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<ip«r»< CARTERET PRESS SHOP THE ADS I E T O U M OSHOP THE STORES-
FIND IT SAVES
YFAROLD MANs HEAVY F H
>R! FWD CONDUCT
nnvinc\, rested For An-(iirU In Park;
lified By 15
IS ARE REPORTEDi ; Paul Stevko,
i. IVmhlng Avenue,c.'iH) by Recordern Wednesday night
...;,•(! on a charge ofii, wan given an tier
. "f «ix months in thoi, it paid the fine.ih police had been
» man a id to be an-: Hid women at theofficer John Hsrrigan
, k'> nn Tuesday when,ni at the park near arh there. One of the
ih-ntlfied him as thei , l been annoying her-lulu, and when 8t#vko
i to headquarters fif-mlled in by Chief
i.lcntiAed him as the> iH wnnoyed them.
\ kjtfki, seventeen, olstreet, is awaitlnit sei:IK theft of a bicycle
w MKIKO, one from Rah„ from Perth Aroboy; anl from the UlmaVia wrist watch from a
H'I.'IT Charles Makwin,i the youth for th<
•m watch, nhich he wa?,• i hi' timt-, and the oth
were recovered whei: investigated.
, M r.inis reported to theiiiwppctrance of hi
.n.lry Autocowiti, oi >, formerly of Cartcr-
,i> dollars ho had sentihuin OR a loan. An-
iitiiini'd the money, hiJisuppeared, and leftuk at the Port Read-
,1 ntntiun. Ludwlf Hal-liurlingUm Street re-mill lust a check formil received from the
Insurance Company.i iM'il the cheek before
Parishioners To Bid Sad FarewellTo Father MuUigan Here SundayPortor Of St. Joseph's ChmthFoT Last Eitht YearsReaches Farewell Sermon Sunday; Goet To Trenton
OARTERET, N. •!., FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1989 PRICE THREE CKOTl
. . . . , , - of S. Joseph's Church ortestimonial banquet this week to Rev. Joseph A
MulliKau, their pastor for the past eight years, who Willhis farewell sermon on Sunday. At the servicfr'tant
rathpt- Mulligan announced his transfer from Car-t h l - I ^ l ! r r h o f ""'y Algols, in Trenton, where he
will take up hi* new dutien next
Farewell!et
week. He said he would, likely besucceeded here by two priestsfrom the Servite Fathers, of Chi-
Father Mulligan
V.I'A Ctiwk
MI lm> been found of thetole a WPA salary< mlomed, from Ed-
i < colored, of 37 M«cetweek. He told police
•.•i..r«>(l the check afteri and left It on a tablei iuid missed it after
• -in his day's work. Po-i the check had been1 A colored msn who
ini'tcen cant cap, andi been given changeiinmit balance on the
' r have the check,• 'niui-d on Page 2)
NEW LOW OBTAINEDIN INTEREST RATEON BOROUGH BONDS
i
Bett Price In History OfCarteret Realized On
lime Of $43,000
2.20 ' , WILL BE PAIDTARTKRET — The sale of a
$43,(100 bond issue at thr lowestrate of interest in tho history ofthe bfiroufrh was effected Mondaynight by the Borouith Council. Thepurchasers, J. B, Hanaucr andCompany, of New York, wtil pay2.2*, plus » premium of $f>3.t>4The issue I'nmprised $14,000 fuipark improvement ami $29,000 forroad work.
There were six other bidders for
All members of the pariah willbold A special meetin*, tonight aft-er the Novena services.
The banquet will take placo| SuniUy night In the school audit-i oriiim. John H, Neville and Mm''iirriHiiis A. Sheridan urc jointrlmirinen nf arrangements, withKdwRrd Lloyd HB secretary; Post-
i muster William J. Lawtor, treas-: IIKT and Francis A. Monaghan'•'Imirman of the speakers' com-
mittee.
Other* on the committee arei I'M ward Mullan, Walter V. Quin,Timothy J. Nevlll, John J. Har-niiKton; former Mayors Joseph A.Hermann and Thomas J. Mulvihtll,
I County Purchasing Agent EdwuniU, Heil C. C. Shnrktan, Dr. Louis
liimns, J. J. Dowling, Chief ofj I'lilici' Henry J. Harrington, Royi Hpmii'flsy, Martin Rock, George
Morgan, James Owen, MauriceMahoney, Michael Mahoney,'['human (Juinn, E. S. Quinn, John
•• Donohue, Charles Dalton, PatrickjCimniey, James Burns, HenryI (ireen.I William Conran, Daniel McDonI neII. John Scally, John J. Lyman,] John Ruckriegel, John S. Albight,] .John Cook, John McCarthy, John
Riolly, Garrett Wals-h, AnthonyVan Dusky, John Snufflein, JamesMartin, T. F. Burke and John Su-frrue.
$25,000 "Pay-Off" SiftedBy "Runaway" Grand Jur$Woman's cinfc will Hold Morris Aides Ignored As Inquiry Opens;
tl/*n f> r r- • i iiie<i i • "..
To Be Held In Recreation Center, Roosevelt Ave.By Isabel Lefkr,wit7
CARTERET—The Carteret Woman's cl thirteenth
$ltSr00;) alreadycome sharen forUnited RooseveltLoan Association
pledged tn In-the proposedBuilding andhere, the final
the linns from Newark and
I B HELD HEREferal Service* Conduct*
By Father DiiadoszOn Monday
i;l i l;KT—Funeral services' V^iuay morning ini. family Church for•'l.ikwinski, twenty-nine
11 «n of Mr. and Mrs.;" M.ikwinaki, of 4 .Whit-
I I Mr. Mtkwinskl had•i two years and died
1 K th« bone of hi* pur-H< ' . urvivea also by four
A'lain, WMllmjs, FelixI ' Makwinikl, a»d two
'' Kaiimara RomanowI I 1 Conrt(lnc« Kolin»ki.
Two Prifati' - ><>> waa conducted at a; "f i-eqaiemby the pastor" "I'. Kev. p i , Joseph
-'1 Rev. Tomawewski:: St. JttDes* cemetery,
ria
""lie Lv»cewaki, Gen-ski, Vtierlo No-
MaJrwinski.Pos-
Wasll.
Eoman-
• i ! K T .The funeral of,7plaje Tuewky
, Thf*ervkeRev, J. if, puo-
New York, and lhe Carteret Bankand Trust CompHny of thidborough. Their rates varied from2.40 to 2.751?.
In I'HVcting the sale of thebonds by Council vote Mayor Jo-seph W. Mittuch commented onthe low interest rate as indicatingthe xouiid value placed on thebomlw by investors.
N«w T»nk» SoughtAM application by the Genera!
American Tank Storage anderminal Company, through its
ocal 'liana^er, Fred Plattner, wasreferred to the Council as a wholeThis application \& for the erec-tion of Unks to give a total cap-acity of 600,000 on its property
a»t of Lafayette Street, and fori plant to blend and refine as-ihalt. The implication stated the
tanks would be used to store lubri-cating oils and other products nothighly inflammable. U i« said em-ploymunt would bt given sixtymen for th« cimstruction work.
Joarph Catri WHH awarded r.permit to erect \ garage and three
iolint tanks at PiTshing Avenueand Harris Street.
A resolution was adopted tourn $;)0,O0U ovtr to the custodian
of the nchool funds. Tho tax col-lector reported July collections.mounting to $148,401,62. At-torney B. W. Harrington withdrewthe application of Joseph Kokoiusfor transfer of the, license of Ste-phen Gregor in the Slovak Hill.A new application for the Gregorlicense was filed by Matthew Kon-
JOSEPH DUNCAN, 60,DIES IN NEW YORKRites To Be Conducted At
2 P. M. From Home OfHit Sifter
CARTERET — The funeral ofJoseph Duncan, sixty years old, ol15 Fitch Street, who died Wed-nesday in a New York hospital,will tuk<? place tomorrow aftei-noon at the home of his sister,Mrs. Henry J. Harrington, 19hPershing Avenue. Rev. Orville NDavidson, rector of St. Mark'sEpiscopal Church, will conduct theservtoca at 2 o'clock, and b'urialwill be in St. Michael's Cemetery,Astoria, Long Island. Undertake)J. J. Lyman is in charge.
Mr. Duncan had lived in Car-teret forty-five years and had beenemployed for the past fifteenyean by the American CyanimidCorporation. He was a member ofthe Odd Fellows ,the Exempt Fire-men's Association, tho Forester?In addition t<* Mrs. Harrington heis survived by two brothers, Johiand Thomas .also of CarterH.
meeting in the campaign to raise*25,000 will be held Mondaynight. This meeting will take place
t 8 o'clock at tht office of theresent Roosevelt Building and.oan Association, 17 Cooke Avc-
ie, one of the three associationsn the proposed merger. Tf: oth-r two participating are the
SULLIVAN BURIALTO BE HELD HERELocal Man Dies In Eliza-
beth Hospital AfterBrief Illness
CARTERET—Funeral servicewill be hald tomorrow morning foJohn Sullivan, 68, of lower Roose-velt Avenue, who died in AlexiunBrothers Hospital, Wedr.esda;after H brief' illness. The funera!will be held from thq home of hi;cousin, Mrs. Howard Burns, of 4Atlantic Street, to St. Joseph':Church, where there wiH bemass lit 9 o'clock. Burial will bein St. James1 Cemetery, Woodbridge.
Inspector Frank I.drk.
BuildingBareford reported July building tothe amount of »(J,iSi>0. The record-er reported fines amounting to 44
ollet^ed in July.A tetter from the Board of
Freeholders of Union County, inreply to Carteret's request for atraffic light at H»welwuod Avenueand Lawrence Streot in Railway,mid the matter has been referredto tho road committee ot tn»board.
STUDYING AVIATIONCABTERtJT—Anthony J. '
of 86 Hunson Street,
'mistered in
husthe Casey Jones
SeHool of Aeronautics, 1100 Kay-JOoflj Boulevard, Newark, to pre-ptre for a career in aviation. Mr.Cwbowiw began hia training onjldy l»th and will attwnd the school
fiWirteen moqths. After gradu-B, h« wlti be ready to receive
Rating from thtAuthority. H<
of Newark Prepura
View and the Taxpayers'i.ssociation.
Pledges for these shores arenw being taken and as soon ashe necessary amount has beenuibscribed a new charter will oeissued under the name of theUnited Roosevelt Building andLoan Association, Shares may beibtained in f o u n t s of flOO byiledgea to purchase a half share"he merger committee wishes toitave as many small investorsiledge to take shares as is po»-ible and has invited the public to
attend the meeting.The proposed new association
Jso has pending an application tohave its accounts insured by the
'ederul Savings and Loannee Corporation, a U. S, Gov-
ernment agency, up to the amountqf $5,000 for each individuashareholder. As soon as the neces-sary amount has been subscribeda new charter will be issued forhe United Roosevelt Building and
Loan Association, whose shareswill then be thus insured.
Sewing Project Tt RemainIn Borough, Officials Hear
CARTERET — Practical as-surance that the WPA sewingproject conducted here for sometim would be allowed to re-main in Carteret was given Bor-ough authorities this week byWPA headquarters in Newark.borough Clerk August J. Per-ry was among those who con-ferred with government repre-sentatives on the matter,' andpointed out the difficulties andadditional cost to tho em-ployees if the project weremoved to Railway ,as proposedtwo weeks ago.
The project is not in opera-tion right now, but is expectedto be undertaken again short-ly The eighteen month lay-offrule in effect for WPA employesaffected some of the women em-ployed, and it is expected thesewill be replaced by others fromthe relief rolls.
annual full flower show has been set for Thursday, Septem-ber 7, according to Mrs. Maurice Spewnk, thiarman.
It will be held at the Recreation Center, Roosevelt Ave-nue, corner Carte iff Avenue, at two o'clock.
The schedule of c.laaslficationa follows: 1. Roses, 1 in
mm is PUKED "'""''IN B&L CAMPAIGNFinal Meeting To Complete
Arrangements For Mer-ger Slated Monday
CARTKKET—With the sum of
'I. Asters, 3 inw*e, any color. r\, Marigolds, 3n vase, any kind. 4. Zinnias, 3
in vase, any kind and color. 5.Snapdragons, .'t in vase, any colors.
Gaillardias, :i in vase. 7. Phlox,stalks, any colors. 8. Delphin-
ium, a sulks. !>. Dahlias, largedecorative, 1 in vase. 10. Dahlias,
rdinary, !) in vase, any colors.1. Any annual not mentioned, %
in vase. 12. Any perennial notmentioned, \\ in vase. 13. Houseplants. The foregoing are forspecimen.
The following are for artisticeffect: 14. Arrangement in vase.15. Arrangement in bowl. 16. Ar-rangemept in basket 17. Arrange-ment in kitchen utensil. 18 Minia-ture arrangement, not over sevenInches over alt. 19. Arrangementfor child's tray (only cup andsaucer to be used on tray besidesexhibit. No silver). 20, Any mls-:ellaneouus arrangements.
Matt Be Crown H«r§Any resident of Carteret may
make entries in the show free ofcharge. All flowers exhibited must
Friday With Judge Lyon;All Gambling In County Ordered Stoi
be grown inexhibited for
Carteret. Flowersspecimen must be
grown by exhibitor. Flowers usedin arttatic arrangement* need not
REVERSING ITSELF,BOARD VOTES 9 0 %PAY FOR TEACHERSChecks For May Salaries
Carry lO'.r Waiver;Vote Unanimous
CZEWSKI J.OSES OUTCARTERET—The eight mem-
bers of the Board of Educationvoted unanimously Wednesdaynight to pay the teachers and oth-er employees of the board ninetyper cent of their May salaries.Payment is to be made on^thecheck forms carrying a waiverwhich may be signed by the recipi-ents, over which there was hot de-bate at the special meeting lastweek, the four Democratic mem-bers opposing the use of the formsthe Republicans favoring it,
An attempt to seat StevenCzycwski as a ninth member fail-ed. Mr. C«yewski was .nominatedat the special meeting and car-rid the four votes of the Demo-cratic members. Republican mem-bers, in the minority at that.meet-Ing,' have contended however thathis election waa illegal in tljatthe meeting was called for thespecial purpose of authorizing the
h i l' be grown by exMMtor.
Entrants must furnish their owncontainers and call for them atclose of show. The club will notbe responsible for breakage norfor containers left at exhibitrooms. Entries will be receivedthe morning of the show up to 12o'clock noon. None will be takenafter the judges have arrived.Visitors will not be allowed on thefloor while the exhibits are beingjudged. Prises will be awarded forfirst and second places, honorablemention for third.
Posters are being displayed instore windows throughout the borough, giving dules and particulars.
The first fall directors' meetingwill be held on September 11 at thepublic library at 2 o'clock. Atthat time plans will be made to attend the state fall conference ofthe federation at Asbury Park onOctober 5, The club's openingmeeting will be on October 19, asthe second, Thursday falls on a holi-day.
ATTEND COVETIQN
CA8TERET—School Commis-sioner Ambrose Mudrak ' and R.Louis Brown of lower RooseveltAvenue, left today by motor forPittsburgh, where they will attendthe convention of the YoungDemocrats of the nation.
CARTERET — Borough ClerkAugust J, Perry, Leonard CatriAnd Fred Gombos will leave atdawn tomorrow morning to driveto Cleveland and Akron, Ohio, towitness the All-American Soap-box Derby there on Sunday.
salary payments.-on.-thecheck forms, and that nny othnrbusiness at that time WHS out^ofor,der. A decision from stnte nu-thorities has been sought.
Louis Peterson applied for theposition of janitor. Mrs. MildredDavidson resigned us teacher and
(Continued on Patf'1 2)
2,000 ARElRESENTAT CEREMONY HERESt. Elias'Church Celebrates
30th Anniversary OnSunday
CARTERET—Over U.OOO personswere present Sunday when St-Eliaa Greek Catholic Church cele-brated its thirtieth anniversarywith special masses on the churchlawn, followed in the afternoonand evening by a picnic and dance.
A special feature of the celebra-tion was the music at the high
This was arranged and pre-sented by the choir director, Prof.Paul Jatzko, and the church pus-tor, Rev, Alexis Medvecsky cele-brated the high mesafc
The masses were conducted ut9:30 and l l :?0A. M. on tht! churchlawn with Rev. Mark Hojos, pastorof St. Elizabeth Hungarian Church,preaching the Hungarian sermon;Rev. Daniel Medvecsky, of Man-ville, son of Rev. Alexis Medvec-sky, pastor of St. Elms' Church,delivering the English sermon, andRev. Julius J. Oi gasny, pastor ofSt. Nicholas' Church, Perth Amboy,the sermon in Russian.
NF.W BRUNSWICK—The "run-away" Grandwhich held its first extraordinary session yeaterdcysrartMl the big Kamblern and bankers of the numberout of operation.
It wan impossible to place a bet on the number* h|Woodhridge Township or Oarteret yesterday, all. IOMI'
ngents reporting they had been tipped off not to.wrttl*'any more slips "for a while." Similar reports alao cam* IB •from the rest of the county as the April term jury sat etafe^cted for three hours in New Brunswick in awhich names of many figures high in public life werttMV*tioned. 1
F m Major Topics 1:Strict secrecy surrounded the deliberation*. lhM|'
sources regarded as unquestionable, however, this'paper learned the following subjects were discussedwill be referred to Judge Adrian Lyon a weellc' from todaffor advice and guidance:
1 The wide-open operation of the number* racketin which cigar and confectionary •tare*, gro-
cery and barber shops take bets without molestation)2 Reports that $25,000 was paid to "someone"
of influence to permit transfer of mob bead-quarters to Middlesex from one or two northernties.
O Alleged break-down in law enforcement in <of the largest municipalities in the county, in
a manslaughter case by automobile.A Circumstances surrounding the raid by State
Police of the famous Burlew's restaurant inwhich scores of arrests were made and trucklo«4agambling paraphernalia were seized;
C Existence of scores of book-making parlon"throughout the county in full view, and with
the apparent consent, of authorities.Prosecutor, Aides Not Called
Wide-spread conjecture which accompanied the aa->nouncement the jury would convene and would not inviUfProsecutor Charles Morris to be present has swept intoevery corner of the county. The meeting yesterday Waiclosed to everyone except the members of the pane), an<|most attempts to learn from them what had transpire^ wer4fruitless. It w.is learned that only three jurymen wetfiaware of the matters to be discussed before the MasiotLVactually got under way.
