8
O CROSS-EYED CAT LISTENS sCROGGtt^ %OW-D0WN" TODAY'S EDITORIAL PAGE CARTERET PRESS READ COMMtOCT FOt UTEST EVERT WEEK SPORT AKTEH&f, N~. J., FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1*985" PRICE THREE Ci Week ii i Review TO DEMOCRAT CLUB Re-Map$ Pro)ecU For All pite of invitations frnm imrtn of the state, the ,i,.,| (inhale, between ("lover- i[.i,,ild (J. Hoffman and ,., |,,. s tpr H. Clee of the II,. i ? expectflri Local Police Expert Lists Advantages To Residents In Carrying Registration Cards; Would Also Aid Fight Against Crime Final Arrangement* Made For Family Picnic On Sunday BOROUGH FORCE BACKS THE SCHEME TO AMAN j p Park. in Asbury to be the "Sale* Tux, night to give thp Covernor himiMtic lot of supportnaa defense of the mnnRiire, •ling the popularity with ,i hn'i been received! to h, MARKWALT GROVE SITE Carteret is well to the for* in the jrrowinir sentimentj Tne Bl]t ^ for universal finfrerprintinjf. imw spreading rapidly. The Program Includes Contest ll0rou ffh's police favor it to a man, and to Captain J. J. Trim ' R H P ' ' " 0W '' n K> fingerprint expert for the local department, it 1 [trowing Roller rins |appears as the possible realization of a dream that every body will be fingerprinted before long. Captnin Dowling went tu New u- .- . M !."*. For The Women seemingly unbelievable imppenad in Bergmi County Putting the final touches to arrangements for the fam- i] y picnic of the Carteret n«rinBeTKen County y p reported hatchet burying DemocrfHjir Organization aired between^ the Rppubli- ! wa.s the principal business nt h ThJ y S( " 1Blor of the late Dwight W. Mor- : ,iid Former State Senator W. ChandleM. The two in Fire House No. 1. T House was full, _Thomn.n Quinn, Atlantic Str a member of to take the n oT was ap- Advisory of l^onis York to study finircrprint methods j when he undertook the work for the department, and from his very firnt day's inntrtirtion the ndvan- tagett of having records of nil in- i habitants of this mid other coun- tries, Riid the possibilities such procedure would open up have ,. been the subject to which hil) ^_:mind turns oftenest in thorn 1 mo- ti when his brain is free to iw its own course. spite of his expulsion from te Senate. The compro- is made last week at a con- in Sea Girt and as usual actions, is "for the goed it hard attend weekly sessionR of the board. After the business meeting there was a social session with on- tertainmerit by the Cart fret Hill Billies. The women members of Not for criminal records would Curleret --or any other body of pulic -want your fingerprintH mid mine-. No, the idea i» to pro- vide a means of quick identifica- tion in cases of emenrenry, nnd Captain Dowling has a still bet- ter idea, original with him. party." lleling the movement in I to ban fireworks for gen-1 The Arrangem ._ B , lIle ,,„,,„, ul ,,. nt Oi miMnr >e -e is 8 movement by civic) The advisory board of the or- hiolcs, insurance companies and in Maplewood which !(reniration met Monday niitht iind other organizations issue cards of •Jill greater scope for the completed the picnic program. The identification to licensees, policy The movement from this picnic will be held Sunday at holders or employes. This record i ounty community IB for a Markwalt's Grove ami free bus would provide quick identificaton •.vide ban on the explosives, transportation between the grove for every purpose. - nnd the borough proper will be vl hy the in ps will he nun invey""of"unempjoy«d""for £ nd Ro05ev( ' | l POLICE ESCORT C.O.P. DELEGATES TO SEA O R T FETE Between 100and 125 Go On Pilgrimmafe To The Shore COUNCIL MEETING OFF i A delegation of Carteret 1 Republicans estimated at be- HENNESSY BARES HAUPT ON HTUCirS 'RED I V 61 Mayor Bitterly Denounces Interference, Conpatu- \KetUnding DOMS 'NoOneErerO| Are fin Prpws Tht ********** K /ire vn rresses, M^nur latet The Council For 'Manly Step' CANCER; PARASITE States Seaman USED VICIOUS TACTICS BOROUGH BOND H( Only Current Debt Taxes ASKED FOR STA1 Jersey is announced as f u r"'»h(vl hy the organization. ; nt state to have completed ' Hu * " tops ' " li " l(< "' R * lemi f l d ?" d Koo program of the" Works Street, C "" k , , - . •s s Administration. Ninety Av(inil * s . *->"'• " {i ™K .^» r ° ^ -nt of the jobs to be pro-j ""»£ Corner "^nninjr at in this new program will be l ?' A \ P . M . th<> h " s w l " mflke th * to relief clients, who leave: 011 11 hourl > T . t . . . lief rolls on receiving their , T , e P r °K rHn > * n ' the day in- cludes wrestling, races, a ;:• pay check. * :te [his month Is the tenth annl- fj . t iiry of the once-famous" •^ 'ins trial of Tennessee, in which Jim T. Scopes, teacher in the i 1 .ton, T«in. school wan tried for i ii hmg the doctrine of evolution, i '! courtroom scenes marked the, St.il appearance on this earth of: >'• late William Jennings Bryan,! «••! added to the ff*ne of Clar-! Darrow. Now even the me- !:•">• of the affair has faded not '-•'. from the public mind, but •:•-i those of the town people: might be expected to remem-1 I''-: it '>ver In Scotland a momentous •Stion is debated. Which if) i rect with kilted evening dress, • hitc or black tie? The Mack- sh of Mackintosh, chief of 1 MChattan and Lord Lieuten- On B card four by two and a half inches Captain Howling has Avenues. Hudson | aj<) o u t h i a i( | e(l nf what such a and Washington car( ) sou | ( j contain. The size is chosen to make i! fit easily i"'o any wallet. Across the top of the would be ."n ,'inprint of the and left thumbs. Below in marked out Tu: the pur- -• -apaLon iniiiueii oiu , n; me pur- Ball I poses would show the prints of ''""teret trip. con-lfhe other four flnpovs of the li^h: cheBtra has lish music Dunne's l)e< " ™X***<i to fur- Did you know a Carteret hand plays ov^r the radio every Sunday afternoon? Jimmy Dunne and his pop- ular Castle drove Orchestra may be heard on your own radio if you dial Station WHBI of NewaTk at 3 P. M, of the holder, and hie or her pkture "Peoptd frequently ask for let tern of identification when th< \ eo to Canada," said Captain Dow ling in discussing his idea. "With a curd such as thia no further identification would ever be lie cessary. And still another advan tage would be that whenevtrfr i person arrested WHS found to have a card not belonging to him, po lice would immediately have some thing to go on. Whywould anyone want a card not his own? Where did h# * * th* onfr W fcaal-*nd wfien Hcard was reported lost or stolen, police could immediately look for its possessor, just they do for stolen cars." Start In School. Captain Dowling believes the Day. A group of five cars with a police escort left the Borough Hall at 10:30 A. M. The others in the delega- tion left direct from their homes, stopping at agreed points to pick tip additional passengers. The committee had made arrangements to provide a bus,if necessary, Dt 't it wss not needed as plenty of pri- vate cars were available. Who Went Amon« tliiiH,* leaving the Bor- ough Hall were Borough Attorney A. D. Glass. {Jeor^e Hensulok and David Ju'oby, who WHS chairman of the committee in charge of the. hern of the com- mittee worked in other sections getting the (croups together. Mayor Mittuch could not leave hi" business nt. the time the main pint of the delegation left here, '•lit ilmvK to Sea dirt later. An adjourned meeting of the coun- cil scheduled for lust night. w».-i p"M|ioucd to Monday night at 8 ''••lock on account of Governor's liny. Too Busy To Go Borough Clerk Harvey VO. I'latt and Acting Tax Collector Alex Coniba did not leav Hoth were too busy. Joseph Jomo Hivrough Engineer Joseiph (J Jomo has completed his discouraging task, that of filling in new forms of appli- cation (or federal funds to make borough improvements, a task already completed on form.i recently declared to bo outmoded, Mini said new forms have been despatched to Newark to be passed upon by reprcsBiitatives of the trovernniciit detailed to the «'>rk. No prediction as to the outcome can be made, btit Mayor Mittuch d«lares Car- teret ii inning to have a park. "This borough hai been prom- ised a purk for a lyng time, iitui it is going to have it," he said, then closed his j»ws tightly and spoke no more. At Imst not on that suhjeot. Father Hundiak Leads Officials To Record Catch 179 Fish Caught By Party, As Well As Plenty Of Sunburn KUTCY ENACTS DRAMA One hundred .seventy-nine ti*h, fluke, vveak and croak- ,*TS and innumerable square !inches of sunburn, spread over various areas on the epidermis {skin to you) of some of Carteret's lending citi- O! i. artcre' IHMH.hfinu at Tncicerto 5 !! I Personally Detett The Sight Of Him/ Says Official Of Un- named Lobbyist When the ordinance to is- sue $376,000 in bonds to re- finance the borough wan pawed on Anal reading and became part of the borough 1,-iw Monday night, Mayor Mittuch halted proceedings to congratulate the council and to denounce bitterly an individual whom he designated as "Red Mike." Scorei "Red Mike" "A certain individual has tried to stop it," said the mayor, refer- ring to the refinancing program, "and will resort to the most vi- cious methods. This individual is known ss "Red Mike" 1 or somo such mike. I want him to know that when we get to a place where we cannot run the affairs of the | borough we will call him in to run it. I feel the council has served the best interests of the borough j in passing this ordinance to save the taxpayers ft large amount in interest charges. I congratulate you, gentlemen. You gave your time and thought to the refinanc- ing plan for the benefit of Car- teret. Lobbied Against "I know a lobby has been con- ducted against it. I know it was hard