,?• T1. - ITT ^*'"wiw*mn

frRlDAt, MAftCti 6, im

One of the

Forty-five

Houses

-ilroady built

at

Colonia Hills

RADIO PRICESSLASHEDTODAY and TOMORROW

Take advantage of this chance to buya first-class set or radio supplies on

TIME PAYMENT PLANas low as $2.50 a week.

RADIOLA III, 2<tufe« receiving outfit, mi ideal receiver for

this district. List price $35. OUR $9^

RADIOLA III-A, 4-tube receiving outfit. List price $83.OUR SPECIAL I'ltlCK, QkfcKCOMPLKTE....'. •• * " 3

WESTERN ELECTRIC cone-shaped 54OAW Loud Speak-er. List price $35. OUR SPECIALMICE, COMPLETE

"PACENT" Head-phones (3000 ohm.). Listprice $6.50. Our Special price

New MURDOCK Neutrodyne, featuring "C" battery tocut down consumption of "B" battery, and built-in loudspeaker. A 5-tube set. List price $198.OUR SPECIAL PRICE, COMPLETE

FRESHMAN MASTERPIECE, 5-tube set.Complete at

AKRADYNE, tuned radio frequency set.This 5-tube set complete for

PATHE B-5 5-tube radio frequency set, sloping panels.Gives maximum signal strength from stations far andnear without the slightest oscillation. $QQOUR SPECIAL PRICE, COMPLETE «P*7i /

Genuine "CUNNINGHAM" Radio Tubes, type 21-A, $2.49

Eveready Heavy Duty "B" Batteries $3.75SALTZMAN'S Special "A" Batteries, 100 ampere

hours '. $14.98

Red Seal or Columbia dry-cell batteries 3 for 87 centsAerial Wire, 100 feet of 7-strand phospated mate-

rial, for 45 cents

SALTZMAN'S HARDWAREWOODBRIDGE, N. J.

73 MAIN STREET. P h o n e 3 7 4 .

Store Open Evenings

Back From The Cleaners

When Your Clothe* Come Back From UsThey Look Like New!

We have established a new and convenient service.We call for and deliver your order promptly. Our workis the best.

FRENCH CLEANING OUR SPECIALTY!ROOSEVELT CLEANERS & DYERS

66 Roosevelt Ave. Tel. Carteret 662.

WE SAVE YOUTIME m .^.¥»,. ,

M ° N E Y a n d WORRYON WASH DAY

Try Our New Offer: 15 pounds of Flat Waeh for $1.50WET WASH

30 pound* for $1.00We call for bundles promptly and deliyer'work finished

satisfactorily in twenty-four hours.

ROOSEVELT LAUNDRY SERVICE CO.Tel. Carteret 417-R 526 Roosevelt Avenue

EASTER IN ROME

With the Holy Yc»r Catholic Pilgrim.** Society.Very Kev. Paul James Fruuds, S.aiuU o£ the Atonement Chun-

lain, Parsonai supervision Dr. J i;. CoyL, K. 0. H. S, PresidentDeputy, Knights ot 1\>1UMI|,,I5| N. Y. Endowed by Arch

'-•—JJ» a«d lending: Catholic l-aymen.

f*tn«Dtt for lti» lour leering New York

Gold Fountain Pen To Go With EveryPurchase of Lots In Colonia Hills

"Al! i.s not j/oM that {flitters." Hut thoao who attend 1h<-npeninjr of the. East Hill Addition at Colonia on March 14th and15th under the auspices of White & Hess, Inc., of Woodbridgo.N. J., will sec tin; glitter and the goldj too. In this case- atleast the road to home owning will be paved with gold, for thecontract:! rovcrinff each purchase wilbo signed by a new Waterman GoldFountain Pen and when tho docu-ment is executed the pon will becomethe property of the buyer.

The East Hill Addition, the near-est part of Colonin to Woodbridgelong St. George's Avenue, is abouttho highest nnd finest point in Wood-bridge Township, nnd the highestpoint nlong thr Pennsylvania Hailroad from New York to the New Jer-sey Shore—a part of the ColoniaHills Community with its fifty cosylittle homes, houses wilt be built therethis summer financed by the ColoniaHills Plan in co-operatwn with theColonia Building & Loan Association.It is thought that this summer's influxat Colonia will surpass anjr.

The Colonia Building & Loan Asso-

Moving day has no terrors forthe man who owns his home. Whyhot get started now on those build-ing plans you've been thinkingabout. Our specialty is helpingbuild homes by furnishing every-thing in lumber, Our lower priceswill surprise you.

m

WOODBRTDGELUMBER COMPANYBUILDING MATEHUL 8TOBIVOODBRIDCI -

cintion is one- of the strongest com-munity association in this section <ifthe country. It has over fl()0,UOOloans out there already and has con-siderable money in the treasury ntpresent, enoueht, it ia thought, totake care of those who wish to buildon the East Hill lots. The comfort-able circumstances of many of theColonia residents accounts for thegrowth and strength (if this Building& Loan Association.

Dr. Albee, who has recently madea trip to Florda, expects to be inColonia the day of the White & H«ssqpenirife of the East Hill Additionand will present the Cold Pen in person to the first buyers.

AUTOMOBILE SECTH

• •»•»• • • • • • • •»• • •»• • • •+»»

\ Mary Succeedson Main Street

By LAURA MILLER

« > • • • • • • • • • • • • • • * + • • + • • • + • •© . 1 9 2 J . b y t . n u r i M l l l w r

THE DESERT AND THEMILK OF HUMAN

KINDNESS

'The lorqllry Is lrreli>v:int" Is theUpturn Qf a successful woman ofTucson, Ariz., when asked whether sliethinks the business oollcKe graduateshould go to a big city for work. "Iudvlse. her not to (to If she can findwork at'' home," Mrs. Reynolds con-tinues. "There's Just one provisionhat is Important. It Is that the girl

ran adhere to a stnnrinrd of moralitywhich will always preclude ioss ofself-respect."

This Is fie prssrhropnt from a pro-fessional reformer. Novels Kouttteynolds has learned that "an honest

code pays In tlje end" from the many-sided business world that the Rey-nolds Commercial school keepB her Inouch with.

World war need found Mrs. Rey-nolds and other business women ofTucson Just as readily as If, they hadhurried to Washington or New York.I even brought legitimate prosperitysince her service lay in equipping anunparalleled number of students forgovernment work.

Tucson holds, Mrs. Reynolds has'ound, an extra appeal to the heart ofany employed woman who has a sparkof the material fire. The hordes ofhealth seekers need cheery sugges-:1OD8 on how to adapt themselves toarid surroundings, unaccustomed con-ditions and homesickness. Mrs. Rey-nolds declares thlB chance for servicewhere service Is so sorely and so con-stantly Deeded Is the most interestingpart of being a business woman InArizona.

Like many successful women, Mrs.Reynolds has developed outside herbusiness an association that keeps herin touch with what women are doingeverywhere. In her case the doorwayto world Interests Is membership Intbe Daughters of the American Revo-lution. She Is historian, Tucson chap-

ON-DISPLAYAfthe

JEFFERSON MOTORSINC.

SHOW ROOMTHE

NEW CHEVROLETSEDAN

160-66 New Brunswick Avenue

N A V I C O A LM a d e i n P e r t h A m b o y

There Is Saving InUsing NAVICOALPRICES; $11.00 per net ton,delivered in Perth A.nboy, Ford, and Kea.beyj $11.50per net Um delivered in Woodbridge, Sewaren, Metuchenand bouth Amboy.

Half tvn lots, 25c extra.Buy your coal a. you need it. Every order get*

pron.pt attention. Phone your orden Perth Amboy 2781

NAVICOAL CORPORATION

HINTS TO WOMENWHO DRIVE CARS

Attend to Business in HandIt Advice of an Auto-

motive Engineer.<Br BRWIN OFfcJCR, PrpiMrnt Qrin-r Col

1*1 • of Automotive Etit thit^rlnc, chleno.)It Is to be courted, at the begin

nlng, that my discourse Is not directedat all drivers, hut at a comparativelysmall number of motorists with drlvInf experience which should havetaught them better, whose handling oftheir cars leaves, In my opinion, something to he desired.

Iftjllel, <]on't loll. It Is distressingto see even a mere man sprawledoat behind s steering wheel, but farmore so In the case of a woman.The woman who holds herself wellhas a way of making ft good Im-pression wherever she may be, andthis applies equally whether she ISdriving a car or sitting at a dinnertable.

What Men Will Think.Don't take ndvantnge of the fart

that you are a wornnn, because,though most men drivers will makeway for you even when you are Inthe wrong, they will think the less ofyou while they do so. And there are'some men who will Insist upon their"rfght|" as motor enr drivers, Shouldyou encounter this last'nnmed speciesthere Is likely to be a crash.

Don't think about the possible Im-pression you may be making upon oth-er road users. Attend strictly to thebusiness in hand. There still existsIn the minds of a good many peoplean Idea that It Is not safe for womento drive automobiles. Do your bestto destroy this false Impression byhandling yonr car with care and con-sideration for others.

Don't Imagine that other drivers willunnecessarily stare at you. If theydo, It will be not because they areadmiring you, but because you havedone something that has made themdoubtful of your ability to drive. Showthem that yoa are mistress of the art.

Dont B« Carsltaa,

Don't (have thing*. Leave thattrick to the barber. Good drivers giveother vehicles clearance.

Don't drive carelessly over wetstreets. A hole full of water may notmean much to yon, but to tbe pedes-trian who receives In hit face th« wa-ter ejected from the hole by yourtire, It Is a matter of moment—damn-able moment*. Beroember the timethat you were spattered with mud.

And If you must speed, buy a rac-ing car. Those things were built es-pecially for people who have nowhereto go and who want to get there Ina harry.

Now pass this little article on tofriend husband—that he, too, may readand gain driving wisdom thereby.

ter, and member at large on the na-tional historical research committee.In April she was sent as delegatefrom the D. A. K. to Washington fora conference of the Woman's Univer-sal alliance, a world organization.

Good Information AboutVarious Engine Knock*

An- urn fumlllur with the dll'Tentknui'ks :m engine niukps.su tliatjri '"canIt'll iini- fnim tin' other? K>knncks fnll nnliiri\lly Into font cl »«fel- -H|MIrb. ovorhenting, carbon a|d ">Seor worn parts.

SpArk knock Is due to sparl I'Ingadvanced too far, particularlygoing up n hill. Tlie «nglndown sod the ci|)lnslon rnmeidend center, causing a knork.Is retarded the knock disappear

Overheating causes a knorlt bj fl ngDie gns before the piston roHcliJsip-per dead center on the compftf IDstrobe. The exploding gas expiringmeets the piston going np and I L Ha knock. Overhentlng ma; \t diedby steam at radlotor.

Carbon knock Is caused by r«J "tcarbon In cylinder head setting firitothe mixture when the gas has \encompressed to a certain point

V ireiprk

HUFF'S BATTERY STATION!Woodbridge lUdio-Elettric Co

35 Mnin St. Telephone B'«J-Next P. R. R. V/oodbriflV

S T U D E B A K E R W U L F PCORD TIRES

High Gr»d« in Ever* R« a p a c t

PRICES ARE RlQHTfWe are Sole Woodbridre Distributor.

WOODBRIDGE A U f b SUPPLyAccaiioriei and SuppliM Q. n < t

ZOMainSt,, WOODBRIDGE' N Ti' i

$601,000to eliminae vibration

IT costs Studebtket600,000 a year to pro-duce crankshafts at are completely ma-

chined on all surface ,But it result! in tl smooth, silent, vibra-

tionless performance tt characteruea the newStudebaker can.

The cost per car is small and the advan-tages so pronounced it to buy a car in thisfield without getttog completely machinedcrankshaft is notM-oba an your money willbuy. jijr

Come and impfct thew Studebakers. Seefor yourself tog latest velopment in motorcars, * -'

J. ARTHUR >PLEGATE363 DirUion St.PERTH AMBOY 250 Geo.rre Si.

NEW BRUNSWICK

XSNvr

StudelakersNothing Bkt

• * . * •

Exceptional dependability has beeil 4 chacteristic of Dodge Brothers 'l*»tor (since the day the first of these stuftiy cwas marketed.

• Not once in a decade has it faikdi» upband enhance its reputation for fiMtib&l p*

. farmanqe. ) k^L

The reason for its consistent gqodliiM aicontinued betterment points dinthe ideals of the founders.

Instead of fluctuating between «H SW*U«

¥ series of annual qxxiels, they dMamfaeid iconcentrate on the perfection of «, sing

' chassis. V

Dodge Brothers Motor Car todirc 1| ttiembodiment of that ideal—an • * ' " '

endure as long as the i

$1095 i. o. b. Detroit—$1,210

FRANK VAN SY

159 New Brunswick Ave.,

1/..

»u.s.