Neither Mr. Morris nor his two assistants, Jafies 9^Wight and George Applegate, were called into the,delierations, and word from the Prosecutor's office was thafno-one knew what was to transpirei
Reporters for The Independent-Leader were inform-ed, however, that the Grand Jury will discuss such evidence 'or plans as it may have with Judge Lyon next Friday and 'attempt to decide whether it will launch a full inquiryduring the few remaining days of its life, or merely haoi 'up u presentment to the incoming jury and a recommeadftk *tion that Justice Clarence E. Case charge the new panel-^',1
the points discussed,. Under the statutes, a grand Jg Jycannot exist beyond the period1 for whjch it was aeattfand a new body will be seated next month 4. * *iand a new body will be seated next month.
Take ' In Township $700 Daily , „Middlesex County long has been a notorious center of
trafflking in the numbers, or so-called "nigger pool," Inone municipality alone there are at leant a dozen stores andshops where the slips are written and it has been conserva*tively estimuted by those close to the bankers that the daily,
M
Mr. Sullivan was born in Ire-land and had been a resident ofCarteret for thlrty-flvf years. Hewas employed for many by thePublic Service Corporation at >tspower station in Hudson Street,but for tho past twenty years hadconducted a radio, bicycle andelectric appliance shop In thi'Chrome section. In addition toMrs. Burnt he is survived only bya brother, Michatl,, who lives inIreland.
lady Falcoiu To See Fait;To Make Trip Aagutt 27th
CARTERET—Members ol theUdy Falcons will visit the World'sPair, Sunday, August 27, goingby bus. Plans were mad* at thomeeting Wednesday night, when achenille bedspread was awardedMrs. Marie Desmlnoe of SslqmAvenue.
UNDEKQO13
Martlndak oJMSmMOft Stt«4t is apattlnt In St. S lJ^bo^ . tu^Wwhert the underwent aa
" " " " " ' "
Derby Winner, Tkr§edAtVictory, OnHis Way TodayTo Represent Carteret In Bid For National Title
CARTERET—Winning th* trip to Akron,Ohio, in »ae« in lk« All-Amsriw" SoapboxD.rby w i t Sunday wa» th. thrill ol alo Barnard (Bunnf) K»th«,champipu. B»t it wai no bi|i*r thrill than U»one he got by winning > bet throufb winninjthe race, held ner« two wook* ago, and he Jo.tno urn* in collecting the forfeit for his Vte-tory. He painted heavy black mu»tacb,e| «•Cwimir Karpimky Mid George Kunha, andthen joined in tht Uufhter at their wUwd e»-p««mncal ' <
* t * »
Bunny left tbjt morning at daybreak withAlfred Wohlgomuth, 1. Robert F«ri.» and hiefaher, LeiiU K»th», to drlr* to Akron, whereB»n«y wlU rae* ehampiom from all over lheUaltvd Statei »nd from teveral other <eun-tr1« »l.o. Mr. W«hl««milh, of the Economy
• 0»r«g«, local ChetroUl de#ltn, and Mr.
box Derby, will represent thii newtpuper atAkron and chaperons the locel entrant. Bun-ny'* fold-colored racer hat bren lettered withthe iitnu "Carteret Pre.i," and all^othe* 4a-tranti will represent their home town news-paper*. The racet locally and for the finalchainpioruhip era ipomored by th* newipapenin conjunction with the Chevrolet MotorCompany and itt lecal events.
« • *' •
Bunny, thirteen year* old, it an ardent BoyScout and, belong, to Troop »7 of St. Mark'tChurch. Next month will be hit 2nd •nnirert-ary at a £cotit, a«d for the patt fcew wee1ii hehat been one of th* group (U«p.l«f outdoonnightly in the big Unt ersctid at Brady'.Field. Thar* tht hoys U»e ei «]o*» to natureat poi.lhle awl carry an (heir |0o«ting »ctiy.lti*i j u t a* tfeough they w«m ipllet deon inthe wood*. Rafn or oth»r h*4 wuihe'r hatn'tholheretl thtUt- »».</ a qUMlii^M to whether
(Cmtim*4 m
sJiti£toiL&'
take" in this municipality averages as much asday, On a couHty-wide scale, thia total would be ^many timea. \ ' r*M
The alleged "tip" on the $25,000 "bribe," was said I M \to have come from a columnist on u New York tabloi*E|newspaper, and obviously could not be readily sifted. ""'in one of the most important points the jurymen coered yesterday, it was rumored, and will be the subjtof primary consequence in the discussion with Judge Lyoij;
Considerable.talk at yesterday's hearing, reliable tmfports state, focused on the allegation that in an autombile mishap in which one person waa killed and severothers were injured that no statements were taken froeither eye-witnesses or those involved in the crash for rtcral days. The identities of the municipality and the vic*'|tim were carefully guarded, and no time was afforded1
nejvspaper to delve into police records to locate aanswering the vague description available.
Morris Dileiuaeo RaidProsecutor Morris freely discussed yesterday the
cumstances surrounding the mid by State Police onlew'n'in Laurence Harbor. He ptated his oftkehad warned the operators of the establishment, and.it was learned that several racketeers from New York'Imoved in, decision waa reached to raid,
"Because of the better facilities of the State-:-r "•'•-• tfimtmtf on faff* ft^r^
»AGE TWO FRIDAY, AUGUST U, 1939
cii i'(»n Fditoriol Page)i V
hy tin ]">!irf> department r>in fiiww of f F, ••<•>! mi fhr»e
tori'.-K ami'iiwil by R»c<tr(l»rsMo whep \hey vrr* brought l»ip him They were John Gnninu,
« K f : i l i v H M r h t u ; F ! n n"Smith, imiJ .hmo* K WrMv .i
inLUAM CONNOLLY
" ^ Frlink Kimmier iOn of -IT l'nn\,
• A v e n u e , i i ini lo! of the BoT"ii(fh
(It (hi- I*nli«h F i l e n n Hull »n<l
. iOeorgi' liinlow•:iri'7iik, of '.''.' Ilinl
, J W S t r e r l , w;i« l o c k e d >i|) 'in hi"
lint Kn«rmi<"i»ki rl imtre.l
Jim wi th atriirinun .imaiilt anil ba t -
tar depiir'mer.t nf labor wni rr»tlrd In 1013
Or, LM S n k5URCEOK CHtROfWlST
Fool AilnnnUin:, SmltK .mrwl Ho*"
PKtTH »WW»T. K ITrl. r A 4-U44
BESUREOFTPOUR
BRAKESTRUST YOURS TO US!
RF.MNING ADJUSTMFNTSDRUM REFACINC
TROUBLES CORRFCTRH
RAHWAYBRAKE SERVICE S
S J. GASSOWAY.Ttop.• Yn. with Blu* G o u i , N»w««4i17 E. Milton AT*. RAHWAY
Formerly AHnnfft Gtrnf e
\
WINDOW SHADESManufactured tni ta-•tallr.il »• t>t r«ur win-dowi at r««un»bl« pric«t
New York Wall Paper•Ml Paint Co., Inc.
358 Slat* StreetPCRTH AMBOY
Pt.». 4-17*
9THUSED CARBARGAINS
AII PricfH G yi.liKIrt Dodge 4-flr. Touring
Sedan *•«>d ' j ' W IVkiirrt 2 Dr. Mode]" » - 121) Si-dun $ST5
!l987 DeSoto 4-Dr. Tuur-iiiK Sedan 1550
19.17 Packard fi-Cyl. 1*Luxe (W. W. Tire»*
i 2 Dr. Sedan WOOI ' m Plymouth 4-Ilr. Tour-
u\K Sedan H*519.')7 Plymouth SM)r. Tour-
inn Sedan 1475VXW Packard Model 120
4i. S. Coupe. LikeTlSW 1480
fi OWsmobile 6-Cyl. KS. Coupe. Uriff. brown
i finish . ... $445a9."!8 Pontiac Tourhnt Se-•"»•• d a n . 4- l l i Oi'ijf. (fre«n"•""'finish $445
0 Plymouth L'-Dr. Tour-ing Sad«n 4&3S
935 Packard 4-Ur. (fullyreconditioni*d motor)Sedan ...JM
936 Poid 21>r. TouringSedan $200
935 Fort 44)r. TouringSedan $325
9SS Routine 2-Dr. Tour-t j« 8ed*n -.
933 Chevrolet 2-Dr. Sedan $120
mart to ehsoi* from.
•t wfll JUtt (Uit JOB.
idwirdKCumminglac.II! USED CAB LOT
409 Railway A™.DE SOTO • PLYMOUTH
tfM AVtNUE.ELJZAMTTI
i
'Take* Prnru Neck Girl AtBride; Reception Fol-
fows Ceremonyi
PKNNS VK< K Mli* l/ralse' Williamsun Knjrelk»'. daughter of
Mi ami Mr, Kd.ert H. F.n(felke,nf Washington Komi. IVnnn Neck,
'•ml William ljuvrence Connoll.V• on nf Mr. and Mrs. John fmiitnlly of 'arteret. were marriedSaturday afternoon. The ceremony win performed at two o'eloek in the rectory of St. Pun]'-.Churrh, Princeton, by Rev .lomplMiller. Thin wa« followed hy nlarfre recijption at the home of th>liride's parents.
The bride wore i, whitr enscmUW with a corsage of white gnrdenins and lilie« <>f the valleyHer only attendant wns her sinter,MIM Esther K KtiirHke. She worebine with H <'OISIIK<' of tiilismairrow* and lilies nf the valley.John Connelly of Cartcret wan hith i d l h e i ' s he^t man.
Kidlim-mt' » motor trip to KatonRfiuifp. Louisiana, Mr. nnd Mrs("nniinlly iv ill reside in PenroNeck where tlify hnve tnken anapartment on Washington Road.
The hiide attended the New Jer-sey College for Women and Ridei( nlleff. She in secretary to Hen-rj W. Jeffers, President of theWn!kor-(iordon laboratory Co,, atPlalnnhoro,
Mr. Connolly attended RutgersUniversity and Ridor College. Hein an accountant for the DuPont(IvNemours Company nt PerthAmboy.
Among the (rue*U invited to thereception were: Mr. and Mrs. JohnConnolly, John Connolly. Thorni^Connolly, Miss Dorothy Connolly,Mr. ami Mrs. John Scally andfnmilf, MT. nnd Mrs. Arthur Ben-«on and family, John fflarrinifton,Jr., of Curteret, and ThflmanThorn of Railway, formerly ofOartorol.
Wr, and Mrs. Jeffers and Mr.Hiul Mrs. Henry W. Jeffers, Jr.,also were nmonjr the gueste. Oth-ers at the wedding reception werefrom Plainfield, Woodbridge,North Bcriren. High Bridge, Tran-(bn, New Brunswick, Metuchen,Elizabeth, Hahwuy, Phillipsburg,Plainsboro, Cranbury, Hightstown,Princeton, Kingston, I'enns Neckmid from Massachusetts and NewHampshire.
SANQUET IS HELDBY BORO EMPLOYESMayor Mittuch Is Speaker
At Affair Held InOrchard Inn
CAKTKKET Members of theborough :<treels .mil roads dcpiirtment held a lianijuct Wi'dnes-day night nl Orchard Inn inSprinnlii Id, which was attended byforty perhdiis. Speakers includedMayor .1. W. Milui'h., Councilntun(iliffonl Cutter, Joseph Galvanekand Willium B. Grecnwald; SchoolCoiiiiiiHhioiieia, William B. Hagan,Charlt-rt Kiy.szewski HIHI FrankHaury; Assi'asor (ieorpt' Bcnsu-lock, Tux Collector AlexODdeiComha.
Borough Clerk August PerryHealth lnspi'L'loi Michael Yar-ch^ky; Street Commissioner John.Kdmouil, Kngineer Joseph Jomo,Attorney llavid S. Jacoby; Re-coi-dw Michael ltesko, Relief Tn-vestigator William Martenczuk•nd Robert R. Brown, Motor Vehi'cle Agent.
John Clark and Michael Preputnick were in chargu, mid Mr. Per-ry was toustmaster. Throughoitthe evfiiinjf thure were piano num-bers by Edward Lo7.nk.
PLAtl f 1CN1CCARTERKT—Members of the
local grovu of Druids will go toPatersou Sunday to attend a picnie being given by the irrovu ofthat city. The trip will lje made ina chartered bus, leaving GurinaiiLutheran Rail at 1 P. M.
IN RAHWAY
LAKESIDE PARK HOMES, INC.AJR cora>rnoN£D 21,-STORY HOUSE
F H A. Approved
1 nrpriM bwtle bow and panelf\ « briijht red Ufflla in theback of thii Kilmour dreit of greenCclanMt riyon taffeta, with lowDAOk and pOf»d ilevvH. A featurein Hirper't Baiaar college iisuefor ABgntt
L*C*IMI IMMM AVB. cor. Maiiiion Ave.
\Totd Monthly Payment $33.004V* NOs EXTRAS
LEGALFEES
GAJUGEJiLE FLOORSTICEBATH
tWWC "FLOORSLAJtGCaOOMSOfJENfOftCH
W W "SHINGfES
SCREENSLINOLEUM
GAS RANGESHADES
T - f f l t tES DECORATED
ma «K mm wo m APPRECIATED_ GIVING SO MUCH FOR SOITTLE
Atmnn, Watch for Sign.
1 *
fe 7.JSM7R
OefiyWiwr(Contmutd jrom Page 1)
they got wet in the last rainstormbrought from Bunny a uomowhatscornful reply—"No indeed; wewere junt »s dry as could be."
Several unusual aspects marked' winning the champion
ship. The ramp from which theraces started -was get up right infront of his own home, at 10 Char-les Street. And this newspaperwhich sponsored the race andwhl(*h he represents at Akron, thePRESS, is one he has Hold foithe past few years,, In fact, hewas much concerned about leav
£ so early this morning that hicouldn't cover hiH paper route, butarranged to h«v«j his sister, Ruth,ii couple nf years younger, takecare of hi* customers during hisabsence. Ruth herself also haspaper route.
Momi WotJurBunny i* a hanotumut, tturdj
lad, due to become a High Schoolfreshman next month. In additionto'soiling papers he doe8 what-ever odd jobs a boy can find—shoveling mow, cutting lawns 01raking the .grass—bwtfng rugs orcleaning o||t the cellar. He tunlong been the speciul pet of William Hitar, manager of the Wash-ington Garage, and th« ohters whowork there, and the chf-ring sec-tion out at Akron is going to havemore than a goodly share of root-ers for Bunny who are going oulfrom Curteret just for that purpose. The garage sponsored Bunnyin tht races for 1988 and 1939.
Mr. Sitav will fly out and backThe others will j;o by automobieand include the following: Georgiand Louis Sttar, Gabriel Kasha,the boy's uncle, Stanley Deiagrowicz, Olerrumt Eskesen, JosephGasey, Stephe Sitar, Charles Har-old, Joseph SiUr, Patrick Potoc-nijf, Michael Toth, Jr., Joseph Sil-v», George Toth, Walter Sitar andJoseph E. Weisman. Mr. Cagt»ywent to the race last year withCharles Riedel, Jr., 198K Carteretchampion, whom ht sponsoredMichael Toth will take pictures ofthe national finals and some of hiswork, will be shown in this news-paper next weak.
Monte C»rlo"The Mao Who Broke the Bank at
Monte Carlo" was an fcngliabman,Charles Wells. After a somewhatshady career in England, he wentto Monte Carlo and In July, 1881,entered the casino with 4,000 poundi,obtained under lake pretense. Onhis first day h* won a quarter ola million francs, He Immediatelybecame a nanular character In themunicipality, but-in 1882 alter a re-turn to Eogland wa« arrested andtried lor obtaining mooey^y iruudand sentenced to eight years' penalturvltude. Attar hla r d e u e bechanged his narat to DaVenport, butContinued hi* swindling operations,•«tv»d Iwo m«r« J>rt»» t e m t andtnally died in 1922.
M U M S OBSERVE2 5 1 1 ANNIVERSARYFriends Tender Surprise
Party; Winy Mttnge»,
Gifts Are Receiver!
CARTKRKT' A gro«r(i offriend'; of Mr. and Mr*. Arthur'liiylm (if 1400 Roosevelt Avenue
•imred them Tuesday ni(rtit :it «rjinse party to celebrate their,TI(\ fifth wedding anniversary.il.lr derorntionR were of nit
flowers nnd silver ribbons, and theuplp received many bouqnrt!?
lint! telegTams of ConnTaitilntion.Cuests present were; Mr?
• hrirtina Sehesta and dauRhter,Mnrie, Mr. «n<i Mr*. AURtiet Se
sta, Mrs. Mary Medvitsi, Mr. andMrs 1,0ms Vonah, Mr. and Mr».Kmnk «'rutjren. Mr. and Mrs.James Rnird. Mr. and Mn. JosephReynolds.
William Reynolds, John Dono-hue. Mr. nnd Mrs. Michael Abarayand dniiffhter, Eleanor; "WilliamAlbright. Stephen Szoke, WalterRtopirmki, Robert Jepsen, Ruthnd Rohert Taylor, of Carteret.
Mr nnd Mra. Charleti Stanik,Mi nnt\ Mrs. William Stanik, Wilimii Stiinik, Jr., Mr, and Mrs
Oliver I fliscn and sons, John andl.nwrcnee, of WoodbridRe; Mr.nnd Mrs. Ronjamin Fields, oft'nion, nnd Miss Betty Yuremlm,•if Rah w a y .
MBS FENSKE"WEDSIN CHURCH RITESCharles Street Girl Becomes
Bride In CeremonySaturday
CARTERET—The tnamntre ofMiss Lillian Fenftke, daughter ofMr. nnd Mrs, Edward Fenske of71 Charles Street, to Robert U n -nin(r, son of Mrs. Elsie Lanninir "f(iranliury, took place here Satur-day iiftei noon. The ceremony wasperformed at 4 o'clock in ZionLutheran Church by the paxtor,Rev. Frederick Noeldeke, and was
low<>dhuj0i reception immediately afterward for the two familiesand ifllatives. This WHS nt thehome of the bride.