for you to decide to carry on with the plan, Again I congratu- late you. You have done the right thing, the manly thing. "This same individual, this Red Mike," continued the mayor, "has-had the audacity to call our public school teachers parasites mid racketeers. Is that a good in- fluence upon our schools and our children? He has been a detriment ever since he came here. He is w. cancer and a parasite on the life of Carteret. I personally detest the sight of him. The quicker Car- For 193S To The County, Schools SAVE f6ft00ANNUALLY\ The refinancing nf the Borough of Carterpt has been completed. Final steps were taken this week when the Council passed the en- Goldsmith Answers Questions Were Prop«r And Friendly To The PropoMl The following corresj dence was given The teret Press by the Car Industrial Association wk abling measure on final 8 request "for"a "state: man said severs! days later the bonds were being printed. Borough Dabt Fr#« Thus Carteret is without c»r- except 'or the ' taxes due the j county and schools, which are not actually a debt. This money is | levied nnd the borough is put more in the position of a collect- ing agency, Mr. Seaman naid. The bom; issue is for $375,000, the bonds to bear four and one- hnlf per cent interest and ma- ture over a twenty-five year p«r- 'iml. About $0,000 annually is ex- j pectcd to be saved by this step ai he floating indebtedness of the sorough has heretofore been car- ied at a six per cent interest evy. Short-Tsrm Loan The Carteret Bank and Trust 'ompany loaned the borough 110,000 this week, for a twenty- one day period, at five per cent, a lowering in interest charge of one per cent as loans have heretofore usually been carried at six per cent. This sum is secured by cur rent anticipated taxes. ports wearing the white bow MI-. The Kilt Society has been inoned into special session to !(• the matter. » 1 <ddiee at a Brooklyn muni- ' golf course think teaching e hink teaching to duffers,merits an ex- iuart«r, and so they struck to it. Miss Emily R. Kneubuhl, sec- ii-uu-y of the National Federation Crowded ; Performed By Rev. D. E. Lorentz Miss Daisy Isabel Van Pelt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Van Felt, of 272 Washington Avenue, this (borough, and Amos Hoff- man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hoffman, of Newark, were ^ . -. . ^w.»„•„,, united at a church wedding W«l- HusmeM and Professional ineada-y night in the Presbyterian ""en a Clubs, which ontaniza- Church. Rev. D. E. Lorentz V *r- 1 naa been convening in Seat- formed the ceremony in the pres- •leelares the time ripe for enc e of a crowd of friends and "ing a woman President of relatives of the couple that tilled' -<•' United State*. She thinks ithe church. j '»en ready for the honor, and I Th« Attendant. "". of them capable, and once I The bride was given in marri- Am«»wiMi»tt R«lltlMta n »|^ at '^l i a lasr^eelTReT on the trip to Sea Oirt yes en ay; Jonn Kundiak. pastor of the «-,re: Mayor and Mrs. J U Mit- Ukrainian Catholic Church, waa ucI, Mr. and Mr*. ,1. H Nevill, the i,,,^ Hpirlt o n t h e trip jtg lu.ldi.ig Inspector »nd Mrs. i„„,,,.,. "„,„! guidei but lt I'nink I. Ka.eford, former .School coul(lll - t ll( . | PlirnM l if the Rood roini.iisNio.ier and Mrs, I,. N. fatht,,. h.xd an lm | m f o r t n e H u n . in the schools. Within twenty years police departments would thus get records of a large part 'J!' 1 ' 1 , of the population and in addition. ,,' he points out, beginning with th school children would break down Continued on t>aae eiaht Street Commissioner and Mrs <leorge Hensulok, former Over of the Poor Mrs. Cii-rii >, former Councilman inn Walter Vonuh, Mr. and Mrs Vonah, Jr., Borough At- torney A. D. Glass, Postmaster to and Mrs. T. J. Nevill, fo.'.iiei Street Commissioner Willian Walling, and William Martinczuk Up E»rly The trip began in the custo- mary way for such expeditions, with the ringing of various bor- lunn clocks about time said to have M., but no reporter teret ia rid o "I will not stand for any invisi- ble government such as this per son is I lying to set lip here. It i: the inherent right of the Ameri- can people to be governed by those whom they elect to office, and I am not going to tolerate any other form of government in Car- teiel." the 8 tory.) R had it LACK OF MONEY DEAYS ROAD JOB PASTOR,RELATIVE AWAIT GRAND JURY S K M M y Negroes Accuse Each Other Of Assault, Battery After Fracas Metal And Thermit Em- ployee Buried From Holy Family Church f them capable, and once The bride was given in marri-!_.„_.._„ nominated by one of the «Ke by her father. The brides- P I C T U R E THE CAUSE 1 litil id MiVil V Plt J ^-AUOt l[ on political assured. * * conventions, 1 'iiieniably encouraging is the ;"' of th# falling off in June '"<•• numbers on relief. Total "•* for 140 large cities show- ;;;ft of 8-3 per cent., or s |7 individuals, with the cost l(l| ef dropping $4,450,459. • * 1 "iKysn, Chin*, has such an 1 snortaue of men of mar- city authori- George Heed, pastor the Colored Baptist mttid was Miss Violet Van Pelt, a sister of the bride. The. bride- groom's best man was bis brother, Jesse Hoffman. The ushers were:',,, ,-, . _ Walter Van Pelt, a brother of the 11 hurch in Kdwin Street, ami bride, and Jack Humphries, her [his brother-in-law, Daniel The church was deco- j (.'opeljind, ice dealer, of in palms and ferns. [Salem Avenue, were each Muiical Program ' f For fifteen minutes before the hejd for the action of the Grand Jury cewmonytherewMmuHicbyMrii Jll 7 "" W*f* " l atrwiou » a . s ' c r i> i. i. • i- . . sau t mid battery, preferred by ^^.'"'"'i'Dil 1 ^ ^}"\^\^^ "KHiiwt the other, at a hear- the orjfun and Philip lin. "O Promise Me," was sung by Mrs. Edward Webb during the ing Tuesday in Police Court. Hail was furnished in each ca.su. n f a bride wore a irown of white unue woie a gown oi wmte ht *•', permit* the one to whom «ued to a«ek a husband but h '- "mrries^oat it Zrn^ '"'«« and^Imprisoned V a n ».f mtQum. |W bouquft of lilies-of.the-vailey: Ke 8 ed ,,, and, sweet peas. The bndjoshiaid " •'""••• H i r e e n , of 1»6 Meaerol•>, WO re yellow mouweline and week. It developed into a light in which Copeland admitted he ktlwk( . d the times after m n jter down three the latter cut him 8 li, M )«p. She earned-* show-; sligh j ly ^ th a k e f t k n i f e Kev . bouquet of lilies-of.the-valley:,^ J ^ , ^ ^ hw , ft k m f ( , but Heart failure foUowing heat prostration causetl the death I'ii day night of Adam Zy.sk, ;i!t, of 88 Mercer street. Mr. Zy.sk had the plant of the .Metal and Ther- mit Corporation. He went home from work there at S o'clock l-'ii day afternoon and ate suppi-r An hour later the attax-k ctuut and death followtni sud<lenly. Mr, Zysk was a resident of Car- teret many years and was a ni.-ui- \nr of the Carteret unit t>( IIK- Polish Alliance, the Holy Family Society and the Holy Kmnily (Church. He is survived by a wi dow, Nastasia and sewn children Stanley, Leo, Walter, Win law. Helen. Bronislawa and Mrs. Ito-e Wi»ter; a sister, Frances MMnik of Brooklyn, and'faur grand chil ulso that was enjoyable, and furthermore, wass enjoyed by those who took it Onco up, the morning was ob- served to have been beautiful and : driving through the clear early morning air an experience to be remembieed and cherished. Man Overboard Out on Harnegat Bay the lines 1 were cast and the pleasurable task of the day undertaken. Pulling in the fish was regular and un- eventful, but pulling in Steve Continued on paqi eight REQUIEM MASS SUNG been employed for some "time m fOR JOSEPH ZATIK Funeral Services Are Held For Copax Employee Dead After Fall The funeral of Joseph Zutik, of 31! Eiiitraon Street, who was fatally injured Saturday night in a fall at the Copax plant of the U. S. Metals Refining Company, y \ o'clock, thence to ] |.- )0( , ' t 2J* I., were -lined $ Reception Held had brass 1 he was not ee times but y unconscious While partially stunned, he wid fl nM w e r e m fot immedate friends and to wn.w.tivea was held in the Van ro I'elt | t | hlm from the Board of home Tn "Waanington Avenue, men drive bakery lh »mu8 G. Kemyon, »ecre- and tr^uiurer of the Car- ' ' "ink and Trust Oom- •"'•- "as been named chair- 111 '•< Publicity for the New •'•>' Jlankem' Association. * n "' I'isto! team of the Car- « oepartroent has been Participate Jn a series shoot* to be held on V'ty ran« near the work- wiU be in two men will be the best* which wag prettily decorated in white. Later Mr. »nd Mrs. HofT- nittii left on a w«d4in(r trip. They will live in &i«lford Street, Lin- den. The bride attended Carte ret High School. Mr, and Mrs. Hoff- man are both employed in New- k h th bMu i his life. All.f.d Copeland testified ne went to Continued on vane eight dretl. T funeral was held from Monday at 9;3U A homo , _. .. with services at the Holy Family Brave in St. Catholic Church where a high Woodbridgi iiiasa of rcquiun was off<T- -I .ii 10 o'clock, for the repose of iln- .soul. The interment was in St. James cemetery, Woodbridgc. The bearers wrt't members of the ,,n- cieties of which Mr. Zysk wa-. « member. was held Wednesday from home at D;30 . St. Eliiabetli's Roman Cath»li< Church, where ut 111 o'clock a hijfh (iia.ss of requiem was offered by Rev. Julius Kiss. Futlier Kiss also ^juct utll j officiated at Uie home and the JameB" Cemetery, 5 MEN, 3 WOMEN HELD IN VICE RAID Kasha Makes Arrests On Orders Of Mittuch; High Bail Set In line with Mayor Mittuch's iictiim he will not tolerate disor- derly houses or other brazen de- fiance of law in Carteret, police cracked down on a place at 17 Bergen .street la.te Tuesday night with the result two