Page 3: CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

Cross-word Puzzles

Hw—r• •

CROSS-WORD

HP•3

ManMaMaBen

i_y_

•—-

b

• PUZZLE

L L

—;

-

-

No.7

m|

1

29

|

a

Ti

CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 30

I© br WeaUrn N |

Horliontal.1—Makea terms of aarreader•—SlagU

lo—Sell1*— !»«gatl»«14—Projecting ridga or aaclfIS—Bcloagtng to18— So.tkern alaU (abbr.)IT—Engllak lor kavlag dlaed18— Pre»MttloaIS—EilatJO—Mm of Irrla aad auator

poetryS>-Memker of aekool of abllMonl

fonadrd br CeaoaVi^Ssnta Amcrleaa matlaantiff—Btavier-tbnn-alr Sylag BtaealSO—Taractoed alotkSI—B*r'' alckaam*SS—Trliurlam (nbhr.)SS—Kortk Wealern alat* (»bbr.)S4—EiUtSH—Animal (at88—Olpktkoag8T—Part of Terfc "t« be"S8—What nn HraglUknaa

n i l an 'onc'a toot40~Snn«aadlag condition

8olirtlon of Purzlo No, 27.

»jwr I'nton.)

Vertical.1—TkaJ nklek can b* f r o m1—Rttroatan rimS—O»eaU« admlttlac llnalda4—One oka akatnlna from latSTl-

eatlag drlnki8—Prrparatlo* and «B«ctai«at • (

lawa8—-Oae mho aeti far anotkerT—Prtpoaltlon8—•Taut vrklek aaanrca a late f M

•act (two n r i i )IS—Impltmtat for rowingH—Jaaaacae aaah11—la or aft<r Ik* •rrl« of2S-~Coinblnlng form meaning eggM—RtfllneJ*—M«w Zcalaad aborlgtnoSS—Polnon»—lla«leIT—Wide atrr*t (abkr.)t»—Srmhol for Iron (thorn.)

Tk* aolatlna trill app*u laa«zt Una,

Solution of Puzzle No. 2&

B H3a

CNNA

RlAlNN

1

- •

Raymond E. Brook*

(£] br W«at»rn N

HorlzonUI.1—Kind of Itatkn4—BcTtraseT—Olrl'a nam*

10—<Br ward of moatkIS—HadtacdIS—RcallHd14—PerUtalaf to a biblical monn-

tala1«—Poollak talV18—MOT« or raa awlf<lr —1*—Short newa aiilcleSO-^Pamoda sardtaIS—K«na1SS—Black Tt«roaa aabatanc*SB—Vtraall wltk mcaaa for teparat-

las eoara* from fln* partlelcaIT—ChlMrta'a cam*SO—Part of verb "<o b»"SI—BaTcras*SS—PtorttiSI—Faahlonabl* waterlar plac*S&—Plnockl* term (pi.)ST—Wagert8—Litter oa nklck eorpae la born*

to grave40—Simple4S—N««d

'4S—Pollcemca46—Wicker container4T—Head or brain (plnral)*•—Poema ,DO—AloneBI—State la Uda-CalaaBS^-MarrrB4— VaaaelW—European IT tree

Wiper Unlaa.) '

Vertical.1—Indlam aitaanre of dlataae*S—Part of the ereS—One who eapers4—Part ot a circleB—Note of mueleal acale•—FlaUkT—ConrelT*S—CoaaldefS—Carp«iter*a tool

_^j»«f9raHM ., .IS—B«rV pla'rtklncIIP—tM o f r i U M a a calendar the IMa

dar o t certain montkiIT—R»ad aaaidatai—SaltpeterIS—Side atepIS—It la (pMtle)*4—EcTPtian aaake2«—Saakellka aah18_Perlod of time1ft—ObtainedS4—Lowered, degradedSB—AllotSS—BaCST—Aetloa aalde or apartSS Colored Sal da41—Spirit42—Walk la water44—Fralt of the blaektkora4ft—Carteey«—Co*e*4T—FU48—Polat ot eompaaa51—NegatW*

Solntloa will appeal In next tan*.

Raymond B. Brooks of SoothOrange, N. J., and New York, t ingiven op hln flmirlshlng bualn^n todevote all his time to directing th«alumni activities ot his alma materColgate university, along llnet tint willpromote a better working knowledgeBlFTOTveWIty and buglrstts jfttflsfa ofeach other's needs. He is the Dratalumni executive secretary In thetountry to be recruited from theranks ot successful business men In§te»d of from young recent graduates.Mr. Colgate was graduated from Col-gate In lfiOO.

J3as ,n]»q

sqot

Brighten Your Home With

Baumann's Spring Flower^

Darwin Tulips, Jonquils, Narcissus

Freesia and Sweet Peas

ARE NOW IN THEIR GLORY

Just see how much a Box or Basket of

BAUMANN'S FLOWERS

Will Brighten Some Home

Just phone Rahway 711—"The Flowerphone"

J. R. BAUMANN, Florist

St. George and Hazelwoo^ Avenues, Rahway, N. J. |fc|

We Deliver promptly all over Middlesex

and Union Counties

Broadcast Bill's Radiolays

LUDENSMENTHOL COUGH DROPSfor nose and throat

Give Quick Relief

—Mention this paper to advertisers;it helps you, it helps them, it helpsyour paper.

TASTELESS CASTOR OILA supwrefinfd castor oil madefor medicinal tue. Not flavored.Strength and purity unchanged.Tutelcu and odorlea. Iiuiit onKeliogg'i, bottled and labelledat the Laboratories. At alldrugguo.

* * • * YouV Coavaraation ******.

"SPIC AND SPAN"Housewives like to be told

that their kitchens are "splc; and span." Spic la a corrup-1 • tlon of spike or nail, and span

ip»nR B chip. The ship Ini • which every bit of. wood and', every nail were new were orlg- ] '.

Inally described as splc and ;. span. Doctor Johnson, of die- .

< • tlonary fame, says, however, \'. that span la a cefireive t6 the; spannans or stretchers onI which cloth was placed duringI the final processes ot weaving. ; !

.Ralslngihe

wo.

TOcur-

TO 60.

3

NBS, SIR1.BOLLtT

CAHTOOfl O Q J T

RADIO ri\LF'AND. HIS FRIENDS- By JACK WILSONCopyright i«ubyi)wMcClunNivipip<T5rwlitait

A letter frum a friend of mine whatmoved some time ago., sez he's most

ul interested in thig here Radio.He don't know about it so he writfer my advice regardin' th' particu-lars, the kind of set an' price. Hesez another friend of his told himthat I could hear a lot of things outof the air frum plees fer an1 near,like special brands of music, bandsan' orchestras an' sich an' whut todo fer ailin' cows er hogs what's gotth1 itch. An' say, you know he eventried, R*settto' by the shed, to hearsome of thig music, without earmuffson his heed, an' even without anyset. Since it wuz in the air he'lowed- he'd ought to hear the stuff 1get frum every where. But frum hisletter I assume the only thing heheard that sounded like music wuzthe chirpin1 of a bird. What soundedlike a lecture must a been the hiredman a'cussin' out ol' Bossy when.she wrecked his new milk can. An'now since Zeke's decided that he'sgoin' to buy a- set I 'spose I'd oughtto tell him, just exactly what to get,so he won't get diseourged on thestart with Radio like I did with mycrystal set. Gosh that seems yearsgo, I recollect how hard I tried toget KDKA, but timo signals frum Ar-lington wuz all I got, but say whenI got that there' one tube set, thefirst tube set out here I heard 'em,betcher life I did, an' they come inright clear. But my, oh my, thatcrystal set, I'd set up half the njghta fusBin' an1 a . fummin', still Icouldn't get it right. Just when I'dhave that whisker fixed so it wouldalm6st work somebody'd give my arma jerk. Oh, well,,them days are nass-ed an' gone, so Zeke won't have tofref 'b°ut a l ) v °* t h e m troubles likeI had with my first set. In them daysthey played records fer us lis'nin'folks to hear but even that wuz won-derful a comin' thru the air. Now,when Zeke gets his Radio, I'll bet thatevery night he'll be just like the restof us- if things are workin1 right.He'll hate to leave a program comin'in as smooth as silk about the timehis hired man is comin1 down to milk.

YOU'RECRAZY!

WHO EVER HEARPOF PUTTWOttlTTY CATS,//1*

BOTTLES

HE WORKS /N AFACTORY OVER THEREHE PUTS KITTY CATSIN BOTTLES P »

WELL I B6TCHAOOLLA

IT'S S o l

K.NOVJS AN1 SHE

Me BOTtieo CATS-UP.

M0MM-< t LOOK. '

DOD K I T ' T n t MOOH

OUT BUT FORDOT

To TAKE IN THE

SUCH IS LIFE

4 ' BUI IT

Felix Speaks the TruthByL.F.V.nZJmMATS THE USEDOESKEEP YOU AMAB,MR. FEA1HEI2HEAD ?

IM BQCEt) ToDEATH

HAVE SOME CAKU \pAMD COFFEE,MC. PEATHERHEAD

vMHAT A STUPID

Why Send ToThe Big City?

for interior paintinga n d decorating ofchurch, theatre orresidences, when youhave expert service athome ?

Our men are recruit-ed from the b e s tpainters and decora-tors in New York andNewark.

No job too big—No job too small—

LET US ESTIMATE

P A I N T I N GDECORATINGPAPERHANGING

THOMAS W. REEDYCorreja Ave., Istilin, N.Phone Metuchen 91-W-:

For BILIOUSNESSUieBEECHAM'SPILLS^ ,

for tho relief of C(niati[)ation,3iliuusii<2MH, Sk-k Hvadache and '

for moving the Bowels.Ilelpa cluar the skin.

Oonlalnm no OmlomalBuy from your ( I n s i s t .

fflc and 5«c the bux.

BEECHAM'SPILLS

IK YOUli HOME IS KI.KC-TKU1ALLY L1UHTK1)

you nt'i'd a lieautiful ft»or or ,.lamp ti> t'lilmiice the beauty ofyour sumiuiidings. If you do nutunjoy tin) wonderful blci^ing ofelectricity we will wiru your home, i ' - lAsk us for an estimate.

..wool

Page 4: CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

PACK

CARTERET PRESSP YS,,b.cripti»n, $1.50 Per Y « r

1'nMislifil every Fridny by

C. H. BYRNE, 44 Chrome Ave., CARTERET, Ni J.Telephone, Carteret 813

E d i t o r n n d M a n a g e rC H HYRXE

' Enter,,! », — m l cla«, matter Juno *.Post Office, liirnVr the act of MBH-.I 3, 1S(J-

Fi.rciirn AdvcrtisinR RepresentativesNow .Icriwy NYiirhlxu-hood Newspapers, Inc.

\im'ric'tn I'n'^s Association

FRIDAY, MAJRCH 6, 19^5, I i illim»

Sh-h-h-h, Don't Wake Him Up Personals

CEV AT THE BOTTOM OF IT.At Ihc lima ni>piwh«s for the distribution of tax bills

thert> is a m.tuenble apprehension as to the message those inter-esting riiM-iimcntH will bring. The exact figures are not knownbut it is kmnwi that the increase over all past records in Carte-ret will lie very great. It is easy to understand that the figureswill bv bigger. The budget this year is more than forty percent, higher than the budget of the year before and more thanfifty per cent, higher than that of the year previous. On theother hand the taxable value in Carteret has been reduced bygiving to Woodbridge property valued for taxing purposes atf230.0()0.

It is announced that soon a tax sale will be held of propertyupon which taxes are overdue. It has not yet been announcedbut it will come soon—a personal tax levied upon all personalproperly above the homestead exemption allowed by law. Per-sonal tax is levied upon your furniture, piano, radio, jewelryand the like and upon automobiles. It is perfectly legal. Itliits renter and owner alike. At present it is levied on ownerswnly in Carteret.

When personal tax is put into ofTed there will also be amore ritfid accounting of poll tax.

T.x sales, personal tax and poll tax arc common enoughin the majority of municipalities. After a few years of ineffi-cient management with politicians feathering their nests, thecost is passed on to the masses in one form or another of taxa-tion. In Carteret we escaped these things because we wereble;; ed until a few years ago with an administration that wascareful, fore.sighted and i'c>nnmical.

Things have changed. We changed them, and we mustpay the cost of the experiment. We have higher taxes withoutany new advantages to offset them. The hjgh .school, boroughhall, and such projects, are financed by bond issues, and even?the interest on these have not yet been included in the taxes.The only thing we can find to explain the jump in taxes is morenew jobs and both new and old jobs paying better salaries.These increases in pay, however, have not been extended todepartments where a real service is given, as for instance inthe police and fire departments. It is an interesting situationthat we have created—interesting and costly.

Of all the elements that enter into it the most difficult tounderstand is the transaction whereby Carteret gave away atract of railroad property on the waterfront valued for taxationby the owner's own schedule at $230,000. Perhaps it wouldir ing infinitely more than that in the open market. Yet all wereceived in return was a tract valued at $80,000 that was a lia-bility to the municipality that formerly owned it. A tractwhich, there is every reason to believe, that municipality wouldhave disposed of gladly without any consideration whatever.In view of what Woodbridge had to pay for policing that dis-trict, for tuition of the children there of school age, for col-lection of garbage and for other benefits to which the peoplethere were entitled, Woodbridge would have saved money byturning the entire property over to Carteret and Woodbridge

, would have done it. It would have been a humane and naturalthing for Carteret to accept the tract even at a financial loss

] woredny.