The bride, given in marriage, byher futhei, wore a gown of whitenet and lace, and a fingertip lengthveil. Her flowers were white roses.Her sister, Miss Florence Fenske,who was the maid of honor, worepink mousseline de soie and carriedpink roses "and blue delphinium.
Carl Seasan t>f Cranbury actedas best man.
After their rcttfrn 'from a -wed-ding trip to Atlantic City the cou-ple will make their home in Cran-bury.
The Average ManThe average man Is 5 feet, 10
Inches tall; weighs 150 pounds; hasenough fat to make seven bars ofsoap; enough Iron to make one nail;enough sugar to fill a shaker; enoughlime tq whitewash a chicken coop;enough phosphorus to make 2,200match tips; enough magnesium fora dose of magnesia; total value 98cents.
Name Helena Mean -Light'Helena, while essentially the same
as the Greek Helen and meaning"light," is considered a dilTc-rentname because It has an added syl-lable, giving it more stateliness. St.Helena was the mother of Constan-tlne the Great. Legend says thatah* dug on Calvary and found thetrue eross.
Nonshrlnkable WoolWool can be made nooshrinkable,
without injury to the fabric, by dip-ping it lor about an hour into a 1.5to 2 per cent solution of sulfurylchloride in to-called "white spirit,"a solvent widely used by textilecleaners, according to Industrialand Engineering Chemistry.
The a m (cheol fw *ha prepara-tion ol teacher* wai opened at Lex-intfon, Vt, In I « » t y Hav, SamuelReefl Hall, «4io fcafl "been t TeaeWai -wcU at •prewftitt, Mt who *e-cejAMl 1h* taMotata «( to OongM-
t i ldiUon that bt w4«hi oonAfft a M d -nary for ttacherj, Mauaabutettiwai the first state to ««tafcli* ncr-tnal ubooli, tht flnjt being openedat l iadm^n tolWI
Which te walk 1* but tw
Alttr nnttltjiK betwieo p pMl OUT WH kbo* Wbere
dola
Many ADow PatentaProtection for an invention can
be obtained In more than 100 coun-tries says Industrial and Engineer-Ing Chemistry. In many countrleithe form of protection Ii somewhatnebulous. Patents are seldom ob-tained outside ol a group of about30 countries.
Tobacco Prohibited In ChinaWhen tobacco was first introduced
to China, its consumption spread sorapidly, especially in the »rmy, thatan Imperial edict wa« issued pro-hibiting its production and use. De-capitation was the penalty for viola-tors.
Beard Feet In a LogSubtract 4 Inches from the diam-
eter *nd square the remainder. Therawat, aiyi Hoard's Dairyman, willbe the number of board feet In aM-toot log. Add % for IMbot logs,Vi for 20-loot logs. Subtract u torIt-toot logs, % for 12-loot logs.
fotMbVroin Wood AshaaThe manufacture of potash tram
wood ashes wa* America's mortthttvtan dwmical induMry to MM,
p toiurtrial and ft
FIM.Th* U^tad States Capitol flag Oiw
M how* I4«r , rain Or ibjq*. thtwind ibreSf it to ribbons sad oftmj)hft« <h» ribbons: the KmUCto m MJoti. As a rwu«.* ontr «toiK ite weeks.fc««* twlltt'af tb.
Cyclnt b SavedFrom Rabid Tiger
By Poisoned Goat
Started to WorkOn fcicycli*t Before
D m * Took Effect.
NFW YORK — Hnvtng cycled fttChhistoric routes i\* Mosf*' old trail InArabia, the Great Syrian deatrt, theKhyber puss and the Rbftd to Klfi-dnl;iy, TrrA A. Rirchmore, W|io»eround thrworld bicycle, Bucepha-lus, in nn display nt the SmithsonianInstitution Ittopped In New York re-cently.
After he got a Ph. D, In Intern*-tirrnnl law at thf University of Co-logne In 191S, Mr. Blrchmore, whoIn 27, made a cycling tour of theMediterranean.
One night a native stole his pan-port •• he itopt on th* bMob of thtRed lea near Suet and H tohk himso long to get anotfcer one that hedecided to try a round-the-wortdblcVcle trip.
Since then he has traveled 40,000miles (23,000 by btcycfe, tht r«tt brboat) in 48 countries, He crcledthrough most ot Europe, exeeflt Rus-sia, na well as Persia, Arabia, Af-ghanistan, India, the FederatedShun States in Uper Burma, Slamand Indo-Chlna. Then he lalled toSen Pedro, Calif., whence he ped-aled acrosi the continent to hishome in Athens, Ga.
Headed for Alatka.Now he's headed for Alaska on
Pegasus, Bucephalus' successor, totrnnsverse the world's lonfwt Inter-national highway, the Pan Ameri-can, into South America.
His round-the-world equipment In*rlndnil goose-feather sleeping bag.frying pan, canned heat, eftfrs buck-skin shorts, extra ttres, bread, oliveoil and a buckeye for luefc, allweighing around 60 pounds.
"Bsemise I carried nothing v«!uable and went unarmed," he ex
fkari Reveries(( onhnmtd from Miloriltl I'nyr )n*)ted that her brother Cu*eyKnhn V nppolnted as teacher Inthe school system. An extension ofl*ave of absence wa» (rranted toAnns M Ryan.
At the request of CommiwiionerAmbrose Mudrak, the transporta-tion committee was jrratited au-Ihority to meet next w e k and re-new transportation contracts ntprices not to exeepd last year.
F k H hCommissinor FrnTik Haurymitted H detailed report of theMfti school activities committee,
Miiw Mary Dylajf renewed hevtppflrarion f«r the position oftencher.
Commiiwioner GHIVSTIP* repots#d H»at thi> hiffh school f»»ld is inbad shape, hecanse It ir bainep
»setl daily by vnnotis jrroups ofthe recreation committee, Com-missioner ft. S. lUrrinirton, su*c(fested that the hosrd inBpect thefield and Friday was set as thedate for the inspection. Mr. Gal-vanek nlso stated the hi«h schooltennis courts nrn nearly com-pleted.
Hifh Mats Of Reqvicm ItCeUWated In Si. Eliza-
ChurthCARTERF.T - Andrew Krupa,
.ixty-Jlye, who died Mondaylit his home, 47 ChristopherStreet, was buried WednesdayTnnminjr. The funeral service wasa hijrh mnss of requiem in St.•Elizabeth's Church, of which hewas a member. The pastor, Rev.Mark Rajos, conducted the serviceand burial was in St. James' Cemetery, 'Woodbridjre.
Mr KYupa is survived hy hisplained, "the native* were not afraid | wife. .Inlin, four sons. Joseph andof me anv iidn't want anything I JHmcs, of Carterot; John of New j
York dry nmf Stryihrn of ?ort_b
handle a case of this kiad, And because of thr d , ,enst. to the county taxpayers, we requested thr Strto make the raid, S«wr»l *«y« went fey fn which „,,was taknn and w« were a^botft \» conduct the ,•..,srlves, when fhf State Pclire M It."
Bookies' F W i t h i n g
Rpportn have It that th* ,ft<ywtk tif hon| ,eslablishTnentj! in the CWBty hM flowtehrd :i,months, and this immolert*d extension was mn-,,!,the prand jury. While cbndtttww In «tjM)r HPciin.,county arc not known to this ntw»pap»r, Chief ,:Georffo E, Keating stated yesterday that therr is,,,,R le eatablishment of that kind in W,oodbridKe T,,It is commonly known, however, that •& nearby tm.,a horse-race parlor which accomodates local i,, iwishing to bet on the races.
Ml f a rBitten bj a monk*?. Ruby Im.
» y*sn old. of Illinium. England,was awarded t " damage* afnlnMthe owner of the tinlmtl
FuelThe Hftro Natlnnni i,
• » ! * • first 'battalion i, .to Ut musWNl to I , ,
Amboy; his father, Andrew, nnd asister, Hcrthn, who live in linntrary He also leaves four grand-children. He had lived in Cartpretthirty-five years.
Pall beurers wero Lazlo Danci,Andrew Kish, Frank Kinh, Charles
had."It was on the Road to Mandalay,
"a fine paved highway," that he runover a king cobra whi<-' v:!"i tbushmaster and a tiger thai hadtasted blood, he rates us the onlydangerous animals he met.
"The rest of them were morescared than I w*s," h* added. jTnlmcs, .lames Kmpn nnd Joseph
In l^« Shan States of Burma heJRtisniak Arrangements were inmet the man-eating tiger. "It was ; charge $t IJ-mkirtaker Josephold and toothless, but its tail kept • Synowiecki.wagging up and down In th« under-1brush alon< the road. I sped up and t FUNERALpassed him by. j CARTERET —Funeral services
"But I soon saw him agBin and wore held Sunday afternoon at .".realized he was following me. 11 o'olnck for Jam™ Richard Aber-kejit pedaling but I was kind of ma-1 n o t h y i tline-day old son of Mr. andlariul at the time and getting weak.
Saved by Poison."Finally I got to a hut at a little
pilgrim's platform near Zeyat.
Mrs. Herbert Abernethy of KTPenjamin Street, Cranford. Theinfant wn.i a grandson of MichaelHamulak of 51 Wheeler Avenue,
There was a 4oat tied to the plat- where the services wero held, priv-form and that goat looked tick. 1remember getting off my bicycle,and that's all I knew until I wokeup in the hospital at Zeyat.
ately. Rev. Alexis Medvecskv.pastor of St. Elias Gruek CatholicChurch, conducted the service andalso offerred prayers at the grave
"It appears that some hunters bed ;„ S l Gertrude's Cemetery. Thepoisoned the goat with strychnine, b a b y Awi] S a t u l , l a y i n Muh'lenbenjand laft it there to be eaten by Hnanitjiltiger*.
"The natives later found me with
Hospital. Plainfield, after a shortillness.
a dead tiger and no goat. We flg. ,Kun"r8.1 v ' ^ T . ^ t """ "'ured the old tiger came up and ate c h l r * ' o f ^ m l 1 N' B l l u b
the goat first and then went to workon me before the poison got him.because I was cut up a little whenthey found me.
"They cleaned me up good In 2ey-at and I got the dead tiger skin an>iexpressed It horne to my mother."
Coffee (kinder FouadIn Grave of Red Man
DENVER, COLO—Unearthing ofa white mac's coffee grinder from ared roan's grave near Johnstown,Colo., recently 'brought to light elo-quent evidence of what was goingon in Colorado a century ago.
The rusty Iron mechanism of anold square wooden ooffee grinderwith a knobbed crank on top and adrawer in the bottom to cateh thegrounds was found 1B a steam Aov«lon a WFA project With the oolatgrinder, skeletons of twe Intiam,which scientists estimated to havebeen burled 79 to 100 yean ago,wore brought up. That «as aboutthe time covered wagons WU* push-ing west across the plains.
Indians were buried With theircherished powessktns, so their spir-its raigbt have ease and comfort onthe trail to the hippy huntinggrounda.
How th« India us got the coffeegrinder might JIAA * faielailin*chapter to early Colorado history,
The skeletons were donated to theColorado Museum 01 Natural Ws-tory by Forest L. Power* of Gree-ley, Cole. Tbejr Men wUl 1M placedon exhibition.
MEET TONIGHT
CARTEfET — The GeneralDemocratic Organisation will mceitonight in No. 1 Fire House.
R««IMU Why Ymi
Snwifd Buy You0M*S Proa Us f
m
B « C k U t e yOU Will l.et !|,,
greatest values InAugust Fur Sal.- \\guarantee you will *,,>.-
Because we make vmicoats to order ri#ht .nthe
B e c a u s e you get th.'p i c k of High- f nsli inPrim* P«dU.
Because mil workmansliip i t guaranteed
Because tke building; i*our twn, . w e have iw>Mgli rant to pay and youbenefit tfarefay.
PROVEN STYLE - QUALITY • VALUE!
WOODBRIDGE FUR SHO"The Home of Better Far Garments'
522 Amboy A w . Tel. Wood. 8" ,
CLEANS UNDER EVERYTHING
4 Stories UpCAMBRIDGE, MASS. - For 10
minute* 00-pound Con Jones dan-Haft fd»ova «ae atnrt, stted •Mm(ailing enty by btr busband'* cra4u-ally weakening grasp.
A Crowd ot «M lathered andttanaV 4 M imttotUA «o «dar oruftwaaadp. Just u the teahMid,
B n Joou, was about to lose Usatwo policemen arrlvad andi fhe Ityear-oia woman to
Jmes mid kK wge attflmpMfl "toW a^g
out clothes. H« seized bar haa* asihti l l icM o w the edge and huMm im H» poMae «rrhred.
Y ou CAN 'get at' things with this electric vac-
uum cleaner. You can do all your cleaning
with it. Of cdurse, you expect to clean rugs and
carpets with a vacuum cleaner but with this
Universal you can get behind radiators, at high
moldings and shelves and at the baoks of pic-
tares. You can clean under low chairs and
couches. Complete with tools the Universal ts
$99.95 cash. Small carrying charge added if
you buy on terms.
"•WS
hi "•• 12,i.iirity which It Involved
,w- lad of a habit ol,,irv from hU mrthte'i
:,rrhwl hit IW Off to;,1(:B freshly Jolted land-i r ; i ( l i n « :
.,,,.( I stole mr moth-
,n stopped them. • ft«t,! nnri (tthw • » • aog
Jo*. ,< dispatched to i«hool
,rn nnd the father given,! $.1 line,
|<,-ri I OOt
An(K,oonBart*teTonirynf
and his hejf« ih herpnif the* hot-watar h«at-• went to work, Wb*h
ihr plumber and halp-i=hfti and «o'had heri:nrni, dlihM, cloeka
lrir iron,,.,• police a r n i t M twd.rx^ them with grand
vot recovered from afrmn a butthtr stop
'HI traded th* lUver-,t, mid from a. bar room
.ui traded the clocks
AIHIO.* Loi«| UfeOAKLAND, CAUF._*j«,n| ,
resU«« Bicker almost eosi Lto-colyn Cann his lifn.
Cann rolled OVIT In hl» ttMt.flung out I,|S a r l I , a m , c r s s h t d | t
thr«u«h « window W n , , M V e t l ( 1 |
an artery
A h hy the sound of ihat-glass. hl« wife found him
profusely. Canntreated m „ hospital. ««•
Rich GoldFound, and Loit
M»n Sure of Reward If HeC FCan Find It Ag-ain,
BLIND - Some-ER^dm. Some-where In the wild buifclsnd 14 mlleinorth of Blind Hlver is a rich, golddeposit, ocross which a weak nndhungry trrnn stumbled while nt-tempUng to find, his way lo clvillea-tion.
Patrick Trainer. 21, prosector,
(lWn. Ordinance1,1 M Making Device*
,', H U R O , COLO.—A new•, ,• prohibiting operation
„ i ,. ni ippllaneai which, • wnnl radio d i t t o baa
|i ring haw to eUmlnat*sintic the atatuta hat
moon complained thaten called In frequently
r,. f,-in\lly or neighborhood• •... /-i.rraU'il by itich in-
Mrs SoaruMJo's vac-. ,;, i simply ruins my con-
., i t:, siory every day."i ,ii italic, police tatd,
,i i ttrflat deal more trou-• , i , mechanical s tat ic
llnhy l)r*WM la MBki iiv MO.—Shlrlqp Ann Sum*>,>. nthi old, lnvtttl|atlnf a
,, iar of i « r mm. toppledfirst and drowned.
.,.•;
Safety Award-.l under protect to police-,-n. Arthur Mo*. • Lot An-k driver, wai given a sur-
tit.ition tor u f c driving. Aii.HITS later he eollapted at thei ot hl> parjeed trunk, and ar diagnosing nervous excite
: ulerpd him to bed.
mis will find "Or So ItiUri&iiiiiir and inffrma-
it -on tn» tporta par*.
who wai inst In the bush tot 41hours, found a vrin of goW quartrlix feet wide and rlrh In mineralContent. If he |j able to retracehla steps t» the spot, at h« la con-fident of doing, his ordeal in thebuih wilt !»• richly rewarded. Heand two cnmpanloni, John Fliherof Halton Bcath «nd Ed FurUndof Toronto, plan «n oxpedltlon loon
IALARIE - TRDCSAKRITES SOLEMNIZEDH«hr PateUjr ChttKk Scene
Of Ntptiii FerfornedB F
BL LORETTO M( ARtKRCT-A
(;<)l(iln(t in which theHctcr is eomptrwl tt»M
Uby Ls«b
the
Mr.
B«Iar«, dauhffter ofChsrles Balaria and thi» lateKalarix, of Ixxust Street, toTrncMk, son of Mr. and Mr»
A. Trucnak of Unffdlow Streettook place Saturday afternoon'Hie reremony wt» performed ot 4o clcwlt in Holy Family Church h>the pastor, Uev Dr. Joseph Ih.iuOOM, nnd wm followed by » re-ception for fifty relatives amifriends, at thP home or the hridr.
The bride, g j T a n in marine hyhpr brother, Charks Bslarin, Jr'..wore a jrown of white «atin.
Mr. Chins in among th* a a * tr-ivnls at the Cartwfet Public'U-irnry. A review of ths book, wuA>f two other new additions, tol-OWs:
MR. EMkUNUCL
entylp, with a Ionic trnin
over which fell her tulle veil, d !itetnding fram a crown of whitesatin. She alto wore * flngcrtiiIsngth veil whieh covered her factHer bouqttet wan of white niseiam! (typraphiln. Her attendant wasMiss Mnrjorie i^pkolaky, who worenqun n>lore<l «f fota trimmed in'luboftriet, and carried a bouquet"f red -n(»(|B.
•loseph fealariR. brother of thebride, a-ttemlcd Mr. Truewk n%l)ent man. After their return from
B r LOUISOn« of the pleasure* anpiTH'iifps, all too rarely, ia to
See nn author repeat a great »UC-<'i'«s. "Magnolia Strtwt," Will amost satisfiictory novel and "Mr,
•I" him all the app*»Hnj'>r that book and more.