white men, three colored women and three colored men were locked up. The raid wua made by Officer Dan Kasha working under direct or- ders of the mayor. Wednesday the eight were ar- raigned before Attorney A. D. (ilii^s noting as magistrate. Sam Sumjners and his wife Lillian, ne- groes, were charged with main taming a disorderly house nnd were held for the action of the griind jury in bail of $2,000 each. $1,000 Bail Mary Junes mid Luvern Pur- rise, arraigned as disorderly, were held in {1,000 each for the K rund ph liraiu-o and Antonio County Supervisor Surveys . From Greenwam Councilman William <Ireenwald, chairman of the street and road committee, told the Borough Council Monday night he has tele- graphed County Road Su- pervisor Murray a demand that county roads in Carteret be re- paired, The telegram, he auij, was then turned over to Freeholder Peter Kroger, director of road laintenance, who wrote asking .vhich roada needed attention and iiomi.sing to make a trip of in- pection here. The road supervisor later came o Carteret and looked over the oads, Greenwald said. From statements of the county officials it appears road repair work is held up by lack of funds. Mayor Mit- tuch said he believes the county officials are doing the beat they can and are hampered by lack of ..,, | Jm . y his \ ( ; m v t ] 1 " , ted. Philips, Formerly Of Boro Passes Bar, Joint Law Firm C. Allen Phillip*, w.n of Mr. •i in mpete y ine county.. \.i.i "liew » Gural ud John . H l">th of the Mil section. j"trned h f on f and Mrs. Charles illipu, of Jr. Wentneld, fomerijr of Carteret, was one of the 144 stwees*^ 11 ' c& n- didatea for acUnlatibn to the Ne-w Jersey State Bar who passed the attorney's examination held last April. Mr. Phillips graduated from the Harvard Law School in 1934 and is now associatftd with the law firm of Whitiny ft Moore of New- ark. Green Guards Hold House-Warming Cafteret Unit Of Honorably Discharged CCC Members Stage Party In Veterans' Room At Town Hall With abxmt fifty members iuel co-operation of the. Recreation I Sponsoring- Committee, Other? Green Guard Benefit and friends in attendance the house warming party of the Carteret Unit of the Green Guards was held Fri- day night in the War Vet- erans' Room in the Borough Hall under the a-iuplc.M of the Rfser«- ation Sponsoring Committe*. Sev- eral members of the guard unit wore accompanied by their fir) friends. Th« organization la made up of former member* $f the CCC who have reoeived hon* orabte discharge* from the ooip«. -.Sptalnirf P«ter Barn*,-ptifWwit nit, In a talk ia, I'orlUKUi'Se, were held in :iich on chaiKcs of indecent conduct. Herbert llest und John Jones nc^i'oi'W found in tlk 1 place were chartf'*! with disorderly cmi- n lint's of $10 each ten daiyn in jail Jones gave a New York address. The others liv in the hoi'nugli. ltu.it and Joiie.s were hejd in the .'al jail nimble to puy their tines, (laivia obtained bail. The others were taken to the county jail. Andrew Gural WHB committed for ten days and John Banko for live days. They were unable, to pay fines imposed Tuesday night" elation in any way possible to fur (her the growth of the unit. Othtrt Thtr* Borne of th* other* present be- { sides thost mentioned wire,: John in Hungary. Lukach, William C - < SpVtowiU, John Ur, ch«k. Michael ' Sagw, G«org_8 Ba g Julia Retell There were twelve bearers, six from the Copax plant: John Cooper, George Landon, Joseph Kolin, Neal Stark, Alexander Par- ker and Anthony Pepricick; ami six from Camp No. 8i), Woodmen of the World, of which Mr. Zatik wa« a member. They were: Nich- olas (Jsatlo«, Andrew Teleposki, Ion assault charges Michael Lippai, Stephen Szolts, Krank Koe and. Charles Lenart. Ritual At Grave The Woodmen bearera carried the coffin from the home to the church. At the grave they held the Woodmen's ritual und released a white dove. , __ r Mr. Zatik fell off a ladder lead- teret August 31 for the thre»-day/ ing to a era no at the Copax plant j convention of the League of Ukrainian Club* of Akner&a. The Carteret Ukrainian Club, a mem- ber of th« league, will act ai hwt to tlw visitors. There will be delegates from all along the Ea*t- ertli Seaboard «(s fur south at North Carolina, and liorthyard through New England. A few deligates from clubs in Canada are also expected. Time will be others from points inland as far u Chicago, High points in the of the funds. Grant Br«i* Parmit Building Inspector to whom had been referred the application of John Breza for u permit to build a filling station at Brady's turner reported recommending the per- mit be granted. The matter was turned over to the council as a whole for ftnal action. The Hoard of Health notified the council Joseph Shutello, Jr. has been appointed clerk of the. board to take the place of Thomas A. Jakeway, who hu.-* resigned from the office but not from the board. The council was also no- titled Dr. Joseph Wantoch was appointed physician to the board in May ami has not boen paid for bin services. The mayor recom- mended Dr. Wantoch be placed on the payroll umt paid for his work since the time he wtia ap pointed. II. J. Collins and Andrew Kicos made application for a permit to open a pool room at 321 Purshing Avenue. The police committee C"utinued on page right Fun Organized denunciation Mike" at the council ing Monday night. M Mittuch did not identify person he called "Red Mi but the assembled audi Reemed to know who meant. Mayor Mittuch fused to commit himself, the nickname is gene understood to refer to H. Hennesay, secretary of association. The association's sta ment follows: In view of the. fact that no i connected with industry has been opposed to refinancing, rounded by adequate safeguard^ the statement in the public preM was read with much surprise, cordingly a written letter of is* quiry as to whether or not attempt at hindrance had . ,_ t made was directed to the 8<M> ough'» Ilond Brokers, Ira Hauf4 & Co. This letter of inquiry, t i » j together with the reply theret<^ ; speak foi themselvsH. "* "Mr. Burt Goldtmith Ira Haupt A Compunr , 39 Broidw.y, /I New York, N. Y. "Mr dear Mr. Coldimilhi 'Til* Council of th* B«r«fcg|| of Ctrttral, «t iU m*etinf Ult •rening, panwi th* *ublia l*fi*l>tion makinf potiibl* ( municipal •)>M>» : due to atMtURCoti tax**. "It wn reported that, after the enabiini lefiilntion WM paned, the Mayor ftatcd that a repreientative of Urf* tax|Mtf> ert, preiumabljr the writer, *t* templed to prevent thu finaM> "In view of the fact Jomr company ti heading up thr ijr«» dicale th*t ii to do the fin inf, and that you ai * tentative of the syndicate- • ought a conference with tfc» writer on the matter, I wo«M appreciato a ttatemant froai" you at to whether at any ttBM opposition wa« exprened to tfta propoul by me, either vtrballr or in writinf." "Yourt rery truly, (lifned) H. A. H.nn<-.»y" To this, the following reply was received: "Carteret Industrial Ano. Cartnret, N. J. Attn. Mr. Hennaitfi "Dejar Mr. Heniumy: "A» p«r your inquiry, we o«a< firm tne fact that you n**«r- at any time opposed, in yo«r conrertaliont with at, the Ra» funding plan that we propotel to the Borough of Carteret, tit« ordinance! for which w«re paw- ed on Monday night, "On the contrary th* qaea. , tiont you aiked ui regarJtay the refunding, were at all tint** j proper and friendly toward the proposal. ; | "Very truly yourt, ' "IRA HAUPT A COMPANY "(•ii-ned) "Bertram M. Goldimith 'Bond Department" Named ERAWorker Thomas A. Chester has been appointed case worker for the Carteret division of the Woodbridge-Carte.et bu- reau of the EKA to succeed Misi Eleanor K. Miles, re- signed July 15. Mr. Chester is a college graduate and taught in the night school here laat winter. Ukrainian Convention To Draw 300 Delegates Approximately 300 delegate ar« expected to assemble in Car- who spoke were Edward A. Struck .... .. r ___ and August Perry. The laU.i Saturday night about 9:30 o'clock ' oaid he mu awiured the borough and was ruuhed to the Rah way' administration regard* the On in Memorial Hospital. He died from GuewU-aa u fine American insti-! intetnsl : ~'— J ~* '•»« » M tution and will give full co-op ! Susday. njurlee at 5:06 A. M He is lurvived by a widow, Elizabeth; a daughter, Elisabeth; five brothers, Andrew and Stephen, of Carteret: Gabrial, Alexander and George, wholive Recreation Sponsoring Committee Arranges Hike, Knitting and Story Hou^Clubs, Cl M Considerable activity un- der the leadership of tin 1 Recreation Sponsoring Com- mittee is keeping many little gfii'ls in Carteret happy thi> Summer. Tuesday Miss Prances Sarzillo, in&tructur at th^ playground, took a group lukmu to WOK and af- terward for a picnic at Mark wait's Ciiivt- The girls them lelveg pu'sniLiI an entertain- ment, Helen (ti|isie doing two tup daiR't.*, and Kluine SchwarU »tng- illjf t^'u non^a. Mildred Muat-o contributed a uowboy song, and a grom> number, "The Rocking HorseJParMdc," was given by Irmu Mayor Perform* L Of" of the program the local club i H and and Eileen Helen y Cutter, Rose Virag Wull»chlagg«r. The panyi, Mai'y Lenart, Helen aie. Julia Nagy, (aimitla pe<le, Mafaldtt Tedeeco, .1 Knorr, Lillian Knorr, _ Chweuan, Bileea Culter, Cutter, Row Virajr, M*ry C~_ Helen Magella, Mary ConloST Othert Who Will ' 3elmu iirivich, Anna Hilda WollM-idager, Helen ! Many (iimla, Veronka T _, ya, CBlhiMine Conlon, ' Zaglewsku. I'liere^a Ch« '"" oiik'n Sidun, Adele Mary VUI-K*>, Julia Nudge, AKneM Conlon, Bal alter, Mary Rechter, Wuft, Kthel Keider, 01-* ' II:.. II -- ""' "— . the Watchung Lake •».« fountains on 8et>tember 1, l of the on ' - The Hikwri i in the par I ( yernachjo,' Alir, Anna Uu3i. Iliel-s, di Elaine'

CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

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Page 1: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

OCROSS-EYED CAT LISTENS

sCROGGt t^ %OW-D0WN"TODAY'S EDITORIAL PAGE CARTERET PRESS READ

COMMtOCT FOt UTESTEVERT WEEK 0 « SPORT

AKTEH&f, N~. J., FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1*985" PRICE THREE Ci

Weekii i R e v i e w TO DEMOCRAT CLUB

Re-Map$ Pro)ecU

For All

pite of invitations frnmimrtn of the state, the

,i,.,| (inhale, between ("lover-i[.i,,ild (J. Hoffman and,., |,,.stpr H. Clee of theII,. i? expectflri

Local Police Expert Lists Advantages ToResidents In Carrying Registration Cards;

Would Also Aid Fight Against CrimeFinal Arrangement* MadeFor Family Picnic

On Sunday BOROUGH FORCE BACKS THE SCHEME TO A MAN j

pPark.in Asbury

to be the "Sale* Tux,• night to give thp CovernorhimiMtic lot of supportnaa

defense of the mnnRiire,•ling the popularity with,i hn'i been received!

to h, MARKWALT GROVE SITE Carteret is well to the for* in the jrrowinir sentimentjT n e Bl]t^ for universal finfrerprintinjf. imw spreading rapidly. The

Program Includes Contest l l 0 r o uffh 's police favor it to a man, and to Captain J. J.Trim ' R H P ' ' "0W ' 'nK> fingerprint expert for the local department, it1 [trowing Roller r ins |appears as the possible realization of a dream that every

body will be fingerprinted before long.Captnin Dowling went tu New u- .- . M !."*.