—Miss

r nnd Mrs. E. .1. Sk<-ffinet<>" |Now York shoppers <>" T h i n s

Elizabeth Nfmnon was aPerthi Amboy visitor Monday evening

-The Happiness f ' i r l s w ' " m ' ' ' ' ' 'March 18, at the home of MisH EHzn-beth Nannen.

_MiRR Mario Crr.mwp.ll was anElizabeth shopper Saturday.

•-• Miss Ann .1. Malloy was theKUfflt of Mrs. Skcflinfctnn on Tuesday.

- -Mrs. T. Burke, accompanied bylior (laughter, Josephine, and- MissAdeline Donovan, went to thn St.Elizabeth's Hospital on Sunday, whereThomns Burke ia recovering from aserious attack of appendicitis.

--Max Rubel, of Roosevelt ave-nue, attended the inaugural services,.f CoolidRe, in Washington, Wednas-day.

—The Misses Minerva Chodash andLillian Brown witnessed a perform-ance of "The Lounge Lizard." at theBroad, in Newark, Saturday.

—-Samuel Roth, of thn I, T. Wil-liams Co., may lose his middle fingeras the result of an accident whileclosing a car1 door.

—Edward Merrell, of StatenJslanfl, visited a group of friends hereSaturdny night.

—John Driscoll and Joseph Casalefrfri attended a 9how in Newark,Wednesday night.

—The regular monthly pediRocicacircle meeting was held in the Colum

This year's show promises to be the bus School, Monday afternoon. Thebest run by the club since it befran meetinp was interesting and severalputtin^^on annual shows many years addresses were made,

will be announced

Harmony Club Notes

ago.soon.

i£onThe date

represented by the $4,GOO paid by Woodbridge for tuition.

Buy a knitted frock?is the practical thing to do.style, there Is no lack of It In a two-piece frock such as is pictured.

The ultra-smartness of this knittedmodel Is declared In the gracefultunic, the long, cloae-flttlng sleeves,border contrasted In color and but-tons for the fastening.

Then, too, knitted outerwear offerssuch t, wide range of delightful color-ings. Bright red 18 given Us fullamount of attention In sweaters andfrocks, In accordance with fashion'spronounced trend. Other featuredcolors and combinations include cop-per shades, pompadour blue, Span-ish yellow, purple and fuchsia shadesand climaxing all are the lovely whiteknitted suits with multicolored bor-ders.

There will be the usual excel-lent dancers, singers and funmakers,together with many new and surpris-ing features in the way of costumesand lighting effects. Further detailswill be announced later,

» * •One of the conductors of these

Harmony Notes is not feeling BO wellsince his car was bumped off whilebeing used by an instructor for theflivvers.

* * *The first big rehearsal of our com-

ing show was held Thursday night.All members in the cast appeared—in good order.

t • •Laff knocked off a couple of nine-

hall games Tuesday nipht from Misko,Monteloni and Howath. Laff says:"If you can't beat 'em bowling, beat'em at pool."

* • *The C. R. R. and Harmony Seconds

will soon roll off their tie game. Theyhave each won a match.

* * »Pfenning was decorating the gutter

the other night assisted by the trtekto cop.

Captain Dzurilla is now hitting pmerry "pace with his bowling uke and

»r. We like it; some don't.• • *

President Boos was a visitor at thematch the other night. It also moveu

London'i City HallThe (iuildtmll Is the city hall or

town hull of London. It dates fromthe curly Fifteenth century. It Is thegrand civil linll where sovereigns midprinces are entertained, freedoms con-ferred and ftuke place.

f

the greut city functionsIt contains the offices und

The full significance ol the transaction was not grasped | council ohiimbi>r of ihe corporation, ofat the time it took place. A campaign was approaching and [the clty of Lot"'"n

many thought it was some sort of campaign propaganda. Forthe time being it was lost sight of.

But it should not be forgotten or lost sight of. It is anincident that means money [(> every one in the borough. It isno more a partisan matter t'lian was our entrance into the greatwar when we thought some or all of the country was in danger.If a merchant employed a clerk or group of clerks and theydisposed of a large amount of his merchandise for something

^ worth very much lens, that merchant would act. He would atleast,get a new set of clerks and he might do something furtherto the ones who gave away his property.

The PRESS feels that the kiul transfer is a live issue andshall continue to be a live issue until it is satisfactorily ex-plained. The deal was open to attack from the start since itwas never published by ordinance or in tin; minutes of theborough. It is not fair to our big industries who pay the bulk ofthe town's taxes and who must pay moru as a result of the deal,and it was not fair to the private taxpayers for the same reason,fior if their burden is smaller their means are also smaller.

If the proposed plan of forming a taxpayers' associationhere is to be carried out that association wilLhave ample workfor a starter in digging into this transaction and they should digto the bottom.

FLINT

SIX

—Kenneth Lee, of Roosevelt ave-nue, was a Staten Island visitor, Sun-day.

:—Miss M. Sharkey spent Saturdayshopping in Newark.

—Miss Mildred Kohn was n NewYork City visitor, Saturday.

—Mrs. J. Ruckreigel spent Wed-nesday in Newark.

Mr. arid Mrs. Arthur Juskowitz,of Newark, visited their pamiU, Mr.and Mrs. B. Juakowitz, here, Sund

—Morris Hertz is spending severaldays in Cprteret, nfter returning fromhis western trip.

—Mrs. John Harrington, Miss M.Dowline and Mrs, John Adams spoutWednesday in Elizabeth.

—Mrs. D. Venook spent Tuesdayin New York City on business.

—Bill Greenwald spent Wednesdayon business in New York Cit.y.

—The Misses Helen Smolensky andAnna Medwick were Elizabeth shop-pers, Saturday afternoon.

—Mrs. Frances Yarcewsky spentSunday with Mrs. Michael Bialeckv,

Hill,HERS OF HIGH GRAIU'l MOTOR <:AR.S

The Flint iquality,tested uricondition!

today is a knownvalue has been

r every possiblen less than two

years it ..hi rteadily advancedto a place flw'dership amongall finely liilt cars. It has

proved itl'W by its o*n, rcord!

The Flint—complet

ForHORNI

St. George's

Phone Rahwafjd

if "»de in Two Chassease! 'Hon of open and

1 bodies.

m istration callMOTOR SALEnear P. R. R. Bridge

Railway, N. J.

FLINTSIX

FLlIlT SIX

Man Has Leg AmputatedAs Result Of Accident

When a rope that was being usedas a guy line for a heavy tank thatwas being hoisted at one of the localplants snapped Saturday night, Gus-tav Ha 11am, aged 33 years, was inthe path of the tank as it swung freeand his leg was so badly crushed thatit had to b_e amputated at the RahwayCity Hospital. The injured man wa&rushed to the hospital as soon as an

b l could be secured,

of Perth Amboy.—John Conlan, Mrs. A. Christon-

sen and son Harold and Emma Chris-tensen were Amboy visitors Satur-day.

—Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Schwartz'A New York City spent Wednesdayhere with Mr. and Mrs. D. Lehrer.

—Miss Ethel Kahn spent the weekend with friends in Bayonne.

1 —A record crowd attended theSteel Works Business Men BowlineMatch at Coughlin's Tuesday night.Among those present were many bor-ough officials and bosses.

—Ben Klein has purcased a newFord delivery truck.

Guest At Inn ReportsClothing Was Stolen

John J. Heist, a guest at the Car-teret Inn, was robbed of clothing andother property valued at more than$200 some time Wednesday, accord-ing to a report he made to the police.An overcoat two suits of clothes and

What People Talk AbtfftIn order l« fimi "»m whiit Mff

nrile topics of nmverslon lire,one luis listened to .VK) 1>IU> ofiinil HasslMed them. "T-mdneiilie popular topic with'spurts" next and "otlier men" r.iliinl, but with the u-iiiimn tljcrt of "men" ranked far i.ls«|nnyililnij else with "dress" secw"other women" third.— Classified Ads. Bring Res

Engliih SuperstitionTIHTP are many Kngllsh superstl-

tlnns connected with bahlcs. the mostt'Mlug of which being what Is

known us "the christening bit." Onilie wny to the christening the nursemust Hike with her n small bag of Ills-

ufc nut s which she must offer |o the firstpwfmn she meets. If he refuneg, the"liil'l will be unlucky, hut if lie uc-'epts, then good fortune will smile

l_ ipon th*> babe.

Hallamand boards in Washington r e p o r t e< m i s 8 i n g .

—Miss Vera Skeffington was theguest of her grandmother over theweek-end in South Amboy.

—Miss Anna Fifticus visited hersister in Elizabeth, Thursday evening.

—Mrs. J. J. Reason was a Newarlcvisitor, Saturday.

MOTOR TRIPS ABROADThe Historic City of Namw.

TWELFTH OF A SERIES OF TRAVEL TALKS

COUNT TEN BEFORE

Trying tu stltle a yawn with a uiug-

stuy around

\

Letting your purrotbHe Cuthcr Is shaving.

Airlanding u vlollu~Bolo. he might>HVC been Juat tuning uu.

Running your red car through a bullpasture.

Promlnlnn your wife to bring In aairing vt llsli for supper.

— LTrying to bluff a mat In a puker

gauie who hohiD four aces.

Flitting your high silk iHrt 4twn ona chair wheu v1nltlng your near-sightedjsjother-ln-lbw.—Chicago American.

SAITH THE SAGETtare are six easeutlttls to success,ag4H!!WQrk »8Vfc work, sav«, work

RANDOM REMARKSIt Is no honor |n liukl the record for

umplug ut I'oiuiusluiia.

Some liii'n'H hk'ii df economy Is topreach It to lln-lr wives.

You cannotman's-

gnln iiiliulttiinceby kuucklng.

to a

It Ik all right to have close friendsIf they loosen up occasionally.

That one can go farther and (areworse Is no excuse for Inertia.

People who think before the; speakget out uf the habit of saylug much.

-~*The bee has managed to get credit

for Industry, but It's I regular hum-bug.

The stamp I* not without some ex-cuse for ue«Blml»iu--lt knows that It lagoing to get Uoked sooner or later.—Button Trtnaalut

' l a (be l a * onjrHhoutind nine hun-tWBUty-flve y«ar*• r

An overcoat, two suits of clothes andnew suit case are among the articles

The property wastaken from Heist's room during hisabsence. Suspicion was directed toanother guest >who left the Inn ab-ruptly Wednesday.

TIMEWE YOU

MOITry Our New Offer: IS

W |

30 pc

We call for bundl^finished satisfactorily in

ROOSEVELTTel. Carteret 417-R.

rtand WORRYof Flat Work for $1.50

bV\SH

- $1.00iptly and deliver workfour hours.

ff SERVICE CO.526 Rooterelt Avenue

Fighters Preparing .<-For What May Come

Johnny Carroll, Young Delaneyand Jack Sharkey, three local dealers iin fisticuffs, are training regularly for iany minute notice of a bout. j

The three boxers are training at Idifferent places. The fighters expect ;

a call to flinjr mitten at one of theAmboy or Elizabeth boxing show*soon, and want to be in readiness.

Carroll and the younger boxershave all made their names in theborough and when they fight they arcfollowed by the local fans.

Schedule City BowlingLeague Of Carteret

Fri., Mar. 6—Maeks-Mexpet.Mori., Mar. 9—Macks-Carteret FiveTues., Mar. 10—Mexpet-Copper

Works. ,Wed., Mar. 1.1—Steel Works-

Wheeler's.Fri., Mar. 13—Harmony Club-BnBi-

ness Men.

A TICKLISH JOB

The Carteret Truit

of Carteret, New

It was organized by the

Its purpose it to help th

It is -owned by the peopl

Its depositor* are tHe

. Every normal manhome some day.

Every normal man ncial advice at some time

Plwlii Courleiy Chryiltr Maxwll Afulcr Curjwrulioiu

Namur still bears the vuirks of the imr. It ii <W of tht most interest-ing cities in nil of Belgium and each year tees mur<r and more Amtrim»motorists staffing thert to view the famous old citatUl.

a tank™ wuu-hdelicuto work."

""Jo Uoutl a tli-li!ll[j|i J(>h."

Bargainsmust be

A MERICAN m u t o i i s t s wlioXX travel from Brussels in Bel-

gium to Parii invariably go toNiimur, the capital of the provinceof Njunur hi Belgium. This hit-

the fork between them is crownedwith the old otudel shown above.

The original bridge at Namur wasluiistiucted iu the lllh century audrebuilt in the reign of Charles V.

It wilt be recalled, that the Ger-entarcd Nuftur August 23,

that will saveyou many a dol-lar will escapeyou if you fail toread carefullyand regularly theadvertising oflocal merchants

The Carteret Trustthis very need—to givebond and mortgage to hel|

Save your moneyspany—the ONLY bank inown your home; the ONLprotect your estate after

Make US YOUR ^we will be here BIG and S'

CARTERET TRI.CARTER

Telephone 666

"Try Cart.4% on Savings-

a % on Checking Accta.

the people*' bank

> save and own a

iclal aid and finan-

waa formed to fillid lend money onn your home.