In "Mr. Kmmwual," LOUIJoldinjr h*s created a akgra«t«r
thrtt KM the nobility, trt» charm,the human qualified of lit-. Chips.In addition. Mr. EmmMwri is aman of Action with datarmftiaion
to firu'ih bin rfigirdltaa «f theand pcnonal risk h* mijtW
encounter.He is one of the Magnolia
Street Jews. He bad .ooB e to thej»ico of retirement aid Was plan-ninfrion Joining; tils Don in. Palestino when a letter arrives from
to seek out the lode nut thli time j " weddlnirJHp on which they willthe ill t kthey will take ample precaulloniagainit losing their way,
A porcupine which he skinned «ndcooked nnd some raspberry leaveiwere Trainer's only food during thetime he was lost.
He encountered mosqultos. rain,swamps nnd a few bears, «s hestrove to find a way out of the bush.Once, with his clothes drenched, hewns reduced to his last match, butsoon afterward he stumbled on adeserted lumber camp where hefound five matches and a stove.
The bears, he sayi, did not moiasthim nearly so much as the mos-quitoei.
ISANKORIZED SLACKS
Al IKRATIONS FREEIf'.''. I,, Mitch C u t tni V«»t
M S H K I N ' 9.., fh St. P.rtk
I Dr. Robert StiskovitzIK<K()N CHIROPODIST
AILMENTSNatt Bank Bld|
*t- Pert* Aaabo:••I-- p. A . 4 - m i
I11
Trick Alarm Snares 13Church Poor Box Thieve*CHICAGO.-Jerry PUsec figures
the few pennies he spent to rig upa burglar alarm for the 6t. JtremeCatholic church h»s had adtquaUreturn.
Pllsec wns hired :n night carttak-er ten year^i aK'> with the under-Standing that OTIC of his jobs wouldbe. guardlnn of the pour-box, frtquently lootrd.
He couldn't get his other workdone if he sat beside the box—so herigged up a burglar alarm that in-cluded wires running from the boxthroughout the church property. Hecarried with him a bell which h«attached tu the wires at various"terminals."
U|>on the i-nplurc of two tramlwtiwith $1,73 from the poor-box, Pll-itc estimated that hi) alarm systemhas rmiglit a total of 13 persons.
visil the World's Fair, the couplewill make their home in I.oniffel-low Street,
Dutch PrisonOne of the most typical and charm-
ing ut Dutch towns Is Oorkutn, inthe vicinity uf which Is Loevestelncastle, interesting to tourists as hav-ing been the prison of Hugo Qrotius.Allowed the consolation of hit wlf»und his brinks, she smuggled himout of prisini ns a box of books.
— Please mention this paper toadvertisers. —
Tartan.
Th* ttttn tnrtan wai known »ndUM material whs woven of one ott#O colors for the poor nnd morevaried forth* rich as enrly as themlddl* of the Fifteenth century Inthe accounts of John, bishop of Ginsgow, treasurer to King James III inWT1, there occurs the following mention of the mnterlal: "An* elne andeae halve of blue Tnrtane. to lynehis gown* of cloth of gold " In 1518aucounu Were Incurred for s Highland drell for King Jnmes V on fheoccasion of a hunting expedition inwhich ther* nre charges fur ' He-land Urtaae"
Canary Faltaful
A «anary belonging to MrrCharles Llnce of Marlon, 111., escaped In June, 1938. when a cat.Iturlajing Igaiiist the cage, knocked•psm the unall-dour. The bird dlsappMred. After an absence of 11months, the canary returned andparched aa the fence in front of theLane* home Mrs, La nre said shehad no trouble at nil in coaxing itback into Us cage
First NewspaperPubllck Occurrences Both Foreign
and Domestick, which was pub-lished at Boston on September 25,16J0. contained three printed pagesand one blank page about 8 by 10inches In ske. was the first newspa-per published in the United States.
('arm MarketsFor (ales at home and abroad,
33S,0O0,Q0O acres can supply all pres-ent available markets. Crops, nor-mally, are harvested from 385.0O0,-000 acres. Tills means that theAmerican larmera have about 30,-
CREATOft d FMY&TEftY/AND
FANTASY
Libraryl o s e Herman, ntrw MOM COOJHT
Editor, Say
Mafrtoita ] f o h »a fttfm near tW MtW forvat aaWhat Ukeh into h**- horn* tnt
y««rt' , wondurt fo «he livsa •»
German refdg** 8ht hadwritten to ask Mr, Emm«nu«J'ikelp in takins; car* of tham. Hews* the snM who eoold refnw h«lpto no otic and before many dayshfed fane by he was on Mr wtyto tfce bufinninif of the (rreat-wrtidvnture In hm life.
The rtfiKree boyn were a surpfise, O»e boy, fi»uno, had n6theard from hin moiber and featr-ed *h« wan dead. HI) jrief was IfgYMt that Mr. RmmaMtl promb-•» Brttno h« woald t o t*j Germatyto see what had htpp«n*d.
t h d lTthouaands of wanted tot out of .Germany—-why Aould
RmaftntMl, J want to
H*w Did You Vote on20?
MMnW'AT IMHB
Now that letters in th» RaringATfl % hoYt\ Wit nsHOOMRlfTn ftf
tawhaw tm» to ovwwhich fartfcn stall > in eontr«|,those who vot»d U rtstorn
Tod rlrowtiinu is considered oneif • Holly wood's nee creators of
mystery and uncanny fantasy. Hidweird .lercon dppictiona have wonhim the title of "The Kdgmr AllanI'm- uf the screen." Mr: Brown-ing's Intest directorial assignment
"Minicli's Fur Sale," with Rob-ert YOUIIK, FlorenceIT Hull.
Rice and lien-
Granddaughter of SittingBull U College Arch*
SALEM, ORE. - Although hergrandfather wns Sitting Bull andher ancestors were lords of thegreat plains and brought downmighty buffulo with every arrow,this little Indian maid had to enrollin college ti> learn to shoot a bowand arrow.
She Is Waste Agidiwihn,'known toher classmates at Willamette uni-versity as Evelyn Welsh.
Her Indian name translatedmeans "Bring Pretty" and Indicatesthat she must do something to bringhonor and distinction to her tribe.
Miss Welsh, an Indian princess/lit tCI ILH U aw l H H i a n « » i a UUMV —i .
000,000 surplus acres for which they ' t n n e r o w n "B h t . c a m e t 0 ">« u n l"lack markets
Olive UU WeightOlive oil produced in Greece this
year will veiuh more than 100 tons
i versity from Culbertson, Mont.,where she spent her childhood on alarge ranch und learned to ride andshoot.
The attractive little miss is prom-inent in .school activities and hasheld a number uf campus offices.
AUGUST FUR SALEBIGGER THAN EVER
\WeAre Offering a Full Line ofAUKinds of Fur Coats
SPECIALFor Our Opening
KIDSKIN—black, greyand brown
BLACK PONYNORTHERN SEALMENDOZA BEAVER
AUGUST SALE ON ADVANCE STYLES OFCLOTH COATS
Buy now an our "Laynway plan" with a mull-Your coat will be placed in our Cold Stor-
Vaults without extra charge.
liberal Allowance on Old far Coatt Applied to NewCoat Purchases.
OMPLETELY REMODELED•ake of efficiency and convenience for our
w« have gone to considerable expense thattter serve you. Come ia and look around.
atNG and REPAIRING,
LOW SUMMER RAtES
HOUSE, Inc.PERTH
With Snake Around Leg,
Forester Drives for AidTRKMPELEAU, WIS. — One-arm
driving, in Uie opinioh of CaretakerGrovor Philijis, of Perrot state park,is essential when your other arm isbusy holding a snake.
Philips found a pheasant in thegrip uf ii largfe boll snake. Hegrubbed the snake back of the headand furceti it to release tha phaas-ant, but the reptile wound Itselfaround Philips' leg.
there — everyone tried to pwsuadehim not to go. Only Mr, Emmaii-Uel ffu not concerned with thedanfers h« would meet Isearch for Bruno's mother
Ehjht days afUr Mr. Emmanntlarrived in Berlin hU lettersp«d, H« had just dropped out ofthe land of the living", tatter* u,lim were returned to Bnilanndamped -^lilrcnH Unknown. Fit-Illy his {Hands in England stirredUp the Foreipi Office to mak»incroiriaa in Berlin. Mr, Emmanuslbecame a sulijcrt for n*w»p»pwheadlines in Rngland and Germany-r-the Emmanuel affair ap-prnncheil the importance of an in-ternational crisis But Mr. E«n-n«inu»l had one friend in Berlin—
Silver, now Udy MaWet-tkig-. When nthiT J^«!, fM, sh«stayed became a Naii official ha4proclaimed thai h« could declar*who wan Jewish Mid who was not.
His relcnse, when it came, waswith orders to leave (lermnnywithin twfiity-fo«r hours. But hestill hadn't found Bruno's mother »•*•and would not Ipave until he didWhat he learned abant her is t imuch a surprine to the readers asthe sxcitlriK evt-ntu that precede itin this thrilling story.Emmanuel u a real oontrlbution
The charaetor of the nobl« Mr.to pretetit-day 1 iterator©—sthnu-laUne *t>d n«w iecauM novelistsMbility and strenfth of charaetetfor so lont n«gl«eted the idea thatare commendable or even intei-esting qualities. Mr. Emmanuel i«the sort of book that gives thereader spiritual rcfreahmenl asw«ll as an engrosHins; story.
GUN BULLOOOGERBy E. CUNNINGHAM
Pony Kirk, waiKierinif Texaacowboy, flmlH himself a huntedoutlaw in the Territory, whenSheriff Bully Witt frames him ona charge of murder. Naturally,he turns toward Texas and hiscousin's 2 Bench Ranch. But in-stead of the quivt reunion he hadexpected, Pony finds himself inthe »torm-c«nter of more troubleand danger than even the wildTerritory had givon him. The 2Bench is beinjr systematicallyshipped of its finest stock; ridersare tain* killed on a lonely range;n club-fooUd (rack allows on thescene of every rrimt\ How Ponyrides the trail of the killer-thievesto settle all mysteries) m^oa ntrrand story.
SPRING HARROWINGBy P. A. TAYLOR
The auntmor season wan still amonth off when Mr. Facet's Bennstarted up the bluff to put hiscottafe in order. Quits a job itwould be, but Bcna didn't mind;it was as good as a movie just tolook at all thoite strange thingshe collected. And very much likeu movie it was when Bena openedthe dark house—for there wasBart P&fet stretched oo the floor,his face and thruat horribly claw-ed, and hia dead luuul clutching i.skull.
One thought gripped allmet as terror ran through the
in New <l*rtaj have on op-portunity to reflect upon th*•OHMwiUMw OT vnv ktrytiiYMBiits
against the satewdnwnt* Therewan nothinf puritanical about th*hostility to racing; and part mutu-
honMt conviction that the apartwould1 become the cate-psw «f pol-itlcians. And the politicians arealready doing ttvelr b#nt to provtiH.
Witneas «l»o ihi» battle over th«commJa-
S n«n-
MM,, #tatt*ititd a ifrW«ti at tktr SMSMof
unJay li itbt Htr |«*JU tnre:Chart- Oa»w Srfwtrd IXUn; JohnKennedy, Xea»eUi «Uw»rt, K -ff*ne R o l l e r , A (tin Wo«L BnHnWantoeh, loan Kojril, and Ui«Ht MadtHne Oroimam Joteph-
Jackson and Jantee Wtntoch.
OOWLIMG DOWN SOUTH
Polkt Captain
personnel of the racingaion. We w*r»salaried board ofmen Wealthy and uniolnifh enoughto administer the job to the bestI of raeiftg Instead, wefec» Iho pretty certain prospect ofa four-man board, two Democratsand two Repabli«amt, tit a salaryof $7,5*0 a year. One would befor one year, one for two andtwo for in, A Democratic (!ov-emor would naturally nanie De-mocrat.i to the six-year poata. Andthe sa'ary of $7,600 repreaentathe higfient paid fbr irimilar ser-vice in the United States.
Senate PnttMent riendrlcktonBays a paid commission wouldmerely open the door to more poj-
all the horor. God's power didnot »top Piltte and the crowd"Thinkeat U»ou that I cannot nowpray to myt Father, and he shallpresently fire me more thantwftjre Jeficna of an»ela?" (Matt26 53.) SUll we see it Was Ohd'ipower that Irionwhed—Bl^^
T ( F r W i of th.Itat* OtaNli), l> th*
A,r«nac ••••• Had attaring the paat twt>MifaM Mary and Ellen•f Mnntrea), Canada,ly of SfotUnd, Eafjai
tSTURN FROM VACA1CARTEHKT—Mr. aa4
fr*d I. Wohlgemuth t dchildren, of Matthew A«tamed thim w«ek after ain Connecticut.
QCitTET AWAY
CARTHRKT ) lno will of Roosevelt AftltVter SokUr of EmenonWalter Kovacs of Carttrsjtiand John Goodman ofAvenue spent the weConnecticut.
itical jobs SoSpeaker Pmro«
does AssemblyBefore the L«g
isiftture gets through with its dis-cussion of thehorse raring in
political side ofNew Jersey, the
people who voted for the amend-ment on June 20 will realise thatthe united newnpnper campaign inthe State its adoptionbaaed upon a pretty sound prem-
-Trenton N»w».
VACATION AT L A t tCARTERET—Mrs. g«
Strandberg and her; Dorothy. «f Wnshint^on•rp vacationina; atN. Y.
—Claaained Ad*. Brtnf.
Prayers arwf PowerPeople »«k whether it would twt
be well to wnd out a call to pub-lic pray?™ then*1 days. The ans-wer nhoulil b», if people who prayhave not fell the need for pray,era without any public reminder,then times nre really bad, so badthat a public appeal would onlyserve to murk thin lukewarm atti-
tude..Jc«tK spoke tn hi<t disfiplei
about collective prayer: "Wheretwo or three are gathered toge-ther . . ." This should aome-times bo mentioned. Those whopray ought to know about other?who pray. It expresses unity,strenghtens courage, weakens pos-sible distrust which would hinderprayer. Su«'h prayers ure sometimes mentioned. As, for instance,when there were prayers in West-minster Abbey . . when Parlia-ment met
It was singular that Caesar's behavior again happened on a GoodFriday, the day when the powersof this world triumphed over Je-sus, The paralysis that held thedisciplea that day seems to havecrept over us today, The mentality of violence and masH suggestion triumphed then SK now. Butbecause it happened on a GoodFriday, anil we remember historyafter the first Good Friday, thereis a strong appeal in the middt of
WONTrotrLOOKPRETTYPLEASE!
Of c w f e JNMTV fi*g may because yourest—bat no vacation it much fun udess yu*Hdoing things and nwefinf new people! YoufH wmt |to look attractive at tM Ham—and you will U ym.visit our salon before you go I
Get One of OurPermanents
Pfone Wood. 8-2394 for appointment
LaGrace Beauty Shop87 MAIN STREET, WOODBRIDGE, N. X
BUILDING)
So Philips wacidled to his car, kepthis grip mi the snake and drove withthe frt'e hand un[il he Bpotted twoof his employees. They unwoundthe snake nnd killed It. It meas-ured VA feet.
Stolen on Eve ofPolice Head'i Wedding
PORT CHESTER, N. Y . - A thiafbroke into the Ryan building at 101Westchester avenue and stoleamong uther things the wedding ringPolice Commissioner Abraham Tu-nick of this village planned to pre-sent to Miss Gertrude Gluckman of1715 East Seventeenth street, Brook-lyn, when they were to be marriedIn Manhattan.
The burglur entered two itoreiand 12 offices, including the law of-fice of Commissioner Tualck. A pinthe commissioner Intended l iving tohis bride also was stolen. Llttiielse of value was takw, howevtr,
HOME FROM SHORECARTERET—Mr. and Mrs. Jer
ry Bartolc and their daubgt«r,Joan, have returned Aram a twoweek vacation at Point Plassant.
town; Suaan Remington's newwildcat*! But Jf a wildcat killed,said Asey Mayo, a human handguided the killing. "Ifa murder,"declared Asey, and with that raninto buckets of trouble. What wasMrs. Allenly doing in the belfreyof the First CongregationalChurch? What was her aon Scottdoing at midni*ht on WebbyBetta' golf course? The great hur-ricane of 1938 played its part inthe final solution, but only when
ey took to crystal gating didthe true shape of things emerge,and the criminal whose guilt wasBO well hidden fall victim to thelast desperate challenge.
To thousands of readers there'snothing to match a new Asy Mayostory, where murder fits thrillinglyInto an atraoBphere of wild-sweptdune and sea, and inimitable char-acter* fall Into adventures bothgrisly and fay. "Spring Harrow-Inf," 1B A t awwer to the Mysteryfan'i prayer, aa exektar tale efproves Phoebe Atwood T*ylor todeath and dvtwetjon which againbe unaurpaaatil in the special field
>she own,
G4ME SOCIAl. EVBRY MONDAt WOKT •
Amboy Ave,
\ 10-50 GAMI $100
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NASH LAFAYETTE
$545'37 4-Dav TrunkA beautiful car finblack. Upholstery |iww. Mechanically 0 .
FORD
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ladilUc Touring
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'^LiJiL^t.^' i.
TARE FOUR
CARTERET PRESSIiihurrlptlon, fl.BO Per Y*ar
Telephone Carteret R-lflOO
Published by Carteret PremiOFFICE
7i WASHINGTON AVE., CARTERET, N. J.
LUCY GREGORY .... Editor
MEYER ROSENBLDM SvotU Editor
Entered a» Mrnnrl dim mitter Jan* E,1024. tt Carteret, N. J., Poit Onto, andwthe Act o( Msrrh i. 1878.
Godspeed Father MtRiganFather Joseph A. Mulligan le.ave* Car.
tewt next wook with the good winheii of allOarterpt members of his parish and thoseaffiliated with other denominations an well.His friends in the borough have been count-less, because his unassuming, kindly per-sonality has won him regard and affectionwherever he goes.
His work in Carteret has been arduous,rtnd often discouraging in these troubledtimes when churches like busineasea areoften hard put to meet their financial re-iponaibilities, Carteret is an especiallyhard parish for a pastor to handle alone,and Father Mulligan's success in hid task isa direct tribute to his willingness to fiveall that he has to the task assigned him.
With his legion of friends here we joinin a sincere Godspeed and blend our regretut seeing him leave Carteret with everygood wish for his happiness and success inlifo new charge at Trenton.
favor n "Ho nothing course" with irix perceni fnvorinjr ftghtinf »ri«(,r»ifht«e«i percentfavoring protest* through the State De-partment.