For The Women

seemingly unbelievableimppenad in Bergmi County

Putting the final touchesto arrangements for the fam-i]y picnic of the Carteretn«rinBeTKen County y p

reported hatchet burying DemocrfHjir Organizationaired between^ the Rppubli-! wa.s the principal business nt

h T h J y S("1Blor

of the late Dwight W. Mor-:,iid Former State Senator

W. ChandleM. The two

in Fire House No. 1. THouse was full, _Thomn.n Quinn,

Atlantic Stra member of

to take the n

oT was ap-Advisoryof l^onis

York to study finircrprint methods jwhen he undertook the work forthe department, and from his veryfirnt day's inntrtirtion the ndvan-tagett of having records of nil in- ihabitants of this mid other coun-tries, Riid the possibilities suchprocedure would open up have

,. been the subject to which hil)^_:mind turns oftenest in thorn1 mo-

ti when his brain is free toiw its own course.

spite of his expulsion fromte Senate. The compro-is made last week at a con-in Sea Girt and as usualactions, is "for the goed

it hardattend weekly sessionR of theboard.

After the business meetingthere was a social session with on-tertainmerit by the Cart fret HillBillies. The women members of

Not for criminal records wouldCurleret --or any other body ofpulic -want your fingerprintHmid mine-. No, the idea i» to pro-vide a means of quick identifica-tion in cases of emenrenry, nndCaptain Dowling has a still bet-ter idea, original with him.party."

• • •lleling the movement inI to ban fireworks for gen-1 The Arrangem ._ B , l I l e ,,„,,„, u l , , . n t Oi miMnr >e

-e is 8 movement by civic) The advisory board of the or- hiolcs, insurance companies andin Maplewood which !(reniration met Monday niitht iind other organizations issue cards of

•Jill greater scope for the completed the picnic program. The identification to licensees, policyThe movement from this picnic will be held Sunday at holders or employes. This record

i ounty community IB for a Markwalt's Grove ami free bus would provide quick identificaton•.vide ban on the explosives, transportation between the grove for every purpose.

- nnd the borough proper will bevl hy the inps will he nun

invey""of"unempjoy«d"" for £ n d R o 0 5 e v ( ' | l

POLICE ESCORTC.O.P. DELEGATESTO SEA ORT FETEBetween 100 and 125 Go

On PilgrimmafeTo The Shore

COUNCIL MEETING OFFi

A delegation of Carteret1

Republicans estimated at be-

HENNESSY BARES HAUPTON HTUCirS 'RED I V 61Mayor Bitterly DenouncesInterference, Conpatu- \KetUnding DOMS 'NoOneErerO|

Are fin Prpws Tht ********** K/ire vn rresses, M^nur

latet The CouncilFor 'Manly Step'

CANCER; PARASITE States SeamanUSED VICIOUS TACTICS

BOROUGH BOND H(Only Current Debt Taxes ASKED FOR STA1

Jersey is announced as fur"'»h(vl hy the organization. ;nt state to have completed ' H u * " t o p s ' "li"l(< "' R * l e m i

f l d ?"d Kooprogram of the" Works Street, C "" k , , - .

•ss Administration. Ninety A v ( i n i l* s . *->"'• " {i™K .^»r° ^-nt of the jobs to be pro-j " " » £ • Corner " ^ n n i n j r atin this new program will be l?'A\P. M .th<> h " s w l " m f l k e t h *to relief clients, who leave:011™11 hour l>T . t. . .lief rolls on receiving their , T,e Pr°KrHn> *n' the day in-

cludes wrestling, races, a;:• pay check.

* :te[his month Is the tenth annl- fj

. t iiry of the once-famous"• ' ins trial of Tennessee, in whichJim T. Scopes, teacher in thei1 .ton, T«in. school wan tried fori ii hmg the doctrine of evolution, i'! courtroom scenes marked the,St.il appearance on this earth of:>'• late William Jennings Bryan,!«••! added to the ff*ne of Clar-!

Darrow. Now even the me-!:•">• of the affair has faded not'-•'. from the public mind, but•:•-i those of the town people:• might be expected to remem-1I''-: i t

'>ver In Scotland a momentous•Stion is debated. Which if)

i rect with kilted evening dress,• hitc or black tie? The Mack-sh of Mackintosh, chief of

1 M Chattan and Lord Lieuten-

On B card four by two and ahalf inches Captain Howling has

Avenues. Hudson |aj<) o u t h i a i ( |e( l n f w h a t s u c h aand Washington c a r () s o u | ( j contain. The size is

chosen to make i! fit easily i"'oany wallet. Across the top of the

would be ."n ,'inprint of theand left thumbs. Below in

marked out Tu: the pur-- • -apaLon i n i i i u e i i o i u , n; m e p u r -

Ball I poses would show the prints of ' ' " " t e r e t trip.con- l fhe other four flnpovs of the li^h:

cheBtra haslish music

Dunne's

l ) e <" ™X***<i to fur-

Did you know a Carterethand plays ov^r the radioevery Sunday afternoon?

Jimmy Dunne and his pop-ular Castle drove Orchestramay be heard on your ownradio if you dial StationWHBI of NewaTk at 3 P. M,

of the holder, andhie or her pkture

"Peoptd frequently ask for lettern of identification when th< \eo to Canada," said Captain Dowling in discussing his idea. "Witha curd such as thia no furtheridentification would ever be liecessary. And still another advantage would be that whenevtrfr iperson arrested WHS found to havea card not belonging to him, police would immediately have something to go on. Why would anyonewant a card not his own? Wheredid h# * * th* onfr W fcaal-*ndwfien H card was reported lost orstolen, police could immediatelylook for its possessor, just a» theydo for stolen cars."

Start In School.Captain Dowling believes the

Day. A group offive cars with a police escortleft the Borough Hall at 10:30A. M. The others in the delega-tion left direct from their homes,stopping at agreed points to picktip additional passengers. Thecommittee had made arrangementsto provide a bus,if necessary, Dt'tit wss not needed as plenty of pri-vate cars were available.

Who WentAmon« tliiiH,* leaving the Bor-

ough Hall were Borough AttorneyA. D. Glass. {Jeor^e Hensulok andDavid Ju'oby, who WHS chairmanof the committee in charge of the.

hern of the com-mittee worked in other sectionsgetting the (croups together.Mayor Mittuch could not leavehi" business nt. the time the mainpint of the delegation left here,'•lit ilmvK to Sea dirt later. Anadjourned meeting of the coun-

cil scheduled for lust night. w».-ip"M|ioucd to Monday night at 8• ''••lock on account of Governor'sliny.

Too Busy To GoBorough Clerk Harvey VO.

I'latt and Acting Tax CollectorAlex Coniba did not leav

Hoth were too busy.

Joseph JomoHivrough Engineer Joseiph

(J Jomo has completed hisdiscouraging task, that offilling in new forms of appli-cation (or federal funds tomake borough improvements,a task already completed onform.i recently declared to booutmoded, Mini said newforms have been despatchedto Newark to be passed uponby reprcsBiitatives of thetrovernniciit detailed to the«'>rk. No prediction as to theoutcome can be made, btitMayor Mittuch d«lares Car-teret ii inning to have a park."This borough hai been prom-ised a purk for a lyng time,iitui it is going to have it," hesaid, then closed his j»wstightly and spoke no more.At Imst not on that suhjeot.

Father HundiakLeads OfficialsTo Record Catch179 Fish Caught By Party,

As Well As PlentyOf Sunburn

KUTCY ENACTS DRAMAOne hundred .seventy-nine

ti*h, fluke, vveak and croak-,*TS and innumerable square!inches of sunburn, spreadover various areas on theepidermis {skin to you) ofsome of Carteret's lending citi-O! i. artcre'

IHMH.hfinuat Tncicerto5!!

I Personally Detett TheSight Of Him/ Says

Official Of Un-named Lobbyist

When the ordinance to is-sue $376,000 in bonds to re-finance the borough wanpawed on Anal reading andbecame part of the borough1,-iw Monday night, MayorMittuch halted proceedings tocongratulate the council and todenounce bitterly an individualwhom he designated as "RedMike."

Scorei "Red Mike""A certain individual has tried

to stop it," said the mayor, refer-ring to the refinancing program,"and will resort to the most vi-cious methods. This individual isknown ss "Red Mike"1 or somosuch mike. I want him to knowthat when we get to a place wherewe cannot run the affairs of the |borough we will call him in to runit. I feel the council has servedthe best interests of the borough jin passing this ordinance to savethe taxpayers ft large amount ininterest charges. I congratulateyou, gentlemen. You gave yourtime and thought to the refinanc-ing plan for the benefit of Car-teret.