•teret Trust Com-that can help youCarteret that can

,one.

hen you need ushelp you.

17 Cooke Avenue

turday EveningsI Over 1800,000

LADIES' AND

We sjyjdalize in doing thi|

und in the pa,-tittle manaer

Experienced Holy*kl ^ « i u

Page 5: CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

Bright Cincinnati Star

Bd Botnh of the Cincinnati Reds—i«haraplon holdout, hntuman and ont-i .(elder at different periods of hi* most\«rentfnl and auccessfal career.

Bicycle'i AdvantageWhen a man walks a mile h« takes

on nn avernge 2,2«3 step», hut whpnhe rides n hlryele with nn average gearhe rovers n mile with nn equivalent olonly (V.J7 slops.

High School Notes(By TED DANIELS)

Friday afternoon (larteret Highlust in Cranfnrii Varsity in a bBskct-hall ennio at Cranford 20-IS. The

iiic w«H exciting'from the stnrt.Miss S. T. Rynn, the prinripal of

the high Behnol, is sick in n hospitaliml will be absent several weeks.Students aro working extra hard to

h K lens difficult for thosewho aro, piihj'titiitinn in Miss Ryan's1 Inop. Meotlingfi were called by allIhc classes separately, by their re-spective, presidents, and. all the classesdrridod upon bringing flowers to MissRyan.

Tuesday afternoon the Junior Girls(owned their Sophomore opponentsfl-IV The first gnmo nf thin kind wnawell attended, find next week theJunior females will play the Fresh-men representatives.

The heat Junior dance was heldMonday afternoon since the begin-I'lnpr of the idea. About seventy peo-ple stepped to harmonious tunes. Thedances are aiding the Junior Wash-ington Trip fund.

Already baseball and football chal-lenges rre being received fromsehoolB in this vicinity. ManagerBerson is planning the coming base-ball schedule.

At the weekly assembly Wednesdayafternoon Miss B. V.*Hermahn pre-sided in place of Miss Ryan. SheRpoke of the inaugural of the Presi-dent. She also spoke coneerning theschool spirit and requested that thestudent body aid in running the highschool smoothly in the absence 1Mi R Mi

[ "THAT LITTLE CAME" ,^. By B. Link |

CLASSIFIED ADSClassified advertisement* only on«

cent « word: minimum charge 2&c.

y ceRynn. Misj Hermann announced

that Miss Scott would be high schoolprincipal until Miss Ryan's return.Announcements were made bv theseveral presidents.

The Dramatic Society meets Mon-day, the Sophs Tuesday and theFreshmen Thursday.

At th i

TRIPLETS,F O U R S AM"

HOVJJ I

'EM

Johnson Joins World's ChamL O S T t i At the meeting of the Freshman

l)()(i- Airedale Terrier, black saddle, I r a M y«»tvrday, after school, muchtan leather collar. Reward if re- j husmess was transacted-. Miss Her-

tmned to 12G Gordon street, Wood- "»n» was present. Black and OrMip• are the c.lass colors chosen, Bjack-

pyed Susan waa selected aa the flower.FOR SALE | £ u e s w'H be ten tents a month.

—.—_ , President Armour chose Geore-e GlassCYI'RES INCUBATOR, 390 c«js, IHcn Donnelly, Helen Daniel and

guaranteed to be in first class con- Walter Wadyak to look nftfcf^thedition, electric thermometer light, motto selections. Miss Roach; theextra oil font, for $30.00. Apply to j class advisor, is in charge of the'com-P. Janson, Iselin, N. J. , mittee; At the next meeting Thurs-WILL sell reasonable, 1-ton Ford

Truck, or will exchange for Ford n |8J; o r m i n s t r e l 8 h o ^Miss Malloy's Civics Class held an

interesting debate Wednesday morn-ing. The question-, 'Ttesolved. thathe U. S. increase its army and navy,"

was decided in the affirmative. Goodspeeches were Riven by both teams.

The affirmative consisted of MeyerRopenbloom, Joseph Comba and Jo-seph Gaydos. The negative, of Eve-lyn Springer, Mary Muchi and Jen-nie Axel rod. The judges were Made-iine Wohlgemuth. Thelma Dinsmore.Mary Dorn, Joseph Turner and Law-rence Harris.

The second issue of the LoudSpeaker came out this morning, thecopy is a snanpy one and has manyinteresting features. Copies can beobtained at all newsstands. Adver-tisers in ihe periodical will ?et theircopies Monday afternoon.

touring. Can be seen evening* orSundy. Stanley Sebasty, Sonora andMiddlesex avenues, Iaelin.

"PROVIDENT" COAL R A N G E ,small parlor heater and extension

table. Apply at 95 Green street,Woodbridge, or phone 102-R.

TOLEDO Fireless Cooker, with ac-cessories, practically'new. Inquire

of Mrs. Joseph Wantoch, Carteretavenue and Locust street, Carteret

WANTED

EGGS—Private family in city wantsto hear from farmer who could

epare 4 dozen eggs «very two weeks.State price; will furnish egg box.Address George Kai&er, 200 West98th Street, New York City.

EVERY FAMILY in this city to buyone of our fine chipped-glasa name

plates and house number*. Every-body's getting them.

W. K. Whitaker, Sewaren, N. J.

"CASH paid for false teeth, dentalv gold, platinum, discarded jewelry,diamonds and magneto points. HokeSmeltine & Refining Co., Otsego,Michigan."

WORK WANTED

WOMAN will go out to wash *ndiron, or do housework. Address

Mrs. Anna Graf, Rector street, Wood-bridgc, N. J. • 2t pd.

Leslie To Meet StengerIn Elizabeth Soon

New Russian Giant

[That Sense ofSecurity

Which comes with the realization that youhave succeeded in saving something spursyou on to redouble your efforts towardmaking financial progress.Decide to make 1925 a profitable year byopening a Savings Account at this bank.Come in now and get the Book that willrecord your financial progress.

The Tirst National Bank) CARTERET, N. J. '

WOMAN wants work, wanning, iron-ing and cleaning by the day. Julia

Szabadka, P. O. Box 257, Avenel,N. J. 2t pd.

DAY'S WORK wanted. Willing tocook, wait on table, wash or clean,

Address Mrs. B»echka, 277 Washing-ton avenue, Carteret. TelephoneCarteret 397-R.

Charley Leslie, the Chrome boxer,who gained honors in Perth Amboytwo weeks ago by offering to fightout the bout after he had been fouladand who did start the fight again asecond time only to be fouled againand knocked helpless for five minuteswill meet Artie Stenger in the Eliza-beth Armory in two weeks from to-

\ night, Leslie has gained in skill andis naturally blessed with mote thanaverage strength for his weight. Hismanly course in the fight two weeksago has won him a great name infandom as a clean ftghter with plentyof grit.

Walttr Johnson has given up any hope of acquiring a Pacific Coast leaguebaseball club and will pitch for the Washington American league team againthis season. He has joined the team In FJorlda.

HELP WANTED MALE

AUTO SALESMAN to sell very finemedium priced car in Woodbridge

Township, Rah way and Carteret; sal-ary and commission to man quality-ing. Address Bo* H, Carteret Press.

AUTO MECHANIC} wanted, experi-enced on all jnakes of cars. State

ago, experience and salary wanted.Box II. Ciirteret Press, t

BOY or YOUNG MAN to assist inCarteret factory shipping depart-

ment. Opportunity for right appli-cant. State age, experience andnalnry expected. Address Box W,Carteret Press.

To Dedicate Synagogue

\Here Tomorrow

Many prominent rabbis and otherleading Jews will be in Carteret Sun-day when the remodeled synagogueof the Congregation of Loving Jus-tice is dedicated. Elaborate cere-monies have been arranged for theoccasion. B. P. Friedman, head oftne congregation, and Mr. DavidWohlgemuth, chairman of the Wom-an's Auxiliary, have conmleted all thedetails for the day's activities. ',.

The synagogue was partly destroy-ed by fire about a year ago and thecongregation raised funds and had itremodeled completely. It is locatedin the Chrome section of the boroughand is a handsome edifice.

Ross Young Tops GiantsThe official averages of the National

league tor the past season show thatBonn Young led the Giants In battingwith a percentage of .355, He made atotal ef ,187 hits In 526 times at batFrank Frisco, ranks second to Youngamong the team's regular players withan average of ,3284. George Kellycomes next with .3239. Of the otherregular players, Meusel batted .3080,Snyder hit .3023, Jackson had a markof .802.

Dundee Is Suspended

Junior League IsA Lively BunchWANTED 1— Office and Messenger

Boy, not less than 16 years of age;must bo a graduate of the erammar , „ . . . .. „.. „echools. Apply at Employment Office, Wh'le the City Bowling League isUnited States Metals Reftnin* Co.,!-1"* blK sporting feature in CarteretCarteret N J | at present quite a little attention is

1 ' ' being attracted in junior circles bythe Junior League. Members of hit.organization are doing some prettynifty shooting and there is plenty offight in the outfit, for all are seekingthe place at the top at. present heldby Ijauter and Thompson, who havewon five and lost one. Yorke and

1 Daniels are next with four wins and

BOY WANTED

MUST ha ambitious and willing towork und learn. Good prospect foradvancement. Knowledge of Hun-garian language helpful. Apply Box526, Woodbridge, N. J.

BOARDING.'1 - two lost.REPINED American family will board Lehrer and Horvath.have won two

one or two reasonably, laundry andmending included; room for car ifileaiied; St. fleorge'a Ave., one blocknorth of the Fast Line Trolley. Writeto Post Office Box 300, Woodbridge,N. J. 4t.

cut of six while Eudy and Sparkyi. re safe in the cellar with one win outof six trips.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

HOUSE PAINTING DECOR-

Man'* Place in Natvrm .W e u r e i i i e in l i i r s nf unn |<reHt b o d y

N i t t u r e [IIIIIIIIMI In u s a nn ' t i u i l love ,

und tilted fur a sdclal life. We^ n f f D E OATING— First class wofk. Chas.

Lauxmun, 613 Ainsworth St., Linden.Tel. Linden 8308. 8t.

DR. T. R. WEIGHT, OiteopathlcPhysician, 44 Green St., Wood-

fcridgu. Telephone Woodbridge 574.Hour*: 1-8 Tuaadayi add FrMavt.

ACCOUNTANT — B o o k » opened,closed; income tax. Will also take

care of bookkeeping for small con-cerns on wvekly or monthly bails.G. Agreen, 164 Freeman St., Wo«4-bridge.

CARPENTER jODD JOBS done promptly. Jot

Durinh, 680 WaUon »v«nu«, Wood-brldg«,N. J. t i

JRNITUl PAII

must consider Iliui we were hum for(lie good «f tlie ,—Sencm.

There are a|l kindsof cheap printing^*but none of It is real-ly cheap—at leastnot on 9 basis ofvalue. Cheau itufjIs usually worth al*most what It costs.Our printing Isn'tthe cheapest yon

• " t If s as

Johnny Dundee, veU'niii Itmlunlighter, bus been suspended t|y I litNational Boxing AHHddullon of Anierlea for falling to kwep his agreementto box Frtd liretuuvl, t'r»ucuweight.

Earl Davis Signedas Centenary Coach

Earl A, Davis of McKendreecollege of Illinois has beensigned to succeed "Bo" McMlHlnas head football coach at Cen-tenary college. His contract Isfor three years.

The announcement was alsomade that Pat Weekly and MackFlennlken, stars of the 1924SQUiid, have withdrawn fromCentenary. They are said to been route to Beaver Falls," Pa.,where McMHUii Is now coach atGeneva college.

Removing Tattoo MarksA l t l i i H i K h t a t t o o n i ; i r i ; s ^ " i \ i r r i l l y l i r e

n s s f i l c i l I n l i e l i u l e l l l i l c if i m u l i i r i ' d

l iy t h e I n s e r t i o n (if M I H I C c i i r l n ' i i i n ' i ' i i i m

mutter, It Is siiM tliey will dis»|i|>nirIf first well rul^ivl with u snlvc (ifluirp acetic acid und lanl, tlien withii solution of potash iind llnully withn solution of hydrochloric acid. Itwould he ndvlsuhlo to consult u skin

j Warm and Cold-BloodmiPColil-Momled animals are(ninslly nf tlir veil tin «t ea ofl>elmv birds) wlinsw Iwily tempervary with Hint of the wnler orwhich they live. Wurm-blftodadnmN are tlmse, such us birdsmnmninls, ivlileli hiive M relutand cimsliint bmly tniipernture,illy cunsliierntil.v nlvive that OflurrniiiidlnK medium

Ivan Zalktn, the powerful wrwtlerfrom Moscow, Russia, who arrivedhare recently In quest of a matchwith the heavyweight mat champion,Wayne Munn. Zalltln stands wellover six tot In height and tips the•calfti at 272 pounds. \ He U forty-one yaan o( age~and has been hi thewrestling game for many year*.