When the Sino-Japanese w*r began,two years ago, a similar poll revealed thata hundn-off policy w n favored, togetherwith withdrawal of American citizens andInterest* in Chin*. Sentiment, it seems, haschanged to where our people are dissatis-fied with the situation that finds UR furnish-ing the materials upon which the Jap armyadvances in China, i
Water Can Be DangerousIt's a rather sad story that comes from
an eastern State, where four little boys losttheir liven while wading in a river.
Naturally, little boys want to go in thewater and play. They should be given theopportunity to do BO under safe circum-stances. It Is a part of the duty that restsupon adults.
Parents should not hesitate to warntheir boys and girls about the danger thatInrks in water. Whether it is a river orthe ocean, a pond or a like, danger lurksfor children. EVen good swimmer* shouldnot underestimate the peril that .watersports entail.
Stamps To Honor AmericansAuthors, artists, poets, educators, inven-
;ors, composers and scientists will be hon-ored by the issuance of a special series ofpostage Rtamps that will carry the likenessof-thirty-five Americans, selected by pollsof philatellic societies and from advice re-ceived from educational, business and pa-••riotic organizations.
It is interesting to note that one of thestamps will show the likeness of Booker T.Washington, noted Negro educator, whofounded a great college for his race inAlabama. The other thirty-four will in-clude thirty-one a en and three women.Here is the list of Americans to be honoredty the stamps:
v Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Sanv• hel L. Clemens, Washington Irving, Louisa',', May Alcott and James Finimore Cooper.
Artists: JamVs A. McNeill Whistler,•' Daniel Chester French, Augustus Saint-' GaudeiiN, Gilbert Charles Stuart and Fred-, eric Remington.
Poets: Henry W. Longfellow, JamesWhitcomb Riley, Walt Whitman, JohnGreenlekf Whittier and James RussellLowell.
Educators: Horace Mann, Charles W.; E|liot, Booker T. Washington, Frances E.i Willard and Mark Hopkins.
Inventors: Alexander Graham Bell, EliWhitney, Samuel F. B. Morse, Elias Howeand Cyrus H. McCormick.
Composers: John Philip Sousa, EdwardA. McDowell, Stephen Collins Foster, Vic-
_; tor Herbert and Ethelbert Nevin.Scientists: Luther Burbank, Dr. Craw-
iord W. Long, Dr. Walter Reed, John Jamea' Audubon and Jane Addams.
Almost anybody, reading the above list,, will realize that it includes notable names
and that it omits others who should beequally honored. At the same time it is
^virtually impossible to compile any group* 'that does not have similar defecta.
As a home-mad£ intelligence teat it, might be a good idea for the family circle> to take up the names on the list in order to
fl«ee how many of them are not within thefamiliar circle tha( should embrace the
.ifreat men of the nation.
• The "Last Itttiarf'Italian legionnaires continue to arrive
n Naples, Italy, on their way home fromservice in Spain.
As each batch of fighting men return, its announced that they are the "last Ital-
ians" from Spain, but the troops keep com-ing. There is no telling how many Italiansare stilt in Spain, where Gen. Franco seemsto be having trouble in keeping his own gen-erals in line.
Italian participation in the Spanish civilwar, long denied, is now admitted. It isa strange exhibition of duplicity m interna-tional affairs, with the evident connivanceof the nations to which denials were ad-dressed.
;r Nothing To Be Gained' V * Captain ,Kddie flfekenbacker, Amer-
Jqaji war ace, proposes that the United"Rfcatesdiapatch a fleet of big bombers acrossthe Atlantic ocean to "show the world some-
•K. This is a foolish suggestion, in our opin-ion. There is nothing to be gained bypending- American bombers across the At-Uantic.
If our bombers need long distance fly-, over foreign areas, let them journey
fioBputh America, where their presence will' i k* ••"" more good . •
.; Flavor Embargo On JapsMore than half the people of the Unitedfees favor aotiojj. by the United States to
the shipment, of war material to the4&jWeHfij accordiUfUO a poll of publicopinion by thA'Ap^a^.Institute of Pub-
polledOnly one-fourth
H$w Long Can It Last?In Europe all nations are on edge. Faced
with the threat of war each country has in-creased is military strength and is devotingthe major portion of its income and the en-ergies of its citizens in preparation for war.
Naturally, the people in these countrieslive in a state of uneasiness and tension,not knowing what day Ihey may 'wake upto find crisis and death facing them. Hu-man nerves cannot endure this suspense in-definitely, Sooner or later one or anotherof the countries will begin to crack andwhen this happens war is pretty certain tocomt. • \
Take France, for instance. It/is surround-ed by potential enemies in Jcase of war,facing the possibility of attempted invasionby Germany to the North/Italy to the Eastand Spain to the SouJJr It has mobilizedand keeps under arm's nearly 2,000,000soldiers. The people are determined butuneasy.
Writing from Fiance, Virginia Cowlesrefers to this tension, explaining that "to-day you will find the waiter, thp taxicabdriver, the dressmaker and the rrewspap^rlealer all of the samei opinion. The situa-tion ,they say, is intolerable; it is impos-sible to live in such tension; if war is inevit-able, let's have it over and done with andget back once again to the business of liv-ing.11
This feeling of inevitable war and thedesire to have it over with will eventuallycause war, unless some statesman-likemeasures are adopted to relieve the' presenttaut, stretched nerves in Europe.
Companies Must Cough UpAs an aftermath of the conviction of
Tom Pendergast, Democratic "boss" ofKansas City, a Federal Court has ordered137 tire insurance companies in1 Missourito submit to the Court's custody, $8,000,-000 distributed to them four years &go ina rate settlement classed as fraudulent.
The government charges that more than$300,000 was paid by. a representative ofthe fire insurance companies to secure theinfluence of political leaden in effectinga settlement of a rate case, under which$9,500,000 had been impounded.
While this step does not Necessarilymean that the policyholders wfll get the$8,000,000, it does mean that the courtshave taken notice of the fact that the form-:er distribution under which the fire insur-ance companies got eighty per cent, of thelfioney should be reviewed in the light ofthe facts brought out.
It might be pointed out, in this connec-tion, that1 polltjal leaders cannot use theiiportions, for profit unless somebody is will-ing to-pftf cash for favors receive*!. In such1 transaction, the guijt is [denjj^l and altparticipaftte are guilty of disloyalty to theideals of the American governmental ays-t e . m . ' ' '•• . • • ' / ' - •"" -
it foes without wy^K, thatirtM$yd tyith mi§tC a/paytnent
should « d
The Crop Report.
This Week Yean AgoT e h Y«l*rt
AVINQ Brt>5RECEIVED BY
The Borough C»uncj£bids for paving all of WaiirnStreet, part of Lincoln AvuWand part of Rootevett Afenm1, butfailed to mak* an ftfard. ' TheBarney PavlnR Comp*ny of Keyport, bicWinir $28,i>7.1.eo was low«t, hut Jniteph jreflriko of Ka*tInhway wan near<tMs figure.
Ron>ugV: Rnjtm«er Oliver F.Mitchell presented » map anilftpeciflcaMons for a tr*unk SAWIMsystem in lower Chrome when1
there in a nerioufl drfetrfagr prof>lem from rtorm wateM.
mnnn, member of the WoodbHd|jeTownship Comnflttec, led the fiuht,wtt^ a#>ist«nc« froufi Kmil Wilhelm,C4tnellun C, i Bhcridun, Charlf»Rnth, Frank Brown and Valon-tine
BOARD OF EDUCATIONMAKES ui,t.lBIONS
The Tloard of Education award-ed contracts for work to hn donein the schools and for the purchaseof supplies, imd n^iiicii ...> ioiiow-in If teachsfa: Mixiwa Lilliontjchwarti and Olive (iundcrtton,Francex Haringten, Herns Kichcy,Phocb* €onr»n,-M«llic Schwarti,
and Kdna Brown.
BERNARDDIES AT 8» ( .
Bernard Hagan died at the honkof his daujhter, Mrs,; Mhry R.Teats, in High Street,
. •'• • V • ;
PLANS BEING MADEFOR BABY PARADE
Alexander Krdelyi, Edward S.Wilgua and Jtooph Galvanek,
m of thV Board af Heirith,were named the committed fo'r thebaby paradr tha bom) will holdhero next month, September 14The line of inarch ferill'be stmrt,from the Borough HaJ] up CuokeAvenue, to Washington, to Emer-son Street, to Central Avenue toPershing Avenue and hack tn theBorough Hall for the aWiuvtHiK <>fpritea.
• « »
Five Year* AgoPLANS PUSHEDFOR AID SQUAD
Plans were undertaken ut thetneetinc of the Board, of Health toorganize a volunteer , Kirst AidSquad in Curteret, *\<mn plans fol-lowed by .such -ornaniiations in
plaiiiB. The Board of Healthordered all barbers in the
borough Ui obtain licenses. Thematter was biooiflit tu i head whenharberti complained one man in thebuxincM Was cutting hair in pa-trons' homes, and a check-up show-ed mine of those operating hadlicenses.
• • *PLAN CELEBRATIONOF1 BOROUGH FOUNDING
Plans have gotten under wayto hold a re-union of those reii-dents instrumental in the separa-tion of .Carteret from Woodbridgoand the subsequent incorporation>f this community at Roosevelt,later Carteret Joseph A. Her-
Thr« t Years A g oi 1,000 ATTEND! LEGION CONVENTION
Carteret tost, 26;t, entertainedother units from Middlesex Coun-ty at a convention here, attendedby 1,000 persons Fred Ruck-riejjel of the local post was amongthose elected to office, and Mrs.
i Harry (Ileckner WHS Mnied to 6f-Auxiliary.
TWO ARRESTEDFOR METAL THEFTS
Walter Kowalsky of Louis Streetand Bernard fihyhiansky of Hagsman Height* were arrested by Ser-jeant Daniel Kasha for the theftof two pigs of tin from the U. S.Metals Refining Company. Thea I rent was made on meager de-scriptions of the pair, given by aWatchman who saw them makingdtf with the loot
• * •
COPPER WORKSPAY INCREASED
Increases in pay amounting to$125,000 per year were announcedby the U. {S. Metals Refining Com-pany. This is the second increaseeffected at the plant in a littleOver a year. # About seventy per
. cent of those affected are resi-dents of Carteret.
*• *' »
On« Year AgoDEMOCRATS VISITGOVERNOR MOORE
A group of over thirty Demo-crats from Carteret went to SeaGirt in a chartered bus to spendthe day at the Little White House,summer residence of Governor A.Harry Moore. Arrangements weremade by School CommissionersMudrak and Lukach, and manyothert went in private automobiles.This trek Is A sort of homecoming
for Democrat* from Middlesex, asDemocrat* haven't gonri to S*a Girlmuch lately, with a Republican,Harold Huffman, in the governor'shome.
• * •
TAX RECEIPTSUP FOR HALF-YEAR
Tax Collector Alexander Combareported tax receipts of $410,000for the period from January 1 toJuly SI, a rise over the collec-tions for the name period in 1037.The Borough has also paid itscounty tax ahead of the date onwhich tt is due, and wad tho firstmunicipality to lay iU taxes on theline at the New Brunswick office.44,97'), due August 1R, was paidJuly M.
,,0
Aristotle Knew BirdsArlitotU was One of the first men
to discuss bird pilgtatlon,. He mademany true statement) regarding mi-gration, but also sponsored somesuperstitions that persisted for cen-turlei. He beUeved, for instance,that certain blrdi hibernated duringcold weather, because he was unableto explain their disappearance andreappearance in any other way.
Oath Value. According to figures presented atthe Conference on Child Jlcallh, aboy at birth has an economic valueof $2,3)3 in a family with an incomeof 12.500 a year. At 18 this same boy1* worth $23,854. It has cost $7,238to rear him. The value Is estimatedby computing his probable incomethrough his working life.
CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE
:^>^V%^
CARD OF THANKSWe, the undersigned wish to
thank our many friends, relativesand neighbors for their kind sym-pathy and assistance shown in therecent death of our dearly belovedhusband and father, James N. Coltins. We especially wish.to thankRev. Orville N!' Davidson of St.Murks EpiscjBpal Church for services rendered; those Who sentfloral tributes ami donated carsemployees of the American Agricultural Cricmipal Co. »nd pallbearers, police departments of Carteret and Woodhridge, UndertakeiJoseph Synowiecki for satisfactoryservice rendered and all those whoassisted in any way. We are deeply grateful.
Mrs. James N. Collins,Son, James, Jr.
CARD OF THANKSOur Son, Frank Makwintbi
In the illness and* bereavemenof our beloved son we were assisted by many relatives and friendsespecially the following: Rev. DrJoseph Dziadosi; Rev. Tomasztwski; the pall bearers, Nicholas Postak, John Zucuiro, George Warn]ek, Edward Kotlinski, EdmnmRomanowski, Chester Komanowsk.i; the honorary bearers: Victoria GuUiwski, Nellie Kotlinski, Jen•me Lyswewski, Genevieve Romanowski, Valerie Nowicki and Fr»nces Makwinski; thone who donatedcar»; those who sent floral piecesChief of Police Harrington andUmk-rtakur Frank Kuiswa.
We, the undersigned, wish tthank everyone.Mr. «nJ Mr.. Suptuit Makwiuki
»nd Family.
The Tide's RisingI am hecoming; more convinced than ever Him ,
wavp ia surging over the nation getipWUy and N, .particularly and before very long the people AIT ,„vote into office a lot of hard-bitten Crusader* »imake things hun\.
The inept performance by the legiriaturp this ;.believe, is setting the scene for the big blow in 11.powibly as early as next year when a new ^1,.,,„ho fleeted. I'm only afrttid that ihe knight in s|,,,,mor, come to deliver a people from oppressive tuv,j?raft and official insincerity, might turn out to i,flash in the pan who would eventually ncuttlo \u<portnnity. The dividing line between an effectiv, ,,and just a plain, ordinary nut ia indeed very fim
1 have, however, an antidote for such an eventiI believe that what this State needa governm. n
i ono-term (Jpvernor. I believe that a man, HMVapneity and with th« prestige of Dr. Harold Will,
of Princeton University, could bury the professioniciana in an avalanche of votes if he would dm ft
fortriKht platform delineating hi» plans and thru, i'I will do these thinjr during my three-year u-rm |not seek re-election to this, or to any other olli.. ,ft, rcompletion of my term and will not, therefore, i,,. ,,„
ded or high-pressured by political exigencies. |all the lobbies to go to hell."
Isn't There Someone?There must be a person in NeW Jersey, eithn
Dodds or someone like him, who would be willingon the job of giving the government back to th,and also their eye-teeth. If there is, I doubtthese game people would permit lurch a man to :MI|Ihis promise to hold public office for a single term.
Such, a crusader, I firmly believe, couid cut JHIUN
by one-half. First of all, 1 think, he should ^u, .,porary furlough to all the tin soldiers loun i ••.,around all the armories in the Slate. He could HImaintenance costs of these club houses and could iisminate the thousands in expense incurred every mto give the boys a free vacation at Sea Girt. The ti|of a wide assortment of generals and their familiesiUelf a considerable item which alio could be disjnwith. Of course, any man'planning a political fucould not offend several thousand home guardsmenman couW.
Another AdvantageNext, he could run the army of lobbyists rinlil
the capitol. These are the spokesmen for the pitsgroup who are getting their cut somehow or other <big road-building; programs, or who are saving thein Hog Hollow by getting a pension for the indigent vof the late-lamented boss of the borough, Thesot r j p j t i r ^ e i y ^ . t ^ e (inetji too; who are resjionsihbifflding up the mandatory, coats which are stuffed dothe throats of local governments, all to the expensedetriment of the taxpayers. We have a lot of c\\v\with this gang, and if you don't believe it try this ybudget on your piano and see how much of it is not nmaking of the local administration, but of the bin s|ers in Trenton.
But, as 1 say, theae reforms could not be expert,the professional who is devising ways and means of kefing himself on the public pad. The tax bill is IMKII
cause the State is operated by self-seekers who don'ta hoot in hell for you and me, but who are solely nested in getting a good living easy. These follows aafford to offend anyone. What New Jersey need>virile, vigilant crop, of men in high places who ilnta damn who they offend, so long as they dish up <iticeconomical government.
I can't help put think New Jersey has, and wants,of this calibre and with this objective at the governimhelm. I only hope that when the time comes and ;ision is to be made that it will be able to tell the diiM'between the sensible one and the nut
54
EM1L N. BIZUB
Falthfil DogIn front of the Shibuya station at
Tokyo, Japan, there is a bronze•tatue erected In honor of Hachtko,« faithful dog. His matter wai ateacher at the Imperial Agriculturalcollege and every morning the dpgaccompanied him to the station,meeting him on hit return each eve-ning. After his death Hachiko wentto the station every day for sevenyears.
—A Clarified Ad*. Will Sell It—
0/ Thrcid
Koch. Halsey. Ore., itaii.-ion a fane; bedspread, sii,*te more tb to a mile »( myear until this year tht >rfX mllti .
Bervanl Girl*If you want \t> » « i»<"••
wearing Jtwelw you must *•'land, partleuhrly to *'<w h e n even fte lervan!mally wear i f least a hutaW worth Of the goldsmith art
CHURCH DIRECTORY5 t Mark1. Epitcopal—Rev. Orville N. David""".
Services at 9 A, M., Sunday School immediately after**"'First Pr«ibyterian—R«v, D. E. Loreot», p^rtp" S l ' '
11 A. M, and 7:45 P. M. Bible school, 8:46 k. M.FI-M Magyar Reformed- Rev. Alexander Darociy, i
SorvictB for children, 9:30 A. M*.; for adirlta, 10:3"; ;'3 P .M.
St. Jo,.ph', R, c.—Rev. Joaeph Mulligan, pastor. M»7:S0, 9 ana 11 A. M.