Lobbied Against"I know a lobby has been con-

ducted against it. I know it washard for you to decide to carry onwith the plan, Again I congratu-late you. You have done the rightthing, the manly thing.

"This same individual, thisRed Mike," continued the mayor,"has-had the audacity to call ourpublic school teachers parasitesmid racketeers. Is that a good in-fluence upon our schools and ourchildren? He has been a detrimentever since he came here. He is w.cancer and a parasite on the lifeof Carteret. I personally detestthe sight of him. The quicker Car-

For 193S To TheCounty, Schools

SAVE f6ft00ANNUALLY\The refinancing nf the

Borough of Carterpt hasbeen completed. Final stepswere taken this week whenthe Council passed the en-

Goldsmith AnswersQuestions Were Prop«r

And Friendly ToThe PropoMl

The following corresjdence was given Theteret Press by the CarIndustrial Association wk

abling measure on final 8 request "for"a "state:

man said severs! days later thebonds were being printed.

Borough Dabt Fr#«Thus Carteret is without c»r-

except 'or the 'taxes due the j

county and schools, which are notactually a debt. This money is |levied nnd the borough is putmore in the position of a collect-ing agency, Mr. Seaman naid.

The bom; issue is for $375,000,the bonds to bear four and one-hnlf per cent interest and ma-ture over a twenty-five year p«r-

'iml. About $0,000 annually is ex-j pectcd to be saved by this step ai

he floating indebtedness of thesorough has heretofore been car-ied at a six per cent interestevy.

Short-Tsrm LoanThe Carteret Bank and Trust

'ompany loaned the borough110,000 this week, for a twenty-one day period, at five per cent, alowering in interest charge of oneper cent as loans have heretoforeusually been carried at six percent. This sum is secured by current anticipated taxes.

ports wearing the white bowMI-. The Kilt Society has beeninoned into special session to!(• the matter.

» • •1 <ddiee at a Brooklyn muni-

' golf course think teachinge hink teaching

to duffers,merits an ex-iuart«r, and so they struck toit.

• • •Miss Emily R. Kneubuhl, sec-

ii-uu-y of the National Federation

Crowded; Performed By Rev.

D. E. LorentzMiss Daisy Isabel Van

Pelt, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Isaac Van Felt, of 272Washington Avenue, this

(borough, and Amos Hoff-man, son of Mr. and Mrs.Louis Hoffman, of Newark, were

^ . - . . ^w.»„•„,, united at a church wedding W«l-HusmeM and Professional ineada-y night in the Presbyterian

""en a Clubs, which ontaniza- Church. Rev. D. E. Lorentz V*r-1 naa been convening in Seat- formed the ceremony in the pres-

•leelares the time ripe for e n ce of a crowd of friends and"ing a woman President of relatives of the couple that tilled'-<•' United State*. She thinks i t h e church. j'»en ready for the honor, and I Th« Attendant."". of them capable, and once I The bride was given in marri-

Am«»wiMi»tt R«lltlMtan»|^a t '^l ia lasr eelTReTon the tr ip to Sea Oirt yes en ay; J o n n Kundiak. pastor of the«-,re: Mayor and Mrs. J U Mit- Ukrainian Catholic Church, waaucI, Mr. and Mr*. ,1. H Nevill, t h e i , , , ^ H p i r l t o n t h e t r i p j t g

lu.ldi.ig Inspector »nd Mrs. i „ „ , , , . , . " „ , „ ! g u i d e i b u t l t

I'nink I. Ka.eford, former .School c o u l ( l l l - t l l ( . | P l i r n M l if the Roodroini.iisNio.ier and Mrs, I,. N. fatht,,. h.xd an l m | m f o r t n e H u n .

in the schools. Within twentyyears police departments wouldthus get records of a large part 'J!'1'1,of the population and in addition. ,,'he points out, beginning with thschool children would break down

Continued on t>aae eiaht

Street Commissioner and Mrs<leorge Hensulok, former Over

of the Poor Mrs. Cii-rii>, former Councilman innWalter Vonuh, Mr. and Mrs

Vonah, Jr., Borough At-torney A. D. Glass, Postmaster toand Mrs. T. J. Nevill, fo.'.iieiStreet Commissioner WillianWalling, and William Martinczuk

Up E»rlyThe trip began in the custo-

mary way for such expeditions,with the ringing of various bor-

lunn clocks abouttime said to haveM., but no reporter

teret ia rid o"I will not stand for any invisi-

ble government such as this person is I lying to set lip here. It i:the inherent right of the Ameri-can people to be governed bythose whom they elect to office,and I am not going to tolerate anyother form of government in Car-teiel."

the 8tory.) R had it

LACK OF MONEYDEAYS ROAD JOB

PASTOR, RELATIVEAWAIT GRAND JURY S K M M yNegroes Accuse Each Other

Of Assault, BatteryAfter Fracas

Metal And Thermit Em-ployee Buried From Holy

Family Churchf them capable, and once The bride was given in m a r r i - ! _ . „ _ . . _ „nominated by one of the «Ke by her father. The brides- PICTURE THE CAUSE1 l i t i l id M i V i l V P l t J ^-AUOtl [ o n

politicalassured.

* *

conventions,

1 'iiieniably encouraging is the;"' of th# falling off in June'"<•• numbers on relief. Total"•* for 140 large cities show-; ; ; f t of 8-3 per cent., or

s | 7 individuals, with the costl ( l |ef dropping $4,450,459.

• • *1 "iKysn, Chin*, has such an

1 snortaue of men of mar-city authori-

George Heed, pastorthe Colored Baptist

mttid was Miss Violet Van Pelt, asister of the bride. The. bride-groom's best man was bis brother,Jesse Hoffman. The ushers were:' , , , ,-, . _Walter Van Pelt, a brother of the 11 hurch in Kdwin Street, amibride, and Jack Humphries, her [his brother-in-law, Daniel

The church was deco- j (.'opeljind, ice dealer, ofin palms and ferns. [Salem Avenue, were each

Muiical Program 'fFor fifteen minutes before the

hejd for the action of the GrandJurycewmonytherewMmuHicbyMriiJl l7 "" W*f* "l a t r w i o u » a.s'c r i> i. i. • i- . . sau t mid battery, preferred by

^ ^ . ' " ' " ' i ' D i l 1 ^ ^}"\^\^^ "KHiiwt the other, at a hear-the orjfun and Philiplin. "O Promise Me," was sungby Mrs. Edward Webb during the

ing Tuesday in Police Court. Hailwas furnished in each ca.su.

n f a

bride wore a irown of whiteunue woie a gown oi wmteh t

*•', permit* the one to whom«ued to a«ek a husband buth'- "mrr ies^oat it Z r n ^

'"'«« and Imprisoned V an

».f mtQum. | W bouquft of lilies-of.the-vailey:Ke8

ed

,,, and, sweet peas. The bndjoshiaid "•'""••• Hireen, of 1»6 Meaerol•>, WOre yellow mouweline and

week. It developed into a lightin which Copeland admitted hek t l w k ( . d t h e

times afterm n jter down threethe latter cut him

8li,M)«p. She earned-* s h o w - ; s l i g h j l y ^ t h a ke f t k n i f e K e v .bouquet of l i l ies-of. the-valley: ,^ J ^ , ^ ^ h w , ft k m f ( , b u t

Heart failure foUowing heatprostration causetl the death I'iiday night of Adam Zy.sk, ;i!t, of88 Mercer street. Mr. Zy.sk had

the plant of the .Metal and Ther-mit Corporation. He went homefrom work there at S o'clock l-'iiday afternoon and ate suppi-r Anhour later the attax-k ctuut anddeath followtni sud<lenly.

Mr, Zysk was a resident of Car-teret many years and was a ni.-ui-\nr of the Carteret unit t>( IIK-Polish Alliance, the Holy FamilySociety and the Holy Kmnily(Church. He is survived by a widow, Nastasia and sewn childrenStanley, Leo, Walter, Win law.Helen. Bronislawa and Mrs. Ito-eWi»ter; a sister, Frances MMnikof Brooklyn, and'faur grand chil

ulso thatwas enjoyable, and furthermore,wass enjoyed by those who tookit Onco up, the morning was ob-served to have been beautiful and

: driving through the clear earlymorning air an experience to beremembieed and cherished.