Triumph* of PhilotophyPhilosophy easily triumphs over ilk'

both past and future; but*pres«* Ulftriumph over philosophy. The goodwe have recelwd from any one shoulomake tra bear with the 111 we have suffered. Weakness often wets the betterof those Ills which rvasou could not.~La Rochefoucauld.

Back From The Cleaners

When Your Clothes Come Back FromThey Look Like Newt

One telephone call brings us to your door.We have established a new and convenient servic&

We call for and deliver your order promptly. Our wor|pis the best.

FRENCH CLEANING OUR SPECIALTY!ROOSEVELT CLEANERS & DYERS

Roosevelt Ave., Carteret, N. J. Tel. Carteret

I;

Fight Fiasco Mogul MayRecoup All His Losses

Jim Johnson, the smiling mayor ofShelby, Mont., who promoted one ofthe sporting world's ibiggeBt financial"busts," the Demptey-Glbbong fight,Is in a fair way to1 stage a financialcomeback.

The other day an oil syndicate ofwhich he li head brought In a wellestimated by operator* to be good foran Initial production of 5,000 barrelsdully. The black crude rushed fromthe well, and gave the derrick anoily bitlji for 20 minutes before It couldb« brought under control.

The same smile with which MayorJohnaon greeted fight managers andsports writers In July of last year,when they wanted to know where the"neit hundred thousand dollars" wasturning (mm to assure holding the bigfight has never disappeared, Ma friends»uy, but now It appears a bit moregenuine.

The mayor, with the same easy,bree»y style that 1« typical of the realWesterner, bad little time for com-ment, but admitted that the limousinefuture he hoped for before the Demp-«ey-Gll>limis flivver aeem?d a bit nearerrealisation.

1BMMSMMMMMMMMMMM3M

—Mention this paper to advertisers;!—— ——.It helps you, it helps them, it helps „ Classified Ads. Bring Results —your oaper.

WOODBRIDGE HUDSON-ESSEX CO.

The Greatest Motor Car Values Today

Phone Woodbridge 60 for Demonstration

HUDSON5UPER-S1X

COACH$1345

ESSEXSIX

COACH

Extra

THE BIG OPENING SALEOf HOMES and HOMESITES

On the New Hast Hill Addition of

THE COLONIA HILLSHOME COMMUNITY

Saturday and Sunday, March 14 and 15A 14 Karat Gold L. E. Waterman ;Lady's or Gentleman's Fountain Pen ; >

Goes with Every Purchase at Opening Sale J

REMEMBER! Sale Opens 1 P. M., March 14th, andOpening Prices will be the Lowest! COME EARI Y!

CHOICE HOMESITES From I$99 up on practically Your Own Terms!

BUILD YOUR HOME BY THE COLONIA HILLS PLAN

Ideal Location—Main Line l'enn R. R.—Excellent Commutation Service—LowPrices—Easy Payment Plan—Fine School Facilitiea—Modern Conveniences—StrongBuilding and Loan Aaaistance^-Free Advice ofExperienced Builders—Big InveiitmentValue. , • • c ; '_

SEE COLONIA HILLS SATURDAY OR SUNDAY

or make an inspection any week day, by phoning our home office, Woodbridge 950,or our property office, Rahway 88, and one of our representatives will call at.yourhome and get you.

Real Estate

St. George* Av«. & Enfield

Road, Colonia, N. J.

Open Daily 9 to 5 P. M.

Insurance

SPECIAL!Indu4«d> this offering

ar* a far choice businesssites faxing St George

4 Green Street)Woodbridge, N.iJi %« A A. O T» 4lT* -•"•H'ill

Page 6: CARTERET PRES - digifind-it. · PDF fileected by the boy's ribs and thud tf ^pinc w»n not penetrated. ... Wai Educated hi Carteret Schools; ... Mary Sil sntor, Stephen Baksa,

FRIDAY, MAltCH 6, 192S

&

PUBLIC SERVICEMen and Women

The Commercial Agent

The PTJBMC SERVICE Agent is for his districtllir loiinciiinp link between those who use elec-tric and gas service and those who provide it.

An Ajfpnt is in charge of each of the twenty-ninc I'UHI.IC SERVICE commercial offices. Underhim is a corps of men and women who "knowhow" and whose job is to see that PUBLIC SER-VICE customer* receive good service.

AB part of this grrvire sal^rooms-whcre pasand electric devices of the heat and most approvedkinds can be purchased under convenient termsare maintained at every office and experts standready to assist patrons and prospective patrons,while a Bureau of Home Economics brings to thehousewife expert knowledge of domestic prob-lems in which gas and electricity play a part.

The PUBLIC SERVICE Agent and his assistauU in your district are always

at your service.

v

AMBOY SHADE& AWNING CO.

Let us show you

RnenlinMS the long wearing window

shade material

A shade of Brenlin willoutwear two or three ofthe ordinary kind.

287 Prospect StTel. 829. Perth Amboy

EYES EXAMINEDHeadaches Relieved byProperly Fitted Glasses

Lea— Crowdon thePwalm

1. MANNOPTICAL SPECIALIST

Ks to my standing, ask yourdoctor.

87% SMITH STREETPERTH AMBOY

Opposite Woolworth'a 5c and10c Store

ANDAR

H 0 U S E GILDING MATERIALS, includ-ing Plumbing Fixtures, Door Fittings,

,,t)Qors, Screens, Window Shades, Electrical Fixtures, Lum-ber. FOR FACTORIES: Steam Valves, Pipe, Pumps,|Meterfl, Generator Sets, Hoisting Machinery. Prices Low.

WATERSIDE SALVAGE CORP.| iW. Auerbsck, Secy. SHIP BREAKERS H. D. Masson, Supt.

Yards at Pier 2, Port ReadingNew. York Office, Woolworth Building

SCIENTIFIC

PIANO TUNINGRegulating and Repairing

of all makes of Pianos

First Class Work Guaranteed

JOSEPHINE JENSEN346 BarcUy St., Perth AmboyTelephone Perth Amboy 1159R.

FRANK P. WOGLOMStationer

, OFFICE SUPPLIESAddlu Maeala*. n J

Typewriter!itT SMITH ST.

PERTH AMBOY

S. B. BREWSTERDealer in

FLOUR, MEAL, FEED, BRAN,GRAIN, BALED HAY

AND STRAW

M A I N S T R E E T

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Adjoining P. R. R. Tel. 55

PUT IT IN OUR HANDS

If you want your garmentPressed, Cleaned, Repairedor Altered properly andquickly.

ANDY McLEAN

Main Street, Woodbridge

Specializing also inFine Werk on Ladies' Garments

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

Full Line ofHARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, VAR-

eft'. N1SHES, HOUSE FURNISHINGS.

|i 055 ROOSEVELT AVE., CARTERET, N. J.Tel. Carteret 812

LARSON&F0X

CIVIL

ENGINEERS

Perth Ambo**

ASSEMBLY PASSBIBLE MEASURE

Vote Is 35 to 23, After SeveralHours of Oratory by Members

of the House.

MARTIN . IS CONFIRMEDt

Stcretiry of State Will Begin ThirdTerm on April 9—Semite Receive!message From Hudson Politician

but Give* It Abrupt Answer.

Trenton.—After a debate that » ubrief but e^clUSg, by reason of thestress to which members of the Leg-islature were subjected in connectionwith It from agitators on both sides,the bill by Assemblyman Bruno, ofMonmouth county, to permit publicschool teachers to read five verses aday from any part of the Bible waspassed In the House,

The bill received 85 'votes while 23were cast In oppostlon. Two mem-bers of the House were absent. Thevote for the bill was only four morethan the number required, 31.

The Bible bill has been the BUbJect o!excitement ever Blnce its IntroductionTwo weeks ago It WBB reported bythe committee on education and thenput back in the Judiciary committeeThat caused more bitterness, especialtf fn view of the fact that thenight It was reported the nailerieshad been packed by friends of themeasure, most of whom were claimedby Ku Klux Klan leaders as members.

Denies K. K. K. SupportBr. Bruno denied the bill waa

backed by the K. K. K. Mr. BarUonof Hudson asked If Mr. Bruno couldspeak with authority to tiiot effecand the Monmouth man said he could

Mr. Bariaon, opposing the measureas did all the Hudson county delegation, called on the 37 members whoput the bill In the Judiciary committee to retain their backbone and votiagainst the bill.

Which VersionMrs. Finn and Miss Carty both

took the floor in opposition. The lat-ter went into an extended discussionof it and Inquired from Mr. Brunowhether the bill would require read-Ing of the King James version of (heBible or the Douay version. He re-plied that he did not know, becausehe was Interested only in the wholeBible. Miss Carty went on to declarethe Bible reading law Is a waste oftime in the schools.

Mr. Bottl denounced the demon-stration two weeks ago as an effortto intimidate the lawmakers to votefor the bill.

Mr. Delaney asserted the Bible hadno place in the public schools.

Mr. Harrison, of Essex, declaredthat if Christ were Jn the chamber,Christ himself w,ould rote against 'thebill.

Mr. Loutrell, of Essex, declared thsstatement attached to the bill wa» aHe.

Mrs. Thompson Mid the Old Testa-ment was a good book but that llshould not have any preference overthe New Testament. s

Mr. Reeves suggested « commissionOf two mlnlBterg, two prleBta and tworabbis might be named to secure anaccord on treatment of the Bible inthe schools.

Mrs. Ebert recalled that when thelajn to permit, reading of the Old Tes-tament was passed that was after dis-cussion by a minister, a priest anda rabbi, so that the present law un-der those circumstances, did not feedalteration on the Reeves plan.

Mr. Altman, of Atlantic, called thebill putrid and rotten because it ex-cited religious animosities unneces-Barlly.

Mr. Anderson said the bill "wo\i!dbe another failure, like prohibition.1'

Announcement of the vote waa re-ceived with applause by a large num-,ierof ita advocates in the gallerleB.

Besides Mr. Bruno the backers of[he bill were Assemblyman Hettinger,of Cumberland, reputed to be activein the K. K. K. in South Jersey; Mr.Read, of Cape May; Mr. Beardftley,of Essex; Mrs. Thompson, ot Ocean,and Mr. Reeves, ot Mercer.

Mr. Hettinger asserted this Is aChristian country and that the Bible,a Christian book, therefore should beread In Its entirety In the schools.He declared that when PresidentCoolldge takes the oath of office Wed-nesday he will do it art a Christian on• -Christian book.

Martin ConfirmedThe reappolntmenfc of T*homas F.

Martin tor a third term as Secretaryof State ot New Jersey, was confirmedby the Senate. The action w u unani-mous. .,

The vote—18 for; none against;three absent.

The confirmation came as an ab-rupt answer to the latest of John J.

tn l i ' wftfl l i i i in r ln" ! <m M o m l n v , Pu t )unry 2. ,Tli(> Hr1'1 b lunt wan « lot t o rIIIIM'HHPII t o G o v e r n o r Sllr.fr a n d•luyor Itagm. (iovcrrt.ir Sllzor re-vived the letlnr on Monday, Fobniary; di'ferrnil action until he? hn«l hurtline to read thr> lntt«r; n>n<l the lot-nr th« namfl nlKht, and nnfixpectodly

..nnt In the appointment the next day,with a letter setting forth that the np-polntment was his answer to thfl Mc-Mahon charges.

The Governor had not Intended send-nk In his appointment ao early an theerm does not expire until April 6,!)ut ihe McMahon attack had the effectf prompting. Immediate action.

8llzer'a 46-Word LatterIn sending appointment to the Sen-

ate, Governor Sllier wrote a letterof 4B words:

My ansVer to Mr. McMahon's let-ter Is the sending to the Senate of thename ot Thomas P. Martin for re-appolntment as Secretary of State—_ position which he bat filled withdistinction (or ten years. I have fullconnflefioe la his Integrity and abil-ity."

Martin'* 8tstomentSecretary of state Martin made

the following statement:"When the first Installment of the

McMahon' charges were filed I wentto Governor Sllzer and told him 1would be glad to answer any ques-tions he might wish to ask, after hehad had time to read the charges.That was on Monday. I called at theGovernor's office the next morning,but he had no questions to ask. Hisreply to the McMahon charge! wasthe sending of my name to the Senate with a note containing forty-fivewords in which he curtly said thatthe appotbtcnent was his answer toMr. McMahon.

"When other charges were subse-quently made, I again went to Gover-nor Sllxer and repeated my willing-neas to be asked any question at anytime regarding any charge that hadbeen made or which might yet bemade.

"Just how much the Governor and jthe members ot the Senate thoughtof the charges may be judged by thefact that neither the Governor nor

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THE PERTH AMBOY jGAS LIGHT COMPANY j

I•

I

206 SMITH STREET

Heatini Mid Cooking Appliances

R,ud Automatic and Storage Water Heaters

New Process C M Ranges |

Cen-Q-n Rit Radiant Loci

Odorless—Efficient—'Inexpensire

Telephone 148 Perth Amboy

I•

II

I

f t tany member of the Senate, consistingot IB Republicans and 8 Democrats,saw fit to ask me any question regard-ing any charge made against me.