Sacrwi H.»rt Slovak R. C—Rev. AAdre\* Jl.Suk.si'" rLow'ihaawa'at 8 and $ A,'M.; hlgii ra»M at 10:30 A. M
Holy Pamily R, C.—Rev. Dr. Jpaeph DiUdoii, P«»t"r V
a t 8 A , M. and 10:^0 A.M. ; A ^ <v •Zioo Uth*ra»—Rev. Frederick NoaWielte, paator. S<
t t »:46 A. ML - ; • ' '•.. . Sit EUsabatli'i Huaiaria. R. e^- jUr . Mark H"J"^ I'8ervJc«»r ft A. M, Ipw nrns*; 10^0 A. Mt high I»IM.r , , to, 0«*M|H«t) UkralnJatt—R«v. M * Rundkk,
View at » A. II. 10:16 A. M. and f , $ # :• H«Hvia»J«ptUt~Rav.,JuUu».HiiiMlto, .11 A. M. Md 8 P. M. Pr>y« m«««nf 9:80 A, M.;
i^lA''?'!i1|f«ta» P!M'*B'B wrTtM,5%-JL Wedne»d»y
. ..;..,*§» tl|«* Qr*4k ,
1
. .lit
. , , • ( 1
ililtll
p9 A. M
•ARTF
'^-^"AT"
^Wi^s^«^p^liB^G^BBBBBBBppiBlB^^^il^s^^^sl^^»r*^B^P^^^^spBJBM
UkesWWCTI, 7 To 3;
or/mg C/afc Beaten By RocknesAs R result of tils
, ttii. Rover* fromi .,-jti«ht League »«d,,. itamn h*lnt; for-,,iiinir <"lub and tH*,„!„ fl one-two po4-
,,il race, with only:. immtlng them.
rki>« were boay acof-tury over the Wheel-
I
Jaekinn to Comb,,, BtaJowircinkto Frankownki to Prokopink
Stolen b CI
!,,« week, the:iinx Club met with a,,. and lost a 5 to 4the Roaknes, !
landing follows:
STAND
Battfckwll
lldW THEY
Remitsi,. Sport* 4.Wheeler'* 8.
a vtsv.72.7.888
i v i ' i •
l i ' l l ' -
W. 1* Pck8 37 47 -Ir •1 93 8
8t
,|,|n-fl f rom, , „ „ forfeit vktaHei over,,vty other te«»4*a» on*
i^ Wheeler** T*.
,,.,,i;iy— Sport* n. Uke*,v*. lUie*.
,c|,Brl S,
Gre
rokopinStolen base-- CJIuchoski.U l (plate)
The rampa^m* U~kps added an-otter victory to their string inthe Certeret Twilight B«wbfinU a R t t t h h ghnchonljiturtinmTuesday evening when they trimm«<i Wheeler's, 7-S, behind MikeBoben * tlx.hlt pitching.
The winners pound*) Tnny NM-cak all over the Int. uottln* IKhits, etery Ukr r | » y P r n l l t f ; l | r a l
scoring at leant one nafcry.Bath teams scored nnre in th*
with the liken adding two it,th* second, one In the fourth andthree fn the seventh. Jor Tere-betki, the league'* lading hitterhad two for four, pot,, Tetehberkihad three for four.
The b
iy One Game In Twi LeaCards Execute TripleI 12-2 VictoryCarterot Trtm Scorea Eaay
Triumph Owr MlttawanToM«rt lUforft R«cordHom*Cn>w4
(-ARTKRRT —The Carteretapparently believe in
doing everything hy three's. Forin their 12 to 2 Vktory over ParkA. C.i of Matawatl taat Sundayafternoon at the Copax Field,they united feur rilfiea of threeniris each. And three of their ral-lies ramp in three Consecutive innings -one of whleK wt« the third,
Well, they won the (farne sny-way for their second straight homiitriumph before abrowd. Mittro
Carter*! \J\,r
W. Bo\>en, Ibb .;hwitowtki,, 3bb . iZ»j»P. » ! . . . ' ' AJ T f b k l If
AB4 0
1jP. !
J. Tefebetkl,, IfM
P.'.T«wb*bcil, 2bGlnda,- c ;,,.
i,n n ' i : . . i ke'n»lnflt Jn ft« sixth;f,i in Inter scoredfh ii mi oppbaitton m
k,,,i. f-.m- the Rockne* a^M, VIM the lcajrue-leadhWrK' Spmting C!ub In,a Ti»t
11 ;Un:i' game at the hign,,i -i ..Imm Monday evening.v »inniiig play, coming in the,, ii.ilf of the sixth inning,
: , •••.;I.MI by Manager Dan
nviin -f the Sports, and a meet*.' iI,I league's protest boardt,,-1,.M tn make a decision. Athail s,ili<il over shortstop, Bial-w.nk< threw his glove at thert Apparently satUflid thatc|.vr hit the ball, Umpire.iki unveil O'Rorke to thirdMII -hr play, as the ratebookn:;r The Sporta maintained
ilv u-l"vo never came near
u to this play, Manager<>f the Sport* waa bottnc-inpim Oreen aft»t •* hoti He cooled hta heelsniinl»tand.
(' h i• ii for the winners, and•!•.. hit*. Roianaki (ravenn' number for the Sport*.n\-score:
Sporting Cla» 'AB R H
92
Chenltk, eU tfM»yorek, 2b .Reako, If .,,.Baksa, ssJackson, Ib....Pencotty, c
,1brf cf
R H1 1
0I02011I
Th* score by innings!Ukes A. C. .::;• ~\mWheeler's' . ..
Three, base
3 7
3—t
hJt,10O 100 1 -
Oinda; two
. Ihkj, c
48333282
• k i .
2« 4 6
Rockne A. CAB R H
•'"— •-..• 2 1 0
i< illumed on Pag* 81
We Guaranty tb«owest Price* in the$Ut«
J1EPAYMENTSartm Cord - Goodywr
Firestone U. S.Goodrich - Dunlop
Dayton • HoodDiamond • Miller
Federal
"
tH INCH
BEDIRES
EW
30c
$27sb^ m
'^TTEWESMouth
N w misStKIJ
9x16
"non
bbase hits, Girnk, J. Terebacki, P,Terebecki; *iruclc out, hy M. Boben0, by Naacak 1; basee on halts offM. Bobcn 4, off Nascak .V; stolerbanes Pa«k>wskl, J TVrebacki, MBoben, P. terebeekl, CheslakJackson, Nascak; double play, MBohen to lapp to W. Boben; urnpiro», Comba (plate) and (Ireen.
U. S. MetaJs SoftballTeam Trims NassauCarteret Towers Pouitd Ou
13 to 4 Victory
• CARTERET—The U. S. MetalSoftball All Stars slammed outhits to score an overwhelmingto 4 victory over the NassaSmelting and Refining Companiteam at the Tottenville fleld lasFriday evening. It was a returrglrce between the two teams witCarteret winning both tilu.
The box score:
U. S. M. R. Company (II)ab r h
Garai, 2b .4 1 3Ciykowskl, ss .J 1 1Comba, p .1 0 0Kaaha, *f 4 2 3Barbarctuk, If 5 2 1Sartillo, cf I 0 0Porosky, cf S 0 1Sloan, Jb 4 3 3Sobiesky, lb ,...8 I 1Nagy, c 4 0 1Kostenbader, rf J 0 0Stojka, rf 3 1 2Potts, p \ 1 IFedor, p & 0 2
44 13 19
record breakingand P4eciy«kl
nhafnd the pitching, aaatpimcnt forUie local dub' aft* turned In s(mod Job; lihiiUn^ Uielr opponentsto seven ststtered nits betweeithem. . • t .
' Tae (ramfr ^M fe^iHrtd hy itlple t>\*t e*ec\iWd Ky the Card
tfco^nftth, Inning. With men^ * 7 i d ; « « d lihAd, Gen*fe«e hitHn« «|-i«! to Ple«y»Ul wlfo threw
o Prokoptak to (ret * • runner ata t . frokopiak whipped the hal
r"lnn( *Ko (fot the runner at secon'd 4nd then FlnR threw to firoiow«ki to catch th» runner fromthird Who tried to score, en theBlay. I
f a,nl(|ht fthe Cards will meet ther*J*pn Nitrate Clnb at Mutuchen«tntfon; Sunday the l»ca,l> will en
Itartiain the-Keyp..rt A. C. tt CopaxFleW,, jrarne, starting ato'clock..'
QPEAKINGABOUT SPORTS
By M . R . _
Ukes Defeat AmboyWiigs By 9-3 ScoreTw. Bif
tonitTt
The Rovers Can't Take HThe Rovers can't take it.
This was proven beyond a shadow of doubt last weekwhen they walked off the field in a Twilight League gameafter one of the officials had made a decision which waain favor of the opposing' team. j
And to top off their unsportsmanlike conduct they re-leased a prepared statement (looks like it was written byan Attorney) late last wVek officially announcing theirwithdrawal from the league. More proof that they can'ttake it. •' 'SUM ' *
I've always considered a championship club as onewhich not only is superior to the rest of the field in win-ning ball games but one which displays a certain amountof sportsmanlike conduct on t he playing lirld. In this iMlte&pect the Rovers have been sadly neglectful and probably rank a poor last. Blessed, fortunately with « strongteam, the Rovers have had tilings pretty much their own
ty anri have been leading the race since the league oportv In last week's game they should have been sports
rh tn do tiie thing in an orderly procedure and everywould have been satisfactory. Under the leagtifi by
laws every team has th* right, when it feels thai, a deri-sion has been made wrongly against it, to file a protect, tywriting, with the secretary of the loop within a certain
(12)
cf
ijakt ib
AB R3 Il 45 86 -8'
ftrotdK^ki, c , 6W-*H«W, 81>. 4PJ«j»WJki,. p ., s
H0222
>1\ 2i 31, 2
,o I.0 60 3
. , 41 •• JjJ. ,17Park A. C. of M.Lw.n (J)
AB R H
Cui^ho,
, rf, If .ef
lb5 j y ,J. Sirauiero, 3b .Fwqnvlf . :V. Strapfiieto.-pArmerillo,' pPm-no, rf
3444434&011
specified time. This might not have even beenfor they probably would ha^e won the «ame anyway. Billinstead they elected to walk off the. field line a "bunch oquiters" and later send in, their resignation to the localpapers. Even here they were wrong for the fesignatioshould have been sent to the league secretary.
Iniofar as the particular play in question is concertedit is of relatively little importance as to whdlwr or'nolthumpire's decision was right or wrong. That is wholly Lftsignificant and immaterial. The important thing tor: consider is that the umpire's decision in final in' every bill p
fUtlWt GIT* Car-aa Victory—T«r»-Horia TWa-Hit
Dan Donovan Named ManagerTwi Loop For All Star Game Aug
CARTERKT — Dan DwiotMit Three ballot* have tan)as named manager of the Carter- ***•• l h f l«T>e secretary
GUM,
CARTIRET—Scorini all theirrani In two big Inntnip—thefourth and Mth—W» Carterctlike* A. C. ritftatMl th« Perth Am-boy Wlnfs, > to .1, at the htfhichool stadium laat Sunday afternoon.
Zapp opened the fourth with atriple to rlfht field. Mike
Boben walked and stole secondThen ftnbrowakl slapped a singlever second, ncorins; both runners.
Two infield plajra enahled Dob-owakl to come,another with an
other score.
In the fifth the Uki>s combined'our hlu with three errors to
$eore n\% runs and put the irameon ire',' us Joe Mell would say.
(Thai iruy lives in ttrnnklyn hutta a rubirl Yankee rooter.)
Pete TnrebbeUkl hurled « threfgiimr for the Uken, while his
team, nyler. belted Bialownki andD /or eleven safe HJOWR.
Thi« Sunday the Uken will mee'the strenf Hlliaide Rarron club athe hiirh whnnl nUdlum. HilUidiha« « r<>pulatf(in of being one o-
the fn«fi>t ,iemi-prn team* in Uni Connty: Either Mike Boben 0
8Un M««lurl( will tr«t the pitch-I " »*i(rnment. Ga(n« time ii
AlhUllt Oak
and must be respected and lived up to in all events. Wfully realize" that no umpire is infallible; even big leagUofficials make mistakes and pull bonerfl, Hut that is njustification for a team to walk off the field. Such an ac>tion cannot be condoned under any circumstances.
The rank disregard for all rules of orderly procedureby the Rovers in walking off the field would have been, in
ur opinion, sufficient cause for the league officials ..fc©th,row>" the team out of the league race. After all is saidnd done, it must be remembered that the league officialsre still running the circuit and not the Hovers nor any
W. Bobrn, thBubhick. ihJiaRP, *II'. Boli^n, 2b .Qobrowjki, efUohahek, If ... .Gurat rfQlnda, cP.. TereheUkl, p
AB R H
t TwilifM Ba«eball
tare thin week for theirAll-
|rame
and all ara unanimoo* iachoice of three pitcher*. BUIof the Rocknea, Babe ROWMUthe Sporting Club and J« iman of the Ukea are on allttaU. C.me Olnda of the Ukt< tmtwo vote* and Jimmy Reako of M*'Elia* hax on* i t thecatcher'* a«ricnm«nt. Trav•on nf WWIfr'n hm two volaa
witha picked Inm of Old Timer*the hiirh school stadium onrust 24 The practice initiated
last year, whpri>in the manager ofthe team in Am plsrr In the
standing* gets lhi> nod to Ihandle the All-Stars, WM *ppr<w-!
ed by all other managm imliflrst base and Babe PnrknfWl at*Tie officials «t a mretinf m I th* Sports has one. Doug Kbtf f t
th* Ukes' clubroom* on L irk ! the fywirU ham three vote* f«9.*]M>Avenue. Monday mfht j SparU. Zapp of the Ukea and jk«l
A deadline for manafer ballot* j ftn ^**f- »"«' BUIowareiuk *l Us*'as set for Friday night. Th* nvriNil l<'*k n f l h * Roekne* h*rrM'«iwnanafers and two local newspap ; v f t t r »P'M'' f o r "horUtop, AdMdrmen, who are votinf for the: <ll»rho«ki of the Rockne* it tlayers, must have their ballot* ir | unanimous choice at third on (Iniy that time. I three hallnts. }
In the outfiHil. Jne T'rebecU t fthe Ukes and Strve I.ukaakk *fthe Snorts are on all three Ittfc 'und Chet Rnmartownki of UM St,Rlias tram i* nn two. Andy Vb«f
f the Spoil* also has one vote ttt_the all star outfleld.
Munajor Jo« Elkn of th* OMTimers announced the acquttitsenthis week of Jack Dixnn, a fttdr-er on the Sporting Club roatejr,but whn is elldble to play #ttfc«the Old Timers as a result of hhservice with the old Pastry Boy* inthf Carteret Twlllfht Uajru* of19S8-1934.
31 2 7. Bcorc by innings;Cardinals 033 30(1 0,8.x—12Matawan ... .„ 100 100 000—2
Two-base hits—Mittro, Gluchos-Ki, ButCo; three'base hita Proko-|>iak, Bre«ny; hits, off Stratricroin ? 2-b innings, 8; off Armerillo,«•; off Mittro, 3 hita in 3 innings;winning pitcher Pleciysky.
Nanau S. * R. (4)
• • *Egaat, cKilaby, c A
BMk, cMbWallen, 4hGtriaano, lbElnhofn, cfAndermn, IfBice, tf:..:Kuihw, ss - A x
Kowal ki, aa f. •Beliner, P . - : • - • 9Sprlnstead, p J «Kufg, tt * l
FJnk. «b JJ, WalWn, rl jSiabo, rf t
>:>l i.
ins, 10-7e act h . n t lft U. S.
Metal. Softball Loop
g advantajfebases on balls, the, Smelter
Softball team scored a lucky 10 to7 victory over the Lead Plant club
W d d i hnight at the Copper-i»orks field. Both teams mad»twelve hits apiece.• The box score;
Saa«ltar (10)A B R H
Uhosky, ib 4 10Mago, If
Ohder, p • 5€halflkiii M ...r....'.'.:...";.., 'fl^ j s m o , 2b J 2McDonnell, c .%t h i k i it.».., ;...,., jPasipanki, cf \.,;.;.r.:.... IWnokowski, rf 3Slotwinski, rt .;.,. iGyug, lb t
000200
0 0
Sfilier, IfK k f
87 4 a
Store by innings:'g U R. Co. ZOO BOB 0 0 1 r i a
i l024SlfJitTMrBtf|
, Tn» «l|ht-jMr bridle lame of Dr.Htd Mr*. A. P. Oyeriaard and Mr.and Jlrt. Ralph Ru«ell 0' O m l W
II over with Dr. Ovetgaard top icor-nr. H« had 1,4«,3*> po'nt»- «>•«m*. itarttd in 1MI and played ev-7 Monday otght. wdtd recently
D , and Un. Overgaard areHouiton, Tm», « « » •
<H (U ejt IWM» K1" Wwi w l t h n e t * r
a paltott"» act being trumped,
At Tu'm#l to Belf'wn wv*1"5'""' ' July It b«td UM farooui
" th* P«nit*t»W * * «ctbiou«h,th*
J m Y / ibewi h«W annually
Uad. Pt«»tAB B H
'otto, pCurran, 3b...
lbcf ....
r, c j . . .
2bcf
448
L a n d e r , o f lS m i t h , s f , . . . . . .<. , . . . , . 4 .
3,0 0
3« 7 1Score by inpingt: "' '
Smelter 2<Mr' 118 018—1Lead Plant,..:. ftlfe 000 M0—
aloof a hill or ridge undtretooda or'along *•• ahorei »f larg«^odJ«t o( witer and k U | th*jr,eurreoU lor *10tud* u i iit-Unc«.
The ringing deunciation 6f the league officials,'umpiresid everyone connected with the loop, made by the FUm
irs in their lettor of withdrawal, is both untrue, unfound-id and tinged with a bit of jealousy. We happen to knowhat the Carteret Twilight League lias b«eit run off in aery capable and efficient manner during the psat twoears and will continue to be operated in the snmd wayso
long aa the present group of men will bo in charge. Welire personally acquainted with the officials of the loopand we can truthfully say that no more capable a group;ould be found anywhere.
The Rovers also charge discrimination. This also ig un-le and unfounded for not a single instance of discrimi-
mttion has been found to date ih the records. It is toothat the fans have been lined up with theunderdpgaroot against the Rovers every time they play but that
is surely not the fault of the : league officials nor of artyother single individual for that matter and to blame the1
officials or anyone else connected with, the circuitfor this action is just plain sheer foolishness. Nothingcould be more ridiculous or absurd. The truth of the matttr is that the Rovers simply can't take it anymore.