Man OverboardOut on Harnegat Bay the lines

1 were cast and the pleasurable taskof the day undertaken. Pullingin the fish was regular and un-eventful, but pulling in Steve

Continued on paqi eight

REQUIEM MASS SUNGbeen employed for some "time m fOR JOSEPH ZATIK

Funeral Services Are HeldFor Copax Employee

Dead After FallThe funeral of Joseph Zutik,

of 31! Eiiitraon Street, who wasfatally injured Saturday night ina fall at the Copax plant of theU. S. Metals Refining Company,

y \o'clock, thence to ] |.-)0(,

' t

2J*I., were -lined $ Reception Held

had brass1 he was notee times buty unconscious

While partially stunned, he wid

flnM w e r e m fot immedate friends andto wn.w.tivea was held in the Van

roI'elt |t | h l m

from the Board of home Tn "Waanington Avenue,men drive bakery

lh»mu8 G. Kemyon, »ecre-and tr^uiurer of the Car-

' ' " ink and Trust Oom-•"'•- "as been named chair-111 '•< Publicity for the New

•'•>' Jlankem' Association.• • *

n"' I'isto! team of the Car-« oepartroent has beenParticipate Jn a seriesshoot* to be held on

V'ty ran« near the work-wiU be in twomen will be

the best*

which wag prettily decorated inwhite. Later Mr. »nd Mrs. HofT-nittii left on a w«d4in(r trip. Theywill live in &i«lford Street, Lin-den. The bride attended Carte retHigh School. Mr, and Mrs. Hoff-man are both employed in New-

k h th b M u i

his life.All.f.d

Copeland testified ne went toContinued on vane eight

dretl.T funeral was held from

Monday at 9;3U Ahomo , _. ..with services at the Holy Family Brave in St.Catholic Church where a high Woodbridgiiiiasa of rcquiun was off<T- -I .ii10 o'clock, for the repose of iln-.soul. The interment was in St.James cemetery, Woodbridgc. Thebearers wrt't members of the ,,n-cieties of which Mr. Zysk wa-. «member.

was held Wednesday fromhome at D;30 .St. Eliiabetli's Roman Cath»li<Church, where ut 111 o'clock a hijfh(iia.ss of requiem was offered byRev. Julius Kiss. Futlier Kiss also ^juct u t l ljofficiated at Uie home and the

JameB" Cemetery,

5 MEN, 3 WOMENHELD IN VICE RAIDKasha Makes Arrests On

Orders Of Mittuch;High Bail Set

In line with Mayor Mittuch'siictiim he will not tolerate disor-derly houses or other brazen de-fiance of law in Carteret, policecracked down on a place at 17Bergen .street la.te Tuesday nightwith the result two white men,three colored women and threecolored men were locked up. Theraid wua made by Officer DanKasha working under direct or-ders of the mayor.

Wednesday the eight were ar-raigned before Attorney A. D.(ilii^s noting as magistrate. SamSumjners and his wife Lillian, ne-groes, were charged with maintaming a disorderly house nndwere held for the action of thegriind jury in bail of $2,000 each.

$1,000 BailMary Junes mid Luvern Pur-

rise, arraigned as disorderly, wereheld in {1,000 each for the Krund

ph liraiu-o and Antonio

County Supervisor Surveys

. From GreenwamCouncilman W i l l i a m

<Ireenwald, chairman of thestreet and road committee,told the Borough CouncilMonday night he has tele-graphed County Road Su-pervisor Murray a demand thatcounty roads in Carteret be re-paired, The telegram, he auij, wasthen turned over to FreeholderPeter Kroger, director of road

laintenance, who wrote asking.vhich roada needed attention andiiomi.sing to make a trip of in-pection here.

The road supervisor later cameo Carteret and looked over theoads, Greenwald said. From

statements of the county officialsit appears road repair work is heldup by lack of funds. Mayor Mit-tuch said he believes the countyofficials are doing the beat theycan and are hampered by lack of

..,, | Jm.yhis \(;mvt ]

1 "

,ted.

Philips, Formerly Of BoroPasses Bar, Joint Law Firm

C. Allen Phillip*, w.n of Mr.

•i i n mpete yine county..

\ . i . i"liew»

Gural u d John.H l">th of the Mil section.j"trned h f

o n f

and Mrs. Charles illipu, of

Jr.

Wentneld, fomerijr of Carteret,was one of the 144 stwees*^11' c&n-didatea for acUnlatibn to the Ne-wJersey State Bar who passed theattorney's examination held lastApril. Mr. Phillips graduated fromthe Harvard Law School in 1934and is now associatftd with the lawfirm of Whitiny ft Moore of New-ark.

Green Guards Hold House-WarmingCafteret Unit Of Honorably Discharged CCC Members

Stage Party In Veterans' Room At Town HallWith abxmt fifty members iuel co-operation of the. Recreation

I Sponsoring- Committee, Other?

Green Guard Benefit

and friends in at tendancethe house warming party ofthe Carteret Unit of theGreen Guards was held Fri-day night in the War Vet-erans' Room in the Borough Hallunder the a-iuplc.M of the Rfser«-ation Sponsoring Committe*. Sev-eral members of the guard unitwore accompanied by their fir)friends. Th« organization lamade up of former member* $fthe CCC who have reoeived hon*orabte discharge* from the ooip«.

-.SptalnirfP«ter Barn*,-ptifWwit

nit, In a talk

ia, I'orlUKUi'Se, were held in:iich on chaiKcs of indecent

conduct. Herbert llest und JohnJones nc i'oi'W found in tlk1 placewere chartf'*! with disorderly cmi-

n lint's of $10 eachten daiyn in jail Jones gave a

New York address. The others livin the hoi'nugli.

ltu.it and Joiie.s were hejd in the.'al jail nimble to puy their tines,

(laivia obtained bail. The otherswere taken to the county jail.

Andrew Gural WHB committedfor ten days and John Banko forlive days. They were unable, topay fines imposed Tuesday night"

elation in any way possible to fur(her the growth of the unit.

Othtrt Thtr*Borne of th* other* present be-

{

sides thost mentioned wire,: John in Hungary.Lukach, William C - <SpVtowiU, John Ur,ch«k. Michael 'Sagw, G«org_8 Bag

JuliaRetell

There were twelve bearers, sixfrom the Copax plant: JohnCooper, George Landon, JosephKolin, Neal Stark, Alexander Par-ker and Anthony Pepricick; amisix from Camp No. 8i), Woodmenof the World, of which Mr. Zatikwa« a member. They were: Nich-olas (Jsatlo«, Andrew Teleposki, Ion assault chargesMichael Lippai, Stephen Szolts,Krank Koe and. Charles Lenart.

Ritual At GraveThe Woodmen bearera carried

the coffin from the home to thechurch. At the grave they heldthe Woodmen's ritual und releaseda white dove. , __r

Mr. Zatik fell off a ladder lead- teret August 31 for the thre»-day/ing to a era no at the Copax plant j convention of the League of

Ukrainian Club* of Akner&a. TheCarteret Ukrainian Club, a mem-ber of th« league, will act ai hwtto tlw visitors. There will bedelegates from all along the Ea*t-ertli Seaboard «(s fur south atNorth Carolina, and liorthyardthrough New England. A fewdeligates from clubs in Canadaare also expected. Time will beothers from points inland as far uChicago,

High points in theof the

funds.Grant Br«i* Parmit

Building Inspector to whom hadbeen referred the application ofJohn Breza for u permit to builda filling station at Brady's turnerreported recommending the per-mit be granted. The matter wasturned over to the council as awhole for ftnal action.

The Hoard of Health notifiedthe council Joseph Shutello, Jr.has been appointed clerk of the.board to take the place of ThomasA. Jakeway, who hu.-* resignedfrom the office but not from theboard. The council was also no-titled Dr. Joseph Wantoch wasappointed physician to the boardin May ami has not boen paid forbin services. The mayor recom-mended Dr. Wantoch be placedon the payroll umt paid for hiswork since the time he wtia appointed.