"Asd I can only Interpret my reap-polntment at the hands of Governor

Cut Your Coal BillUSE A MIXTURE OF

HALF LARGE PEA-HALF NUT

$12-50 A TON

ORDER SOME NOW!.WARR COAL & SUPPLY CO.

ST. GEORGE AVENUE Phone 724

"Education which is not based on —Mention this paper to advertisers;Silasr and my unanimous connrma [ r e l i i o n a n d c h a r a t e r i s n o t c d u c a . i t helps you. it helps them, it helpi• Inn Kw th& Canata no k*tAriRIIlCLOrT i •• ti r

RAHWAY LAUNDRY, h e .41-J. Clarkion Place, Rahway, N. J.

Driver for Wuodbridge Township Route:

A.L. JABDOT

|tjfonul Certificates Given—Ask driver about them.

Tho Safety Razor thatta Its Own Blade*

Babies Love ItFor all stomach and intestinaltroubles and disturbances dueto teething, there is nothingbetter than a sale Isiiants' andChildren's Laxative.

MRS. WINSLOWSSTUUP

Complete in ItselfSharpens the blade in therazor without removing it.Quick. Convenient Easyto clean. Complete sets—razor, with sttoi> and extrablades, $1.00 and up.

HcMahon's sertes ot attackB on theSecretary of state, a latter addressedto members of the Senate urglpg fur-ther delay la order that he might sendextracts from the testimow taken inthe certlorarl procesdings. *

Thar* were throe members of theSenate absent. They were: SenatorReeves, one of Mr. Martin's strongestfrlendr, who v.us In a conference lithe House when the Senate ncted onMr. Martin's name; Senator Whitneywho at the time was hi QovernodiliefB office; and Senutdr Burtonultto a friend of Mr. Martin, who hadnot appeared for the evening gesulon

One Month of FightingThe fight agaiuHt the Secretary o:

tlon by the Senate as %atlsfactorr jevidence of their confidence in me. A 'dieslre to abide by thp rules of goodtaste prevents me from discussing thematter at further length."

Senate Plays PoliticsAlthough the Senate Is made np of

18 Republfcans and only % Democrats,there was no doubt from the outsetthat the appointment would be con-firmed. <o

The majority, however, betnR of theopposite political faith from Mr. Mar-tin, played politics with the confirma-tion by delaying action for a monthby way of encouraging the McMahonUctlcs to stir up a Democratic fightIn Hudson County.

When it became apparent that th«McMahon attacks were simply enter-taining Hudson County Democrats,without stirring up any fight, otherthan McMahon's personal fight againstthe Secretary ot State, the Republi-can Senators decided to end the affairby confirming the appointment andthat action was taken.

Quick Action, FinallyWhen the work began there was un-

usual speed by way of contrast to thedelays that have been maintained fora month.

, Third TermMr. Martin was originally appoint-

ed Secretary of State by GovernorJames f. Fielder on April B, 1915,succeeding David S. Crater, who haddied suddenly during a snow stormon April 3.

The bringing about of this appoint-ment was distinguished by an unisual action on the part of the Houset Assembly, of which Mr. Martin was

at that time a member and leader ofhe Democratic minority forces on the

floorThe entire Assembly, Republican

majority joining with the Demooratleminority, went to Governor Fielder1*

fflce to urge Mr. Martin's appointment.

The appointment was made theBame night and was immediately confirmed by the'Senate,

In 1920 Mr. Martini was reappoiatedby Governor Edwafd I. EdwardB. Hlireappolntment on this occasion wasopposed by the Hudson Observeforces, but on that occasion therewere semblances ot decency still re-maining in the Hoboken newspaperattack against a rival newspaper pub-Isher.

Friend of GovernorWhile Governor 811 ser. had never

made any statement committing him-self to the reappolntment 6f Mr.Martin, It had been expecUd eversince the SlUer election In 1922 thatthe Hudson publisher would be bischoice.

Governor Sllter and Secretary ofBUte Martin have been friends for

your paper.

COALGet your coal now and be auured of food clean supply

next winter.We have the be»t ever produced.The time ia ripe and the price i» right-Give us a call; or, at your request, we will call at your

home. .You are auured of a square deal with

RYMSHA & CO., Inc.Dealers in Coal, Wood and Ice

989 State St. Tel. 1313 P. A. MAURER, N. J.We also carry a large stock of Locust and Cedar

Fence Posts.

R. A. HIRNERFuneral Director aadExpert Embalnwr i I

The only full; equipped and up-to-date Undertaking Establishment totown.

Fair Traatmmt to AIL

Office Phone—264.Residence Phone—289.

Homemade Crullers andDoughnuts like motherused to make.

Ask your grocer.

HENRY DOMHOFFCARTERET

WOODBRIDGENEW YORK

CANDY KITCHENManufacturer* and Dealers tn

OANDIB8 AND IOB ORKAM

71 Mala St. T*l. 43

IB Tears, ever since Mr. Sllrer servedlu the Senate and Mr. Martin In theAssembly, back in the days whenWo%drow Wilaon was Governor.

When Mr. Hilcer was nominatedfor Governor in 1922 be invited Mr.Martin to manage his campaign in thenorthern part of the State, and onmore than hne occasion had given evldeuces of appreciation that IndicatedhlB Intention of rewarding him with athird term for Secretary of State.

Illu first HUtement, either publicor nrlvate, in that connection, camethe day after the first McMahon at-tack was made, and It was in iiwordB—the letter that went to theSenate with the appointment.

Designers of Store and Office Futures

Mill Work of the Beat Kind

GreenwalcTs Woodmilling Co.MANUFACTURERS OF FINE MILL WORK

Telephone Port Richmond 1901

HUMPHREYS A RYANHARDWARE

Mab St Woodhridget N. J.Plumbing FlmturM

Wiqter Hardware—Stovet,FurnacM, inA Repairs •

SALTZMAN'S HARDWARIWIRELESS SUPPLIES aad SETS

T l JHOUM

Bai l«W Hardwar.• 1 Mai> Street WoodbrUfe

FLOOR SURFACINGOld Floors Made like New!New Floors Made Perfect I

EUGENE SCflREINER,66 Fulton St., Woodbridgo

Telephone Woodbridge 61

GUSTAV BLAUM

Groceries and Provisions

07 MAIN ST. Woodbrid««

OLIVER B. AMES, I N CELECTRICAL CONTRACTING

Willar« Battery Service•„•> rEAW. Mr.

MAIN ELECTRIC

EUetrit Contractor!

Tel '

FORDS

THIS SPACEFOR SALE

LOUIS MORRISONShoes, Clothinf and General

M h iOpen

Merchandiserj,y Excpt

POBDft, H. J.

FORDS NATIONAL BANK

$326,000

FORDS, N. J.

HANSEN A JENSEN

GENERAL CONTRACTORSEftcav>tlna, Sewariaa;, Grm&mg,

t . r l i n , . f ,U Kfede»«9 CORNELL ST. TeL M4-M

WOODBRIDGENEW YORK CUSTOM

TAILOR

CU.nin, . Prawlnf . RasvirlMSuit* M»de W M~»u'«

Wom.n', l i«r».nu » Specialty«« MAIN ST. WOOD8R1DCE

G. A. FU1LERTON

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impireHigh Average

Rahway House Hag AnothroBill of Great Pictures

For Week THEThe New York Stage

ByWALT K. SWEZEY

wonders sotnftims, what themanagement of the New EmpireThfiitrc, RahwRy, will do m>itt. Whonthe new electric lights that go snak-ing nil over thn front of the buildingwere put into commission people Raid"Well, the Empire is going to looklike Broadway on the outside, any-way." But with scarcely an exceprtion die New Empire has been put-ting Brondway successes on the in-side. Look at the bill for the weekbeginning tonight. RiiRter Keatonin "The Navigator" doubled hund-reds up into knots last night when thepicture was put on for the first tim.It Is the funniest thing- ever. Andit will he repeated tonight. Thenthen- is "Poised," tomorrow; a pic-ture that is so full of suspense, thrillsand excitement that there is not adull moment. Besides, there are theusual five acts of good vaudevillennd some yery fine extras.

For Monday and Tuesday theNew Empire has booked the greatestscreen comedy that has been released"In Hollywood with Potash and Perl-tnutter." This picture dealing withthe famous tharacters created byMontague Glass presents Abe andMawruss in a brand new industryfor them; they are in the picture • literature, the quality for findinggame in Hollywood.jyhere all the big hidden values was essential to his

work. .So "Tangletoea" finds herwinsome pensiveness hag flung her

ERSTHE SHOW GIRL AGAIN.

("Tangletoet," an Edmund Plohnproduction, at the Thirty-ninth StreetTheater.)

"Tangletoes" is a show frirl. Whenyou get acquainted with her, she'sfound to he quite as effervescent asher sparkling name, yet somehowstrikingly appealing in a- mute, un-der-tonish sort of way. That's prob-ably why Morgan Farley is supposedto marry her. , As a book reviewerchiefly concerned with contemporary

picture stars live. The mix-ups theyt i t ith d h t t t

into matrimony's swamp.It seldom does for a "Tangletoes"

to marry, and as for a marriage witha boot reviewer—Gosh 1 Well, "Tan-gletoes" is full of pep and isn't wildabout the speedy times her book critic

"J*nic« Meredith Hat Men Of26th Ai Heron Of '76

History went backward when oftVhubby gives her in the form, of long \ cera ndi enlisted nn-n of the old Twen

dicates that. It is an old story with J every sense of that phrase." Couldsome new angles and a modern set-ting.

you blame the poor kid for seeking

'or You, My Boy," the other pic-ture for Wednesday. It is a fatherand sot* story of sacrifice, misunder-standing and a final clearing up ofcrimes and mysteries.

Thursday and Friday will be event-ful to Empire fans when the greatbaseball picture "Life GreatestGame," is presented. It is an officialbaseball picture but there are otherthrilling events. For instance, thereis an actual scene of the sinking ofthe Titanic, one of the most marvel-ous scenes ever depicted upon thescreen.

The Empire announces the com-ing on Saturday of anoth«r super-picture, "The Atr Hawk," and inthe near future Douglas Fairbahkswill appear in the "Thief of Bagdad."

outside pleasure?As a dramatic reviewer with a

p p y«et into with vamps and whatnot putsinto the shade all the funny adven-tures they had in the cloak and suitbusiness.

On Wednesday, double feature daytwo remarkable pictures will beshown. Of these Mae Busch in "TheWoman Who Sinned," is porhar/s the j c .._most sensational. The title alone in-1 evenings of literary consumption—in ; ty-sixth Infantry, quartered ut Platts-11 • " - .. . . - • burgh Barracks, portrayed soldiers of

Washington's army in "Janice Mere-dtih," the thrilling Cosmopolitan pro-duction starring Marion Davies, whichis now playing at the Dithmas The-atre, Perth Amboy. It was a case ofthe boys of the 26th playing boys of'76, and the men thoroughly enjoyedtheir debut as motion picture tcors,

•Approximately one thousand menfrom the Twenty-sixth Infantry tookprt in the scenes of the Battle ofLexington and Trenton, the occupa-tion and evacuation of Philadelphia,the surrender of Yorktown, and thecolorful scene in a Boston CoffeeHouse. They were augmented by 400cavalrymen from Fort Ethan Allen.Soldiers also appeared in the gorge-ous scene at the Court of LouiB XVIat Versailles.

The Swell Uniform* of '76When equipped with uniforms and

MATINEE

10c—-20c

f\ CADE'S T\

STRANDPERTH AMBOY

EVENlHOv

2Or,2S«,J

Under Personal Direction of Walter Resile. A. S. Flagg, Res. !

oAhiCg MEBSSlfcl

Why Not Have aNew York City Addreu?You will be surprised how little

you will have to pay for an ad-dress in the heart of the financialdistrict, where mail intended foryou may be sent. Write for re-quirements. Address Room 440,Dept. R, 98 Park PI., New YorkCity.

conscience, we could not, and justas we decided that she was all to themustard, this "Tangletoes," we dis-covered that we were enjoying thislittle comedy immensely. There area few extra long steps for the imajri-nation in "Tangletoes," especially forone who is on speaking terms withthe show business, but the completedproduct makes darned good entertain-ment and you may believe us, too.

SHADES OF THE CAMPUS.

("Two By Two," a new comedjr,at tli* S*lwyn Theater).

Do you remember your rollickingcollege theatricals? Do you remem- - , - „ . _ber when the "speed" of the campus! a r m g of t n e "Revolutionary soldiersand the champ female impersonator | 8 n d afte r exchanging their khaki foiwould bring "the house down with : the buff and blue of the boys of "7C

their deft handling of each particu-larly farcical "big scene?"

If you do, you will, perhaps, enjoy"Two By Two" considerably morethan one whose memory is not sotaxed.stance,

This show never, for one in-would impress any person

who can speak the English languageas a thing to rest on Broadway, oreven on 224th street. It's a farco,all right, and it has big possibilities,but what do you care about that,

MAPJOM CtfVlES - JANCk M£R£CUTW

NEW EMPIRE THEATREIRVING STREET, RAHWAY, N. J.