We were glad to see the league officials take the stamthey did in this matter and accept the resignation without
attihg an eyelash. It indicated that the Hovers nor ahyother team for that matter can dominate or break up theleague. It was fully a surprise to the Rovers, we believethat the league officials accepted the withdrawal withouA whimper. The Rovers fully expected the league officialsto cry about it and run to them with unfolded arms. Suchwas not the case by a long shot.
Finally we think that the Rovers are sorry for their action in this matter and very likely regret that it all OQcurred.
Which is the way those thingB usually work out when-ever one does a thing hurriedly* without first sitting downand thinking the matter over.
Mr. Jonph MedwickRegardless of what you. may think about the recent in,
cident in which "Ducky Wucky" made the headlines *cently, the fact still remains that J06 Medwick is still onjof the greatest players in major league baseball oday. Thifact is admitted by all that Jersey Joe ta one of the greatestright hand hitWrs of all time and any team in eitherleague would be glad to have him. Even the New Yor*Yankees with their "all-star" outfield.
It is a known fftct, and has bean, fof a long long timje,that the St. Louis CaVdinate are a poor-paying elub—probably the lowest in both leagues. !Xh«3f run » week daytendance frequently of leas than a '<J,000"!an». Theyprobably losing jhoney although w? are not aure of( a c t . ' . . ( ' • • • " • "
Ever since ha joined the club th 1982 Wedvflck has bearan Qutatan^iBriiar. He was jpickfcd fof-rooH vaiuaJbjeplayer in 1987. taring those seven years with the C*rdabe was nev nr fully (Oontented for he realtwd that the
V}nw he la a>«lrtwf down about $18,000 annunHy btf
Errors, W. Boben, Bubnick,lapp, Gural 2, Lopes, Bingle, Mis-rak 2; three-base hiU, Zapp; two-
e hits. W. Boben; struck out by•e-hpftki 7, Bialowski 0, Biskethn.sM m\. halls, off TrrehetakiRialnwski 2, Bisket (I; hit by
itcher. Simon (Terebetuki); hiU,IT Tei'cbctskl I! in 9 innings, Bial-wski 5 in 4 innings, Hiskct fl in
2-3 innings; winning pitcher,Terebftflki; Insinir pi teller Bialow-aki; u/npiri's, J. Naacak mid Cherc-pahiak.
on 8)
|H».n, cfIngle, 3bif
38 9 1Ptrlh Amboy Winfs
AB R H0 000
P.*
c ( i pitwin, rf
4
4
4
44
3443
3 4 3 3S c o r e b y j n n l n g t : ' , , •
itiJT" .". ;.,... 010 000 020—3'krainlan A. C. 000 860 OOx—9
Scrap Plant HammersOut 13 to 6 VictoryMai Hurli Steady Game Aa
Scrap Plant UpMt« CopaxIn U. S. Metal. Loop
CARTKRKT Th«> Herap PlantSoftball tpRm fur thr flrnt time inR long while showed «mo« nignn oflife and pmmHnl out a 1,1 tn 7 up-let victory over the (Input ClubTueaday night in the U, S. MtululnteTdeportmpnt League
Joe Mai pitched « steady ballfame, giving up eight hits. He raninto trouble twice—the first timeIn the second inning when theCopax scoied three runs and thenagain in the eighth inning whenthe boyn from acroaa the trackpuahed over three more rum.
But those »ix runs were Juntkid's play compared to what thi.Scrap Plant ulugyera did to Toed to work on him bright andkarski, Copax pitcher. They start-early and opened with a five runattack in the first round, AfUr anhort rcceiw in the second theycontinued the bombardment in thethird with another flv« run as-sault. Another two run rally inthe fifth made it 12 to 3. And bythin time the Scrap Plant waa outin front by so big a margin thatit wasn't even funny anymore.
The score:
Scrap P i n t (13)AB R
Paupnnki, c 3Oregti, cf 6
Terrys Win 2 GamesIn Recreation LoopDefeat ^ukach Dairy, 14 *•
10, and J. P. Food Start,5 to I -
CARTmf^Thi Tan1** to* Jboth of their games In tha Raws*' ' 'tion sponsored Junior J M M M I .eague this week, defeating tht •Lukach Dairy club, 14 to 1«, MMonday afternoon at th* Mgfcschool Aeld and then scoriae Ws-other victory over the J. P. Fb*4Store, S to I, on Wednesday after-noon. In the Midget Leafua play,the Wings divided two gasn**, tot-ing their first to the Heart*, Utah*,4, and then coming back t» b*atthe Pirates, 8 to I.
• T.rry»(4)
Sehein, 3bMai. pBoran, sfChereiiski, usPajak, lb ...Patrick, iftlsccnski, lib(Joetj, rf
ABR'fcColgan ..RiddleUlliot ....Van PeltF. BongyHorkyBergmanYapE. Bungy t.
1:aoet
XTotals 38 13 18
Cop«» (7)
3bAB
Yap Hurls Casting-W. M. To 9-5 WinLab. Beaten In U. S. Metals
Softball League Game
CARTERET—Frank Yay hurl-d the Casting-White Metali com-
bine to H neat 9 to 5 victory overhe IA\> Wednesday evening in the
U. S. Metals Softball League.After u poor sUrt Yap struck hisstride and gave only thief hita
fter the first inning.The box score: ..
Caning W. M. («)
AB K HHousraan, 3b 4 0 1Derewski, If 4 1 1Evanlts, 2b 4 1 0Larrinski, ss 4 2 1Yip, p. . : 4 1 0'Malowitx, gf1: 4 1 2Sl0tw<n«kifc 3 1Ugbi, rf 3 f tPanek, cw 8 0 0Wierqnej, lb' 8 I l
Ncrinir, cf 4Joe Rcako, 2b 4M. Poll, s« 3Hokarski, p 3Andrejcak, lb 4IjinrioD, c 4Kaanowski,'If 2Bonahky, If 1Bakwlz, sf 2Cromwell, rf 3
Sloan 8Mioduitak 88ankner 2Mai 8'KoUbaa ,. 3Nadulaky 8Boinuwtkl 3P*rry IPluU ,. 0Caplk 2
TiUls 33 7Scort. by lnningi;
Copax 080 001 038— 7Scrap Plan 505 020 Olx—13
36 9 9(8)
Maakarlnec, If 3foaoby, 2b 8•Fuger, Ib 3Barbarciuk, 3b aTarnowaki, p aOrages, u ' 3Olbright, rf 8Klelman, c aTufn«r, ef 3WudskJ, *t . . . I 8
R H2 2
Score by Innjngs:80 6 6
800 01« 0—9801,010 0—«
Vldow Eagl*Raymond Stalllngs, farmer on the
Frog Hollow road, displayed an ea-gle measuring * feet 6 Inches fromwing Up to wing tip, and hit U-yetr-old daughter Dorothy May showedscratches on her head today follow-ing an attack by the bird on th*girl. Dorothy May was walking to-ward the barn when the eagle swaptfrom the sky, dived at her headand began beating 1U wings abouther face. Her screams frightenedH Into a nearby field. Th« eagl*waa sitting In the Held when Stall-hit's leveled Juwn at Wl paces withan ancient, aihgle burr«lt>J shotgun.B* didn't miss.
J. P.25
FMHI St.r. (3)I 4
*0 09 1• • I1 t
.», »0 • •0" t0 t .
24 1 IJ. P. Foqd Store.... 000 OM 1—1Terry* 200 030 .jt-r-6
Winning pitcher Bqngy; lotincpitcher Ferry; umpire F. Proko-piak, N. Y. A.T*rry'» 201 713 0—14Lukach Dairy 201 813 0—10
Winning pitcher, Kollbaa; tot-ing pitchef, Hasluck; uiFrank Prokopiak, N. Y. A.
Score by innings:Hearts 010 506Wings 101 020 ft-H 4
WinniiiK pitcher Terebecki; tahint; pitcher lliinmuski; umpir*.Corky Andrea, WPA.
Score by innings:WiiiB* Oil 301 0 - 4Piratus 000 100 0—1
Winning pitcher, Hayduk; lA*>int; piuher, Paviliiett; imptra,Corky Anilies, WPA.
Challenge 0( Rovers Accepted BySporting Club For Chanty Gam
CARTKRKT -Thfii challenge,published in local newupapei'B l»»tweek to the effect that they wouldplay any team in the Carkiet Twi-light Baseball League "anywhere,anytime and for anything," and
the injured pluyer's expense^ ,I'o date, the Rover manafV
mt-nt has maintained an ominotMncu in this matter. Fan» fefl,
however, that they will be fora*4to play the game, inasmuch as thWr'
M p f ^buunctt iwltoimtiilm th* e«n-
Mtfa wlft jnon th*n th*imflWAtpJ f»)bw«« throughout
• > ; * f * a . ' .;.. / , . . ,
signed by Ruver inanaKtr SteveAlach, has been accepted by DanDonovan, of the Spurting Club,with the appnrvul of the official*of the Carteret Twilight BaseballLeague, and followif* acceptanceby the Rovers, a tome betweenthe two teams, proceeds to go tothe league's hospital fund, will beplayed in the high nchool stadium.
Such w»s the action taken thinweek by Dohovan, whose team waaplaying the Ukes when a playerwaa accidentally beaned and hoa-pitalixud for nearly a week. Tfcaleague, faced with a siieable hoa-ptul bill, which it Is not bound topay but will' da m anyway, UIsponsor the Kamc to help d
challenge of lust week waain good faith, and failure;to ac-cept Donovan's termH woulda seriou.i IUHX of face to theHouderi), if they haven'tthat already by droppingthat a y y p p gmonioualy out of the league aft*f'a minor argument two weeks af0»> '
There is a natural rivalrytween thi) two clubs that piomilto more \h*n db \U share *tgate. In two years ofLeague competition th«have beaten the Sports tfera*. <and the Sports nold theber of victoriua overHousera Donovan is ^kavu thin xamu playtxi aa a>'b#l" (fiiiiu1 in the
Revue iof World Events in* . + . . .
VgraphsBritain's First 'War Babies' En Route to Camp
vi* • S&rlfeks U. s
Called (« •KTVII <• bv a n armlne Britain, these noldlrro—p«rt o( J0.0O0 young men between If (ndltl'yeariof age—gaily walk Into London'* Waterloo railroad station, bound fur their varlonx cimpi U d Darnell . Theyform thr vanxutrd of 204,000 ronncrlptrd mllltUmrn who were babies shortly akcr the World W»ren|ed, andare an Integral part of Britain'!) prepared™*** ram palpi. * ' '
Manager Bill Terry Greets Boys Town Residents
Onfl week each ?f«r t'en mW iainer te*»V«ical wort! In l«ajia« «M
beauty, will swk furtherpageant whht tkfkt content
III Braail in^ ^ m t h r i, i Left to rlffat ard Jes.it Krrnrh.t*f1or *nd Petty Bivjmgarlner1 Supply—KxH'pt—
Fisrlat party setyetejy,hit bfcyt* darter thr TOtttr irranAi,oat ef
" • * - - « -on a baseball tour,however, as the
Hoys Town, Neb., ju§t before the Giant-Cub frame at Wrigley field In Chicago. The jboys wer«nur, having won thr i huniplonNhip in a Roys Town tournament. They didn't bring T.erry luck,• Cubs managed to win the garni- with a ninth-inning homer. • '
. . . <
'Somewhere in Holland Too Close to Germany' ]
Shorted when the Unlfcd Slate*abrogated *h<- MU JapanMc-ir. H.eomnirrt l»l treaty, TaUne ttawtl,Jftpanw foreign offtcfl »poLa«rt»».Intimated Japan would not demandU,«. rouoKtiKUn of it« "new •x'rtorlnEast AsU" as a new pact basic, -
Plungtis 150 Ke^t, Lives
^ With the e*xpU«n W RnSftU's hnge'wheal rrop and (HilnVs output,t ie tentative world's wheat supply hi S.WO.SM.OM biuhels Which meansilitt more wheat wRI be afttlattle tor uee in the m».'4O srason than rvrrhUtre, »wordto» t« osWtnales *M*> by 41m ''• N. bureau *f agriculturalMODQiniii. Th« carryover It lJtOD.tWM* tamheU, ami this year's whcaicf*f will total aUptoxlmatdy iMtjm,m bwhels.
; Tlki >$flP$**8 Voire U» Saw
I
"Somewhere la Holland too dose to Germany" ti the only locality Identification riven for thl* ifcow tlD»ich preparedness on the German border. Left: A steel-hdmckd sentry stand* guard before t^e witr«ao»to one uf Uie new border fortresses. The concrete stub la a "tauk stepper," (aralfhed with «te«l raUt asd »bonijaet of barbed wire. Right: Soldiers of fhYNetberlanda' regular army stand n u r d in a trench a|«af tiwOertnan border. Huih fitenus are pUntiful along the entire frontier. •
Nine-Year Drought May Produce .400 ffitterl
y aning death wh«wher «ar flunked IN Itei (roin *vtiiduct, Mrs, lidna Burdiek «f ViemYork suffered, ^niy a tew »er»tjijli<»Incite almost uabeili-vaUe a w W i tH e br«6M Use tndloaiei Ike dp-scfnt of the automobile, wakh"wasleft a crumpled wreok, Botiow:Mts. Burdlck treated
CoifjAete Transatlaijtic Track Meet
forty he uoatuuw* a4 nil nreeent
* UK* star* as Rogen H e n u ^ ; i lay•-- *row. Center: Hia itejue ^ ^
m e n t t t i w t . ;•' - • ' , • • ,
'S&fc:
l-hp Pother of <ht I5ri|1l»h[» was he who flr«t prltittd 'tii" HlbV in fiagllsh *ndbrn»dc<i|t thraugh UMtMd*m n law forbidllng tnyjri*irnntlntr the lerlpttoti Into t lwititmit ctttharlt;, and wtl*i T j<-l.il.- uppilpd to th» binhfip (4 L * -1 .. f;; |M>rmli<;slnn he wan refused,
T" hin- the trnnslatltt m a i l ltt»!nt<T"\i flcrlaration: "Jf OtxJ ipiH"«niv I iff. 1 will rauif » bofr thirt• Ir'vrth « plow tn tmoW »W»t of tft«S^iip'tire Ihnn th«U dolt" .
'A i, .".-• nt (.'ambrldje, Tyndaio h«flhpi ii under llir |nBn«rlC» dt Rlik-mw. 'Mr greotent OHrt «Chfilir Ofhis fin.-. nnM It wa» flirt* 1SM h»mirtc himwlf farrftillir Wiih A trjr'-nk tps1»m(>nt. Be w*f J4»t*r-•nr«1 that the penpte o( ff--h -;.| hnvr the nAvMHagl
iiu' f 'i tiicin^fiveii the.Wordfhv<'iiRii \hr new invention <^ pri;-,g mid when he loynd tDIt jr M!H iidl he (irromplllhM atJiorDCIn- left f •!• ihr rontlntnt. Thlt wl lin ifl?4 Tn Hnmbur* he ypficed J>much thr snme w»y ai JtrorB* h f ldunp no niv H rfntitry bt fon and*Vfnr nftrr he « • • at Colegrte withtin- shrr-t, of hli quwto Ntw Te>^r-rnent rfaHy for the prtnter. f
'>••• i!.iy n m*siii|M <iMf«e that I*wntcrKMl. ID U) Mi *K . Mi P
el* he enenped to Wornih rtd
e pIt was mere thnt heruiilKliinu the first ftdftlpl) W tjNew Testament In AnftlahJ TIvolume* were taVtn stcfvtljf IIIh:« own munlry hhMen Irt «•
In In)letrvrr they could b* | U # A 1 : nwi
Ift*
ynnr! bernro long the? * * N INtiniiira throi^hout 4 M Uwet,m»ke the shipping of w)««l eft-irr Tyndale AIRO printed in Editionin a sninller ilte , ,
TlKiusnmis nt coplen w«re telzMnrnl burnt, hut when the translatorhennt (if this hii comment waj:"In hurnlnK the book they did nod*nlher 1hnn I looked for; ne mof*Khali they do if they burn m l a hi*,if It he (HMI'P will ttitt it srioipd IkH'inr " Tyndale alto trattilat^dpnrts of the Old Teitament. tjht %his <<f!ort.s he wai thrown Into prll-on His last prnysr waj—Mojien tin: king of Rngjana'iHo was eventually s t r | l 4his Imdy burnt at the iuk«:this wai done In the nsme 6f rir-l i g i i i n
Brain Found to ContrWThree Ph»M> of
at t-ras
Thi' all embracing law ofis ih.it it runt In cyclw.Joseph Jnstrow in Ui article, "Story of Human Ener|i«#"ing In a recent Uiue of
Life is a seriei of rhythtru., Thtenergy cycle prejenU the thj«eI li.iM'i of energizing, utlgufti anSrest, in the core of the brain Is tincehimism that lets your prograrjfrota the cradle to the frave. Dalin and day out wtth atto#aBO*for emergencies and holidays, thatportion of the bxata hat itrmf pi*as a monitor of the eaasgjr ef»le. ,
ronditioning the energy cytlt iichemical traffic ijritMa 1 1 | | |
nirtiibolism. The foalingl4* a Cr*fand fatigue set up the'(O, cl Utlo|.niii stop signs, n * b o # «eedimore than rest to keep H 0&>tiit also needs food, 8U4Uai f « N at
supply nourishment,; fotd llmetabolized into energy.
it is true that rouseWi Ura antthat nerve fibers do iwt, |njr wth.ui (i» the wires of ao elMtHfscuit nver which the current * T *But it h still truer tblt tbe tciUri
cular set-up Ii \)\e fofQs atthe nerve battery turn
(luWII
Sound ef Veice.'I'lic sound of the human vi^et Mi
dependeuL (or its plaaaam $tics upon the air u U :
uiKuiis which produce fhaKxpiriinents were nudeKrnst Buruny, of the Up
lu, Sweden, In whiwith which the lung*tilled was replacedThe subject under
air and breathed infrom a rubber bag. Uttotf t edrogeu us a medium for carrjin|the sound wave* he spoke tnanftt':,t sylluules which wwe studiedin many ways and compared Wlljlthe sounds produced when -eis* w « |breathed. The titbit flM i* ft*body cavities C«UM4 K M 4(sound trequencks In the v«to«be raised one to two oelawe, Hlisteners were *ble to i i i i i twi l ie |only about two-tbird* Of J w tOfkfbits spoken,
WidowsAlthough cUmatip
variations probablyqueatio*. a court easeAustralia. In which a W t a ffio,ooo damviei tra We H M f i l *husband who bad been killil i« ( | tworking on the railway, h*s re-vealed t/om fhe invejUuUoai ofcounsel, tbe i i f '
cent:said the proportion e | •who would remarry within » ;was it per oent-
l » yeari !lK
Lerralne Coats -,w,P«t t*}k. Now. iMM. Etftne W,nipet tack «t „ t ,
fe a audden r . , ,
f«pp«d up IntoMd been IndscUioae yearn.