The Newest, Niftiest Theatre in the State

For the present the policy of the New Empire will be as follows!Super Photoplays Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. DoubleFeature Wednesday. Photoplay and Five Acts of Vaudeville onSaturday. Matinees daily at 2 :S0—Evenings* 1 and 9 p. m., Satur-day, 7:30. Seats can be reserved by phone for Saturday EveningPerformance.

TODAY (Friday) March 6—

BUSTER KEATON in "THE NAVIGATOR"It'll twist you into sailor's knots of laughter. An ocean of fun.

Twenty thousand leagues of hilarity in a submarine. Buster onwater and under water and always screamingly funny.

Htl Roach Comedy—"Hello Boy"Ben Turpin in "The Animal Trainer"

Special show given by Joe Simons' Shifters Club of 800 members.EXTRA—One of "The Go-CetUn." — Topic of the Day.

Matinee, 3 p. m.; Evening, 7 and 9 p. m.

TOMORROW (Saturday) March 79th—

CHARLES HUTCHISON in "POISON"There's a thrill In every second—excitement every minute,

there's romance, mystery and suspense that will hold you sp«llbound.'3rd Series of "Croit-Word Puiile"

"Go-Gettert"—"Never the Train Shall Meet"

5 ACTS OF REFINED VAUDEVILLE

MONDAY and TUESDAY, March 9 and 10—

"IN HOLLYWOOD With POTASH and PERLMUTTER"The World's Greatest Comedy Characters

In a comedy of the movies—from Cloaks and Suits to filming"Beauts" with

Alexander Carr, George Sidney,Vera Gordon, Betty Blythe,

and a bevy of Hollywood peaches.Extra—Fable* and Kinogr&ms

WEDNESDAY, March 11 —

DOUBLE FEATURE DAY"A WOMAN WHO SINNED"

With Ma« Butch"FOR YOU MY BOY"

A Showman's Picture for Showmen—with an All Star CastLarry Semon Comedy

THURSDAY and. FRIDAY, March 12 and 13—

Emory Johnson's Mighty New Melodrama—"LIFE'S GREATEST GAME"

Racing along the heights of emotion at nerve-wrecking pace—surging to dramatic clash, after dramatic clash, Hweeping to u tre-mendous climax with a background of sixty thousand frenzied fans—a giant tribute to baseball and human nature!

The first and only official'baseball picture aver filmed.Presented by a Brilliant Caat of Character*

EXTRAS: Cameo Comedy—"{The Mad Ruth"Earl Hunt's Cartoon—"Th« Artirt1. Model"

• • • • • ~ ~ " - " • " \ i — — " — - — • — —

SATURDAY—nHE AIR HAWK"

ythe men found the change rather uncomfortable, although decidedly col-orful. Powdered wigs, gold braid,shiny nickle plated buckles offered astriking contrast to the trim khakithey were accustomed to wearing,and as one of the men said, tangledup with his white wig and gold braid,"If this was what a private had towear, I'm glad I wasn't a general.It's a shame spoiling these wonderfuluniforms crossing the Delaware, allright."

The Twenty-sixth Infantry is oneof the oldest and most honored mili-tary organisations in the UnitedStates,

Movio Kietes Have No"Kick," Say* Constance

"Movie kisses do not have the emo-tional reaction which they seem tohave on the screen," says ConstanceTalmadge.

'There is absolutely no privacybout a motion picture kiss, and forhat reason all of its charm is lost."

Constance's latest First Nationalomedy is "Her Night of Romance."instance's leading man is Rolandolman. Albert Gran, Sidney Bracy,oseph Dowling and Templar Saxelsu are in the cast. She wears aeautiful array of new gowns. Theicture will be the feature attractiont the Ditmas Theatre, Perth Amboyext Monday. It is a fast-movingomedy, involving an English lord,London money lender and an Amer-

can heiress.

since they are'nt even half workedout?

LADIES OF THE STREETS.("The Night Hawk," with Mary

Newcomb, at the Bijou Theater.)There certainly is an epidemic of

plays pointing out the tragiei beautyin the position of the lady who "justdoesn't think too much" as JeanneEagles would say. Dawgonit, can'tthe fair sex be interesting and holdthe center of the stage without beingprofessional bummers?

Nevertheless, "The Night Hawk" isone ef the better of the soul studiesof them that have no souls (not orig-inal). Mary Newcomb is certaintyone of the. prettiest stars Broadwaycan boast of, and that—well, look aall the choristers who aren't stars.There are 'two things in favor.

Mary plays the part of a dame thaihas waxed old in due, course of thstrenuous necessities of her life. Noabashed by the oncoming cold ahouder, she gets a surgeon-friend ti"remold" her into something m

Raisethem all

mblematic of spring. Whereuponhe drama starts, and solid, interestjj drama it proves, too.Mary Newcomb Is worth going to

see, and so is the play, that makes iunanimous. Review adjourned.

OH AGONY!("The Virgin of Bethulia," a i

comedy presentation by the Meatrt«...k~.t .i >k. \ _ i . . . . . j TL...-.\

Matinee—2 and 3:30—Children, 10c; Adults, 20c.Evening—7 and 9—Orchestra, All Seats', 85c; Balcony, Ado

?M; Children, 20c.Saturday Continuous—Evening Prices Pmall,

TODAY and TOMORROW, FRI. and SAT.,

Big Double Feature

^'TOMORROW'S LOVE~With AGNES AYRES

An ideal romance, running the whole gamut of'

human experiences; a startling story of a pilgrimage of}|

love through three generations; the relentlessness of

of compensation, a story that will reach out to the heart-!

strings.

Also

Harry Myers, Wanda Hawley and Sylvia Breamer

in "RECKLESS ROMANCE"From the Broadway Stage play:

"WHAT'S YOUR WIFE DOING?"

Are you in love? Don't marry the girl till you'V«'|]

seen RECKLESS ROMANCE, the side splitting

comedy.Pathe Newt .

< • •

(lONDAY and TUESDAY—

James Kirkwood and Lila Lee in

" ANOTHER MAN'S WIFE"' Comedies

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY—

Hope Hampton in

"Let 'Er Buck"In "Let 'Er Buck," Hoot Gibson

ilaya the part of a Bob Carson. Whenhe story opens he ia a cowboy on -

jig cattle ranch in Texas. A ro-mance has sprung up between Hootand the ranch owner's daughter,played admirably by Marian Nixon.This earns for Hoot the enmity ofthe foreman, Through a scheme ofthe latter, Hoat is made to believehe has killed his rival. He flees, tobecome a hobo who beats his way asfar as Pendleton, where he is ejectedfrom the brake beam and finds him-self in Jibe center of the. impendingRound-Dp.

Get* Into Contest.Wandering to the arena where

cowboys and horses are practicingstunts. Hoot becomes involved introuble with the foreman of a ranchowned by a woman, portrayed byJosie Sedgwiek, one of the most dis-tinct Western types of women inscreen work. The foreman knocksthe supposed hobo down as thewoman owner comes into the scene.Encouraged by her apparent support,Hoot administers 'a fine thrashing tohis new enemy.

you remember the most beautiful, themost perfect, the most sublime theat-trical entertainment you have ever

Shubert at the Ambassador Theatre)Do you remembe'r the play tha .

made you applaud and applaud and seen.applaud at its finish? Do you re-, If you tan, stick to your memoriesmember how you sighed with its tre-1 and stay away from the sexy pot-mendous dramatic bits and shook con-vulsively with H! controlled mirthwhen it wanted to make you? Do

pourri mentioned between the paren-theses above. You can take that asan honest observation, too.

URGE BREAD BAKERIES USE GAS FOR FUELFINDING MANY ADVANTAGES OVER COAL

FcHlCK UstUtTEBel

The nutritious oatmealbase and the cod liveroil scientifically com-bined right with it,just pours strengthand vitality into thechicks and they growlike sixty. Get yourFul-O-Pep today,

Manu/acfuiW by .

6For $aie by

Dealer's Nameor Dealer* Everywhere

Ri|OST ut tha largu tmiuri liukiiiK companies in the stutu usf

gag Ub tut'l ful- their baking uvuub,ruBciirch having. pruveil to themthat guH is the perfect fnul forthin purpose.

The photograph shows tbe de-livery end of one ot thn bruudtmklug oveua in a New Juraeyplant of a large baking company.TIIH ovum embody tha Ittut wordia deuigu and are linec\ with whltntilt.. There Is ueltber dirt uor dustand a comparatively small force ofmen Ut required to operuUi the*.The ovuna are of the continuouscouveyur typo, the dough bulngplaced In pans ou a heavy platecuavuyor which carries the pansthrough the oven at a regulatedrate of ap«e<l.

ApproxIniaWly, gevunty fas burn-ers are placed above the htmrthuud about tie aane uuuiber underIt. The beats or temperatures otfh£ oven «re eaatly controlled, a

(a41o»t(ft« t |* temper*

through a cumpruHsor, 1Bilullveml to tht! humors uudtir

An inturijallng unitpateQted featurn of theau burnerala au arrangement wfeereby a contlnuouB rlaina la uecurud acrosstho oven, so that one side of theoven will not be warmer than theother and cause uneven baking. Afurther ' refinement in constructionof the burners permits the gunflame to burn In an atmoaphere ofsteam, as steam Is usually Intro-duced Into tbe oven during Uu)baking.

A unique system of lighting thegas burnttre Is «ny>loy<vl. At eachburner Is u fixture which gives auelectric spark every six aecoudu;lq lighting the oven, therefore, ItIs ueceanAry to turn on only Uiomain gas valves and proas thebutton to start the sparks at theuurmirs. TUB spark also matesIt Impossible tor the gas to re-main ituignltsd. A" »u additionalsafeguard, a valve U provided

automatiually shut* ofl tin

The Price of a Party"

DITMASPERTH AMBOY—Tel. 2796

TODAY and SATURDAY—

MARION DAVIESw

IN

MONDAY—TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY

CRESCENTPERTH AMBOY—Tel. 2SS

TODAYHOOT GIBSON in

"Lt'er Buck"Let'er BuckFeaturing Scenes from the 1924 Pendleton Round-Up / i l

5 GREAT ACTSVAUDEVILLE

READE'S

MAJESTICTHEATRE, PERTH AMBOY

TOMORROW (Saturday)—

GREAT ACTS £ |VAUDEVILLE

FEATURE PHOTOPLAYCorinne Griffith and Conway Tearl«

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PACK EIGHT

Before The Crowd Got There The Popular GirlB,THOMASARKLECLARK

it D o n of Men, UniTer.Uy of

t h e C a p i t o l ,m o n i e s IH'III t h e n

M I I I M . K T O N did not return to col-l w nftcr HIP ChlMmns vacHtlnn.

Me WHS 'limn In his M miles, Ills In-structors HMJ<1 . his father dli1 not wishhim Iff continue, he told the fellows}lie hud arrepted s jmnUlon, the collegejiaper announced; hut the real factswere thnt It was n girl—a very popn-l«r ftlr!, who hail ruinwl Mtddleton nndput nn en<l tn his college education.

She was a yretLj elrl with,pleasantmiiiinero and stylish clothes and aready flow of talk snd exemplarymnrni.—ir her clothes had b«sn alittle l ew correct and her moral* alittle lew eiemplary, «be might hartb«en leas dangerous. From the timeahe had entered the high school shehad k*pt r> string of fellows about her,and she had played them adroitly,

is a ch i s (> -u |> v i cuv ( if t h e (<rii]i<l s t a n d b u i l t i n f r o n t o f , ski l l ful ly , and with a *^<Iy eye r.o

Washington, especially for the inaugural cere-1" --««-«•"-»«

t h i s

her own selfish Interests. If one evertried to break away she melted Imme-diately and jrnve him the ImprewiloB

*d on hli coming whenever She hacfc-nned, and, too wMk to re«l*t her, sh«rnadu life for him n cnnnlNnt nnrrr-Ulntj and hell which he left collectto rid hlnnelf <'f.

Snrh a man In wenk, yon Ray. F'pr-haps,. Bnt H renl wmrmn might hnveXrengthenert him, *n<-niir«K«l him, setfor him tdenls, or, hest of all, sliemight hare let him alone.

There are many such girls withpretty faceg and cursedly attractiveclothes, Incapable of renl feeling andIncapable of »n unaelfltih thought.They come out nnncathPd, many peoplethink, from these social escapadea, butIt 1« not true. They pay—every oneof them. Sometimes the time of pay-ment la long deferred, but they payto the lait farthing, cruelly, far morethan their little petty popularity andpleasures are worth. Wli«n they cometo the ftolnt of wanting friends thereare none; when they want love andreal devotion they are gone; throughtheir trifling with sacred emotionsthey become Incapable of feeling orappreciating such emotions, and theend If loneliness, unhapplness --•*B*flect

and

DOUBLE

"S. k H."