EPITAPH ON (;M A vHONORS I MM W
fhey PwUedrforce and »4oors,
loul deitrucimn •"hlch they
t* Man Ui
T o Work for I),
AUQU1PPA, PA(hie Ohio vollfy i!<-ftret in tome meir»paid a debt to •poor Italian immlRi .cpntly.
The men's body nmarked grave in stiery instead of u,where he W«B bun. Iburned to desth v.±,ciught fire in U"house,
SUMBI workers i
live* the debt »r ,"4ecerit" burlel hi.OoUrlly swept M:, ,"earn" hU weekly •H.ffl. Or, i i M.-in i(Hit i t in hi* broken [IM, (hey giw mr i«t«kee my brood t.i
am a marbe became :
fined to the cnur,1'. iyear-old mm alw.r,, •paying the count\ 'nence. Then, one -!.,•.bathrobe caught fir. .were fatal.
County officials Iv, •'btft to oonilgn hk imarked grave.
But Aliqulppa st.•• -iwives and CIMKIM
owed this poor ni,i ,deeent burial. A fnand townfolk cuni: -•
With the mnnpy .i •purchased and «nto ti^e the "Littlr idecent funeral.
Few persom of n.r,antUiX ever had a :.
oenmoiiy and sn • ••Huo' i fecond bun.
mourners, nuiinf. were In the ,potter'* field to thrcemeU'ry.
Choir boy« sanK - ipriests recited thr
The ceremony end< ite n tied past Hit- 1 •pher's" grave to rcnl '•scribed on the stmn
"Mario Euo—it m, '>bread lajte tweeterman."
l l r . f
Arreated Driver Found I
To fie Blind PenstoJSAN JOSE, CALll
of Justice may turn ;•turn out lome quci-rend. When a motmion a charge of il. ^a search of hisha was receiving a .-from the state, UIMbrother living with hing. a blind pens:' i
Ae tbe po»iessii..nlicenae and a cm:.:neae irnpreiied the .iIncompatible, they hlicense annulled.
; • •
H)Mirror Battling Bi
Triumphs AfterTPLABE, CALU
battlini houjeftncii. i iworty's champion ''ttfew purta i t the i- •iiay fiitt against Ins •|n the window of u tu!per office.•. Bvery day for two ,<.koppeil, up to the wiiuii •••Wty at the "other bu.i
0R 'H» «tee»th (Ujbird" didn't «how mEddie toek credit f •t i l adversary awuy. :
feneroui coating off l a n did srwajr with tin
Falll Down Elevator We
Lands oo Anothet sNEW
fltor behind the shaftf a i n Berllla opene.i .
w h e r « hn is "through, I'tnil.i '
• l o r y t o tbe bottuin >•< "'j b w e * net Injured, but •• ••Ll
lhatby t e uixl>
ftan,
•oft flf accident.
in Mont<tiw
JaURtallyCet
toftl* fturdUmnd,
• ' ctis"''ilrl
•^m^m
"-SLAV'S* " ? • " H» " ^ rtetmam for hia
• models nnd the Rhine for the DeU
Cllapm still sillOne place, nn<i nni> pb?e only In
the world, ot Mnrlrhnmm In rTn-! lind'i AWnd Isle*, will you tee the1 ellpptt inipt which American
lailori once hinde tnm<m. TheVinniifh harbor it firtl at wtndjnm-" " " atin doing good
11,193df iK,%« :i^i
' r : '" ' „ «•.»« Bible, |»,r | ) M
11 nerd earmulTj on -nm Rihu u ~ , . *\ I .
..,„ apartment. . m o r e ^ 7 ( ? . ^ ^ ^
S K I ^ J S W trlb^a^rtonno^aM,,
men of London who have.•Ing Gari|*b*l Ind Omiri-
i. Hindu girli frarn Mytcre. In-<JI«, *hn , r t joined together Msm-••* »tyle. declare the girls' penon-• l ' 1 '" nnd brains are independent,w* mo«t of their tiervea are eon*" • » » > « * l mat e « or M m her-™ lh(> ° f t w ftwlithe hijufy. Gemr-*•">• may hm* „ rotffh. (hntaba.1*«t f« l the strain In her throatWhen one embroiders and Comes tothe end of h w ,f)k fa o t h w w | 1 ,
> u t n m « i e « y hand her theecisww.Whilp they h.iv* much In commonU«y arp not auWnatln 1* th*lr likea»nd dWtVM. flangabal Kites ten;Oiiurnbni prefera coffee,
Man; Pity CiHfOOF out nf every 33 Auslrnlldn-
play* gnll. arrovdlng lo .m eslttnAlepublished In MPllwiiifne.
The color o* ckwda depmdt tatthe turo^int of progress mad* ttfthe droplet! composing them towtMthe formattnn nf actual rain. wiMMthe particlet of water are to t c M lthnt they reflect the light, at 4 *cryninlt. the ekwd tl whit*.
Mlalklan OairrtrnA minfotuK farBeti which t M i
first prize at a flower show In PUJf*idrnce. R. I., Is watered with tjmrvliclnf dropper. Ruth Ely'i |aj»'dm la perfect ai te scale, MMmeasures M)Iy SB by 22 Inches.
Jon alt and (he S««Davy Jones It so(d to be a 9th
ruptlon nf Jonah, the name glveltUrBailors to the evil spirit sunpoWlto rule over the sea demons. Tito*,to go to Dnvy Jones' lacker meW»to be drowned or to be burltd littea.
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rortat •arvRv BBJIthat 81 per cent t i all . . . ,in farm ihelter trtltl and field windl#M)rt »f •)>» t»HW% friatnt Itttyear survived.
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taid by CharUa MaBar, fa to"Sixty Centuriet of Skftnj." to b«m tvi»o»h*i«, *t 1*JMltt to Hi
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FRIDAY, ATJGUOT 11,
SPORTING CLUB(r,>niiitti<-<l Sport Payr)
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,COLBERT AMECBE
Rcqur>< I rut ui r Sal NltrClmlir McCarthy
"C.Ol.DWYN I OL1.1ES"
Sun , Mnn., Tun.. 3 D«f> Only
UMS WEDNESDAY\The Lane Siiteri
Daughter! Courageoul"
Speaking About Sports(Continued irom Sport Page)
knows thnt he would probably get at leaat five grand morewith sonw of th*1 other clubs.
And it is not only this year but other years that he hasboon underpaid.
To this ndd thp fact that Medwick is a hijfhly temper-mental guy (he was always tempermental even while hewas in high school) and you will probably get the realreason for the recent flare-up with Ray Blvdes, managerof the Cards.
A Bk of PhilosophyThe other day in the course of our reading we came
across the following verse which contain* perhaps thobest bit of philosophy of human life ever written in so fewwords. We produce it herewith.
THE GUY IN THE MIRRORWhen you jret What you want in your struggle for self,And tho world makes you king for a day,Then no to the mirror and look at yourself, •And 8<"' what that guy has to say.
For it isn't a man's father, or mother, or wife,Who judgment upon him must pass,The fcllor whose verdict counts mo«t in his life,I-. (he kMiy .staring back from the glass.
fli-'s lh<- feller to please, never mind all the rest,lor he's with, you clear up to the end,An I you've passed your moat dangerous, difficult tesl,If the Kuy in the glass is your friend.
Yon may be like Jack Homer and "chisel" a plum,And think you'ra a wonderful #uy,But the man in the glass say;; you're only a bum,IT you ran't look him straight in the eye.
You can fool the whole world down the pathway of years,And got pats on the back as you pass,Hut your final reward will be heartaches and tears,If you've cheated Ihe guy in the glass.
Sells Dual VocalCordt for $10,000
ATTICA, IND.-The Rev. K.m.sBiker of KelloRg, Minn., formerpaitor of the Newton Pronbyiorl•n church, told hl« dunl net ofvocal card» to the British Mrri-Ical aiioclation for $10,000 rush inadvance, cords to be delivered ntdeath.
The Rev. Mr. Baker can sing ndeep ban or a light aoprano atwill.
Texan Wins FameAs Crook Chaser
Privileged WifeTo Mayor O. I. Mlnter and Police
Chief Fred Carr, of Rocheiter, N.Y , a widow addressed an urgentplea—that they ttop her late hu»-bund's three former wives from dec-orating hli grove. "I think I ihouldhave the privilege," the woman In-sisted. "Ho wn* mine lait."
uf PolandCicstochowu, the Lourdej of Po-
land, often iittracu 60,000 pilgrimsnt one time to its shrine. Daysand often weeks are required forthe pil/jrimaues ns the Journey IInifidc on font or In old farmwagons.
Children Operate 'Bufhome'The largest amateur museum in
the world Is thr Washington (N C.)bughouse, operatrd by school chlldren.
MhTK I-)T . i k r iiKlii' i- H i n t HI ' I ' l l r iMInn h i m
I " - ' " niMili. | . . i i n M n y n r i i inl C u t i n -1 il "1 i In- Hi irni iKl i »f ( " u r t e r r t t oiranifei t» Matthew Kondrk SirIHrllJlBI-B IlimllMl 111 r..' WtlPclttr A VC-l'll'-, <'nili'ri.|, N. I , Mir plvmirv rc-liiil ciiniuinpllcm liciTue #C-19 heroto-fnn' lamiRil to Hlfiilii'n Gregor for theIHrriilsea l(n«tp<l lit 5S Wheeler AvenueI'arli'ri't. N. ,1.
If any, shiiuld be madelni!<-l> III w r l l l i m lei AIIKUHI .1
' ' I ' l k •>! tin' Hi.roUKli of L'lir-
MATTHBW KONDRK.
Newark Bears StartFinal Road Invasion
NEWARK—Having chalked upI heir most impressive home stiiyrecord at Ruppert Stadium, theNewark Bears are cur/ently ontheir last northern trip -of the In-ternational Lefcgiie campaign. TheBears return to their home groundsAugust 25.
Two new additions in theBruins' infield around the crack<loubk'-play combination of HamSchulte at second and Mickey Wi-t«k at (Oiorstop have been a greatcomfort to Manager JohnnitNeun. Joe Mack at first bane hasgiven the club added fieldingspark and some timely offensivepunch.
Fans have keenly watched thedevelopment of their favorite oflast season, Buddy Blair who iscavorting at third. Blair was in-jured last season. He has shownconsiderable improvement and ifbeginning to get around as of old.Blair has become a hitting sen-sation to watch with hop-and-jump infieldin?.
—Classified Ada. Bring Results—'
STATE THEATREWOODBRIDGE, N. J.Phone Wbdife. 8-1212
SUN. - MQN. - TUES.AUGUST 13, 14 & ISDOUBLE FEATURE
WARNER BAXTER in
"The Return of theCisco Kid"
"Some Like It Hot"with GENE KRUPA
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 16
"Hotel Imperial"RAY MILLARD
"They Made'Me a Spy"with SALLY EILERS
^EXTRAS CHARLIE CHASE* i » * iide-»plitting Cumctly
ALA MAID"
I. MANN & SON• OPTOMETRISTS
Hour.: Daily 10-12, 2-5, 7-8; Wednetd.y 10-12 Only
89 Smith Street Perth Amboy, N. J.
Tel. Perth Amboy 4-2027
GRAND OPENING
Arrested Six Who SwindledHim Out of $80,000.
HALE CENTEfc, TEXAS. - JFrank Norfleet, Hale Center rancher who In 1910 traveled all over thpnation chasing and capturing six•windlers who mulcted him out of$80,000, still is buiy at his favoritework—thief catching.
The small, white - mustachioedrancher who , won natkmnl famewhen he trackeddown the men wnngypped him In a land deal, now is78—but he'i still hale, hearty andactive. He still carries with him hisconstant companion—a .38 Cult"thumb-buster" on a .45 frame.
Norfleet Isn't affiliated with anystate or national law enforcementagency, bat since he made his binpersonal catch, he's found plenty tndo as a sort of private dctectivrrunning down swindlers for others.And he has been lucky. He ennlook back on 93 arrests, of which 87have been tried and convicted.
Norfleet still like* to recall hisfamous job of tracking down the sixmen who beat him out of his money.and started him on hli sleuthingcareer. He traced them doRgedlyTwo were captured In California,one was bagged in Montreal, nfourth was run to the ground in Atlanta and a fifth captured in FlorIda. Of the sixth, Norfleet merelysays that he was found In Florida,too, "but the 'gators got him."
The veteran rancher doesn't sayJust what he's working on now, buthe leaves the impression that ilwon't be long before he adds another mark to his string of 93 caphired thieves and swindlers.
Scotland Yard Use. OldMotors to Fool Crooks
LONDON.—A fleet of "camou-flage" carB is being used by Scot-alnd Yard to track down a gan(!of Car bandits who have rnldcd jewelers. furriers and tobacconists indifferent parts of London.
Looking like dirty and neglectedprivate cars of makes not normallyused by the police, these newvehicles, of which three are at pres-ent in use, are fitted with high-pow-ered engines capable of 90 milesper hour and" equipped with thelatest police wireless apparatus.
Each is manned by four membersof the Flying Squad, each differently disguised every night. One of thecars patrols the streets dt Londonthroughout the early hours when 90per cent- of the smash-and-grabraids take place. The times androutes of this patrol are kupt secret
OF
MIRIAM'S LADIES' SHOPPE(Formerly Miriam'j Silk Shoppe)
76 MAIN ST. WOODBRIDGE
A brand new .e lec t ion of ladie , ' wear . S i lk . , .marthouaecoaU, « t i n . i i o lk l k i d«lk .locking! .nd many other<tem. to choo.e from. Vi.it our .hoppe and convinceyour.elf of the value, we have to offer.
OPENING SPECIALSSILK STOCKINGS3 thread. Reg. 69c
3 pr. for $1.49
HOUSECOATSbecriHckor. Reg. )2.SS.
.84
PURE DYE PRINTS
49'yd
OPENING SPECIALSSATIN SLIPS OQc
Size. 32 to 44
Moving Picture Dog Starh Killed by Mistake
BUCHAREST.—Rumania's mostpopular movie dog star "Alma"was caught and killed by the dogcatcher of the city of Braila, whodid not recognize the famous nnimal.
"Alma" had been signed up againto play one of the leading roles in anew film called "The Island ofSnakes." During rehearsals shestrayed out of the studio in Brailaand ran into the street where shiwas caught and killed by the dogcatcher.
The director of the movie company, Horia Igirosiunux, has Hied asuit against the mayor of the citydemanding the payment of $2,500as compensation for the loss of thtstar.
PURE LINENAll colon.52 inchea wide.
Kidnaping Plot Cleared;Two Baby Birds Are Back
ADRIAN, MICH.-Mr. and MrsElmer Hosteller had been watchingthe nest of a pair of Baltimore orioles and hatching of the young altheir farm all spring. Then telephone linemen, in trimming trees,cut down the nest and hauled ilaway on a truck. Dale Hostetler, ason, noticed the parent birds, wildwith frenzy, In the tree where thenest should have been. He solvedthe kidnaping, followed the linemen,rescued the nest and two baby or!oles, and hung It back in the treeon another limb. The parent birdswere satisSed.
Mr. Merchant:
TO SELL 'EM YOU'VE GOT Tol
TELL 'EM
The CARTERET PRESSreaches 5,000 r e a d e r swaiting to be . . . . .
6 0 c yd
TABLECLOTHS | 1 . 0 9Pure Linen. Special
MIRIAM'SLADIES'SHOPPE(FORMERLY
76 MAIN ST.%\UL 3BOPf«)
Derelict of Street* DietWith Fortune in Pocket
NEW YOHK.—The waiter thoughihe was just another bum. HI*wa* shabby and frayed, his shoesWorn. He begged a glass of water,gulped its contents, reeled to the |sidewalk and collapsed.
They called an ambulance, but tht Iman already was dead of a heart]attack. In his pockets police found:
Four $1,090 bills, vine $100 bllU, Ithree $10 bills, one *5 bill, two WJbills, and a silver pharmacy award.
On the back of the medal was tb4rac,rtptlon: "Presented to O«wifDart. W88." ^ ^ '
TOLD AND SOLDThe headline of this advertisement isn't merely • catchy but mean ingle si
jingle—the thought it expresses is really based on the soundest logic and
.soundest merchandising, as a moment of reflection will prove. For it itandi
to reason that before a merchant can make a sale to a customer he muM
attract that customer into his store.
Every merchant knows the value'of location—he knows that if his store is
situated on a street which has considerable sidewalk traffic his business will
vary in proportion to this traffic. He knows, too, that this takes place be-
cause potential customers are attracted by his offerings displayed in hi»
windows. He sees to it that his windows tell passersby that he has money-
saving values for them<
Carteret Press advertising offers all the advantages of an ideal "traffic"
location and more. It is the modern magic carpet which transport! more
than 5,000 Borough residents on a tour of advertisers' stores. It is the
medium' by which the greatest number of potential customers can be told
a{ the least cost.
And Carteret Press advertising sells 'em as it tells 'em! Borough
families have found that it is a reliable index to authentic values. That
it gives them a chance to compare price and quality . . . that it saves them
time and trouble and money . . . that it enable* them to do their marketing
in an easy chair. It sells 'em, furthermore, because it finds them in • rect"l'"
iive mood . . , at home.
Mr. Merchant, 5.000 readers of the Carteret Press are waiting to b.
told and sold every Friday. Use the Carteret Press — the most «-"Hi
cient and moat economical advertising medium—to teH 'em and tell '<em:
Cwteret*. Bigge»t N#w*paptrFtcldeT
A 70-y«ar«ld man, Hod»» <Pbsi juit «*)ebr«t«ddint at 8«rsJ«vo,Wk fl sjf«d 3il,