GREEN

STAMPS

on

SATURDAY

DOYLE & CUNNEENSpot ShopPhone 803

' TBS3M1TH STREET PERTH AMBOY, N- J .

w«ISSUE

•nd

REDEEM"S. * H"

LEARN TO TRADE AT THE SPOT SHOP AND SAVE MONEYAll Can and BUMS Paw Our Door

Up-To-Date Full Dresi and Tuxedos to HireOpen Evenings Except Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday Until Further Notice

We Do Cleaning, Pressing, and Repairing by Experts

Stetson Hats

Dollar Day at the Spot ShopBeginning Tomorrow-Saturday-and

Continuing all Next WeekTHIS IS THE WEEK OF BARGAINS

$1$1

>rtment

$1[andi—

$1

Men'. Neck Band ShirliSlightly Soiled; 2 for..

Collar Attached ShirtiWhite or Striped, each

Men'i Silk Tie*—Good assortmentof patterns;2 for

Men'* Pure Silk Four in HandiHundreds of them;2 for

M«n'» Summer Union Suitt—GoodPin Check NainsookSizes 34 to 36; 2 for

Men's Btlbriggan Union SuitLong or short sleeves; ankle orknee length;each

Men'i Sutpenden—Reg. 65c gradeGood fresh stock; wide or nar-row web;2 pair v'-

50c Silk Soft Collan, 35c;

3for

Reg. 20c Peque and Madra. SoftCotlart,8 for

$1c gradeor nar-

$1

Semi-Soft Collar*—Bilt Right, Ar-row and Lion Brand;B for

Men's Grey Cotton WorkSweaters; 2 for

$1>• Soft

Si;ht, Ar-

$1$1

Ref. 69e Wool SportPlain or fancy styles;2 pair

Socks

$139c Men's Silk Plaited

Socks; 3 pair $129c Men'i Heather Work

Socks; 4 pair $1

fhiit h« w a s th« only one for whom•he had really cared. nn<1 ho uRiiHllynwlierl tini'lc Into her trnln. ,

When Mnrton enterort rollprrc he wnsnnd p i v e promise of nn <•*

rpcnrd; hut #lie wns nttrn.ti-itby him, and he no sooner m i n e underher Influence than ha lost nil ambition.H(> won wild after her, spent Mimoney on h«r, and. neglected every-thing to be wrth her. She would neverlet him alone, ptoyed with him In atnntnllilng way, called him on the tele-phone If he failed to see her, and, thenwhen she had ruined him as a studentand tired of him as a lorer, threw himaside unemotionally and picked upanother Yirtlm.

There had been several of them be-fore Mlddleton came—* »hy, sensitive,tender-hearted boy, easily led, easilydiscouraged, and In lore with the girl.His attention* flattered her, and,though she did not really care for hi").she waa too calculating!? selfish tolet him go. She smiled on him anilalmost Insulted him In turn; she madeengagements with film snd then brokethem without compunction If a moredesired aaeort came along. She count-

NO NEEDFOR THIS

The s tw way, the way lensible women have adopted of doingtheir washing it to phone Perth Amboy 1893 and then forget there issuch a thing as Wash Day. Their laundry it returned by us spotlesslyclean on tke day they want it,

Perth Amboy 1893 % the number of

MIDDLESEX SANITARY LAUNDRYPATERSON AND SECOND STREETS, PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

Our plant it entirely new. We hare only the latest improvedmodern machinery. We use only pure soap. The most delicate fab-ric patted through our cleaning proeettet without the slightestdamage, tn icxtare or color.

We do any kind of laundry work; in whatever manner you desire,such at WET WASH, ROUGH DRY, FLAT IRONED, or FLATWORK. We alto clean and dye Rags and Draperies at moderateprice* and in a most satisfactory manner,

' NOTE: We cordially invite you to visit our plant and convinceyourself that what we .say is absolutely true. This invitation is ex-tended to every woman in Middlesex County.

Each Wash i s done separately. Delivery is made within twenty-four hours. No bundle is too large or too smalt. Phone us to haveour salesman call and explain our service.

Give us a trial to prove our worth and we will be assured ofyour future patronage.

1fMusic Op [)the Week l

Hall and Murray MakeTwo Entertaining

Records

Macco Socks—Black andCordovan; 6 pair .:.. $1

39c Leather Palm CanvatGloret, 3 pair $1

f Soft

$1Men'i Hati—Clearance of Soft

Hats; a goodbargain; each

Men's and Boyt' Caps—A good aa-ment of fine quality Caps thatwe are closing

Reg. 15c Work HandkerchiefBlue, Khaki, Red;10 for $1

Leather Work G l o w and Mitt*—Just the thing forrough work; 2 pair..

out at.. $1 Pioneer Wide WebGarters; 3 pair

$1$1

Another Rare Treat for Men

Soft Hats at $2.95$2.95 is an extremely low price for hats of

this quality! They are perfect in every particu-lar; made of superior grade felt in all the desir-able shapes and colors.

.Silk Lined Hats '.' $3.45 and $3.95•Spring Stetsons are here in all the new

shades—Greys, Tans, Lavender Huesand Powder Blue, at $7.00 and $8.00

Newest Spring Caps $1.50 and $2.00

SPRING SHIRTS-Get aline on these ShirtsWhen you «ee the amart patterns, the snappy colors, and the excellent tailoring,

you'll not hesitate to buy all you want at the following price*:Arrow Colored Soft Pleated Shirts; seperatt

collar and French Cuff '...$2.95Newest French Flannel Shirts, collar attached..* 1.95865 Percale and Madras Shirts will be sold at

this very low price 89cIde Azuretex Cloth Shirta; 2 separate collars. $2.45

In new patterns—with separate collar tomatch; Ide and Liondale; collar to matchshirts „ $1.95,

Imported English Broadcloth, separate collaror collar attached $1.86

New Spring "Ide" Street Line ColUr At-tached Shirts; white and blue $1.4S

500 Men's Shirtsof White Engluh Broadcloth—Tan, Grey, Blue

at $ 1 , 6 5 eachA splendid collection of shirts from every point of view—the result

of a very advantageous purchase from a prominent manufacturer! Allof them were made with exacting care from imported English Broad-cloth of a lustrous, durable character.

Shirts with pre-ahrunk neckbands, French cuffs, centre pleat and fineocean pearl buttons. Sizes 13^ to 17; sleeve lengths 33, S4 and 85.

Sale of Men'* Ready-to-Wear Suit*At the Very Spwial Price of $17.95

Ueguluily $25.00, $30.00—Sizes 3-;i5, 4-36, 3-37, 4-1)8, 3-40

Big Slash in Men'* Winter Overcoats

Reg. $18,00 O'Coats, now $10.00

Reg. $26 and $30 O'Coata, now $14.95

Wendell Hull, tlie first humnn inKcmii! time to timi rnimrthin); nrw Innay n limit tho wont her, tnkos hia"uke" in hand to ting fur n newrecord on the admission "1 Cnuhln'tGet to it in rime." Tftiere'n a lotof clever fun in this piece anil to midIn the merriment Hilly Jfurray occupics the other side with "Oh Mabel,"a recent fo* trnt to which you mayagain dance.

• » *

A Quartet of Fox Trots.Tnclc Shilkrct's Orchestra makes a

vrry finished record of " F a * ami / , "a ilimcc record revealing some unusualmuBirianBliip. " Will You RtmvmberMr?" liy Waring's Penntylvanians isn rnbiiRt nnd joyous number, reveal-ing n (lute.

flonrgp Ol»™ :md His Muxic reeord•for iliinpors "Noboiiy Know What a

Urd-Ilrad Mamma fun Do," utiliiinffnmti-tl trumpetn nnd other reeerit er-fefts. " / Cnn't Slop Babying V"ou"by C'hnrlM IlornlH'rKt'r nnd His Or-chestri\ is n crin]i mul Rniippy fox trotwith 'mime good piano work.

msty

The ".ey to SuccestT'ulks WIIM it<>n t tiifcr tliPiiiKplvni too

BPI* insly, font who take their workvery seriously, are bound to succeed.

mm"after every meal"Parents'- mcoange the

children to cert fbrtMrtetihfGive them W r l g l e y s .It remove* iood particle*from die teeth. Strengthen*the ftuau. Combats acidmouth.BefreiMnt MMI beneficial!

SEALEDTIGHTKEPTRIGHT

Tliis Week'sSix Victor Hits!Billy Murray, Wendell Hall

OfcM.fe.11 CwU'nt Ct lo II in Taw

Victor Rteord No. I9HI.

Jack Shilkret and HU OrtheitraWarinf'i PemtvlTaniani

Tan and I -F« Tm (h— M, o f )Wffl You RMHolxr M . I - F « Tnt

Victor R«ofd No. ltJ7l.

George 0U«n and His MuskCharles Doraberf er and His Orchwtrt

N«U<tT Knm What t lUd Hud M w .Can Da-FoTnt

I Ctn'l Stop Babrbii Y«a-Fn Tr«Vietot FUcoid No. 1VM0.

LEWIS PIANO COMPANY54 Roosevelt AvenueCARTERET, N. J.

v Next to Chrome Movies,

DR.HUMPHRIY3'

5Prompt Relief for

I-

5 Down

More thanwomen dependHoover to keep their homesthoroughly clean.

is all you need to pay to have thisbrand-new latest model Hoover de-livered to your home on our

Divided Payment Plan

Because the monthly payments that follow areonly $5.50 each, there ia every reason why you shouldorder your Hoover today.

^ •1,500,000on the

Men'* Suits Made to Measure from the Woolen* of 1925Tlic.o Fabrics—Cheviot*, Wor.tedi, UnfinUhect W«r(ta4>, Flannels, Cauimsr*>, Sergei, T V M J Il Wor.teJ.. 'These me the woolens that will be worn during 1926, by the smartly dreased man of affairs. They

the woulens that are now being made up by gooij tailors throughout America for their Spring andmer business. In light weighto, in medium weights, in heavier weights. There are hundreds of pattern* f

hoom from, yuiiies, Checks, Herringbones, Plaids.Plain Blues or Grays, Browna, Tans, Lovats Heathersnity! • •

The Hoover combines thethree essentials of cleaning— beating', sweeping, air-cleaning — in one* simpleoperation. !

Hoover smaller size $55.

SimplexElectric Iron

$4.50All steel plug, air-cooled

guard, where plug is attached,and an air cooled rest stand arespecial features of this SimplexIron.

It heats quickly, stays hot fora long time with current turnedoff, making it an economicaliron.

The Simplex Iron isBuilt for Service.

$4.50

The RightMazda Lamp

means no glare and noshadows. White orfrosted Mazda lampsbanish the glare. Theright Mazda lampswill do away withshadows.

Come in and let ushelp you select thelamps that will giveyou the best light.

PrettySpringtimeFrocks

can be quickly made if

there Is an electric

motor attached to your

sewing machine!, A

boon in making Cur-

tains, hemming sheets

and table linens.

A Changeof MenuWanted

If you'd bring restto flagging appetites,serve waffles that arecrisp and golden, rightoff the iron.

A good electric waffle

iron is priced at i\2.

New Tricks inBreakfast Planning

Ada Besale Swann. dlrector o( our Home EQO-nomir* Department, beUev«B In atmrtlMy tb« dayright, and to ahe bM de-cided to broadcaat break-fast menut that are newand delieioua. Tune tcStation WAAM—on T Wday and Friday moraiugiat elefen.

B LOT 1

Order Your Spring Suit Now—Save Money

LOT 2

Woul Suit to Measure.

•w

Fancy Striped Worsted, Trueiluo Berg«, to Mtuxure.

$33 00

LOT 3

Special Terms OfferThor Electric Washer

for only $ 5 DownEighteen Months to Pay Balance

To be able to dd yourself of wash-day problems for sosmall a sum is unusual.

Imported German and )?retifhBlue Serges and Silk Mixed FrenchBack Wooleruj, to Measure.

$40 ra $45*6 Days D«di»«ry

Fi«Mt Lining* and Trivuniuft Uwd

, y t h e H u r 1 ^ M " W n eTT!? ^ largeBt concern in the world man-ufacturinf domestic washers.

?i. ,'1U B P M d y «P«p»t»«S **• Bubstan; the specW, patented gwrs that are g U M MwwJiUnoiv and it«wpwior flolsh

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"KILL TWO BIRDSWITH O f f STONE"

I'M PLACING.

CPV,"TERCW,

dOST WA\TTIU

UNCLE- BILLI'M QOiNG To GETUP \H "WAT "TREE

MEAN BYAny $ucREMARK?

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EFPOrn?S By F. LEIPZIGER

MY I'M LATEROOM! T W R ! , MOTHER

NW DIA.M0MO LAVALU£f t6 Wl. AIMi. Po4ir\Vf=', ANDW ' T LftT W MAKE:

I 8 *0 ITHBRE ON TH£

ANONOW

FIND ITAMVWH

WITH THii CAPTH1S ,I3IPA.MINa/TO DWqi/ISE. MYSELF

A i A DBCOfcATOK "ps DO

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cone out of

5H0RT 5KIRT6DcoMe!

We'u. 60

f\' i^

GRUMPWjy'i

THf TAU« OP ANBRlCKr—»

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