II. J. Collins and Andrew Kicosmade application for a permit toopen a pool room at 321 PurshingAvenue. The police committee

C"utinued on page right

Fun Organized

'» denunciationMike" at the counciling Monday night. MMittuch did not identifyperson he called "Red Mibut the assembled audiReemed to know whomeant. Mayor Mittuchfused to commit himself,the nickname is geneunderstood to refer to H.Hennesay, secretary ofassociation.

The association's stament follows:

In view of the. fact that no iconnected with industry hasbeen opposed to refinancing,rounded by adequate safeguard^the statement in the public preMwas read with much surprise,cordingly a written letter of is*quiry as to whether or notattempt at hindrance had . ,_tmade was directed to the 8<M>ough'» Ilond Brokers, Ira Hauf4 •& Co. This letter of inquiry, t i » jtogether with the reply theret<^ ;

speak foi themselvsH. "*"Mr. Burt GoldtmithIra Haupt A Compunr ,39 Broidw.y, / INew York, N. Y."Mr dear Mr. Coldimilhi

'Til* Council of th* B«r«fcg||of Ctrttral, «t iU m*etinf Ult•rening, panwi th* *ublial*fi*l>tion makinf potiibl*

( municipal •)>M>»:due to atMtURCoti

tax**."It w n reported that, after

the enabiini lefiilntion WMpaned, the Mayor ftatcd that arepreientative of Urf* tax|Mtf>ert, preiumabljr the writer, *t*templed to prevent thu finaM>

"In view of the fact Jomrcompany ti heading up thr ijr«»dicale th*t ii to do the fininf, and that you ai *tentative of the syndicate-• ought a conference with tfc»writer on the matter, I wo«Mappreciato a ttatemant froai"you at to whether at any ttBMopposition wa« exprened to tftapropoul by me, either vtrballror in writinf."

"Yourt rery truly,(lifned) H. A. H.nn<-.»y"

To this, the following replywas received:

"Carteret Industrial Ano.Cartnret,N. J. Attn. Mr. Hennaitfi"Dejar Mr. Heniumy:

"A» p«r your inquiry, we o«a<firm tne fact that you n**«r-at any time opposed, in yo«rconrertaliont with at, the Ra»funding plan that we propotelto the Borough of Carteret, tit«ordinance! for which w«re paw-ed on Monday night,

"On the contrary th* qaea. ,tiont you aiked ui regarJtaythe refunding, were at all tint** jproper and friendly toward theproposal. ;|

"Very truly yourt, '"IRA HAUPT A COMPANY"(•ii-ned)

"Bertram M. Goldimith'Bond Department"

Named ERA WorkerThomas A. Chester has

been appointed case workerfor the Carteret division ofthe Woodbridge-Carte.et bu-reau of the EKA to succeedMisi Eleanor K. Miles, re-signed July 15. Mr. Chesteris a college graduate andtaught in the night schoolhere laat winter.

Ukrainian ConventionTo Draw 300 Delegates

Approximately 300 delegatear« expected to assemble in Car-

who spoke were Edward A. Struck .... . . r ___and August Perry. The laU.i Saturday night about 9:30 o'clock 'oaid he mu awiured the borough and was ruuhed to the Rah way'administration regard* the On in Memorial Hospital. He died fromGuewU-aa u fine American insti-! intetnsl :~'—J— ~* '•»« » Mtution and will give full co-op ! Susday.

njurlee at 5:06 A. MHe is lurvived by a

widow, Elizabeth; a daughter,Elisabeth; five brothers, Andrewand Stephen, of Carteret: Gabrial,Alexander and George, who live

Recreation Sponsoring Committee ArrangesHike, Knitting and Story Hou^Clubs, Cl MConsiderable activity un-

der the leadership of tin1

Recreation Sponsoring Com-mittee is keeping many littlegfii'ls in Carteret happy thi>Summer.

Tuesday Miss Prances Sarzillo,in&tructur at th^ playground, tooka group lukmu to WOK and af-terward for a picnic at Markwait's Ciiivt- The girls themlelveg pu'sniLiI an entertain-ment, Helen (ti|isie doing two tupdaiR't.*, and Kluine SchwarU »tng-illjf t^'u non^a. Mildred Muat-ocontributed a uowboy song, anda grom> number, "The RockingHorseJParMdc," was given by Irmu

Mayor Perform*L Of"

of the programthe local club i

Handand

EileenHelen

yCutter, Rose ViragWull»chlagg«r. The

panyi, Mai'y Lenart, Helenaie.

Julia Nagy, (aimitlape<le, Mafaldtt Tedeeco, .1Knorr, Lillian Knorr, _Chweuan, Bileea Culter,Cutter, Row Virajr, M*ry C ~ _Helen Magella, Mary ConloST

Othert Who W i l l '3elmu iirivich, Anna

Hilda WollM-idager, Helen !Many (iimla, Veronka T_,ya, CBlhiMine Conlon, 'Zaglewsku. I'liere^a Ch« '""oiik'n Sidun, AdeleMary VUI-K*>, JuliaNudge, AKneM Conlon,Bal alter, Mary Rechter,Wuft, Kthel Keider, 0 1 - * 'II:.. II - - ""' • " —

. the Watchung Lake •».«fountains on 8et>tember 1,

l of the on ' -

The Hikwrii in the parI (yernachjo,'

Alir,Anna Uu3i.

Iliel-s,di

Elaine'

Page 2: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

' \ " • '

PAGE TWO FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1985

MEXICAN HOT SPOTN E T IN A DECADE' h Caliente' Shows Model

Of Idealized Spanish-American Town

By HARRY M.rPHFRSONTnsofnr us illusiotiarv concep-

tions of romantic foreign Inndsare rorucTned. pre-cnnreivcd no-Cons nre unite generally erron-«ous. Killt fire scarce in Scotjam! Pew Swiss nntives ran yodel.Try to flo<l n jmintin(c car In Iretend

In R Meornn town, one looks inTain, even on n moonlit night, fnrguitar strumming swains singingfftrenavde* to HnTk eyed sennritasbehind grilled windows.

But so-called "model" townsire erahted hy modern architect*and promote™ to fit the preset-tied notions of the tourist*.

Auga Cnliente, located in the"Dtirtrito Del Norte, Baja Cali-fornia," or Northern District ofLower California, in Old Mexico,waan't a town at all until aboutten yearn ago Ft was just a de-f*rt*d old hot spring* lying southof Tia Jiiitna, near the border,and there wasn't a tropical tree—#carrei!y a hlade of graft*Within night

Today, however, this locnle ofFtnit National's latest musical•en** play, "In Caliente," whicheom«« to the Majestic Theatretonight in considered 8 perfect ex-fcmpTe of an idenlireo, Spanish-Ajneriran community

Architecture, deroration, furni-tore, landscape gardening, enter$ainment, cuisine, ronlumett, Ian-ITiaire, everything has the Span-t*h or Mexican flavor, und Michttfential touches nf modernism anare necefwary to luxurious com-fort have been nicely camou-flaged by the artful appearanceOf Bjre

When 7)i(*nher» of the FirstNational troupe of the "In Cn-liante" company, went there, theyfound brilliant tropical parrots,perched in gnarled old oaks ortwlms, screaming their greetingsn Spanish. Rooms in the hotelWere rugged with hand hewnbeam* that some Spanish padre'sfaithful mission workers might.have mnde

Electric lights were fixed inMexican pottery or wrought ironand cunningly miide to appear asold lumps or dripping candlen.

The screen story of "In Cn-liente," in which Dolores Del Rioand Pat O'Brien are featured. i«in itself, pretty thoroughly SpunIkh American.

MORRIS, MISS BRUCEIN HOSPITAL PICTURE'Society Doctor' Comes To

Crescent Theatre OnWednesday

Following the success (Pf "Mmin White," the medical drama inwhich {'lark (iuhle and Myrnn Uiyscored one of their greatest hits.Metro (Joldwyn Mayer lirings tothe Crescent, screen, starting Wed-nesday, its now story of hospitalMfe, "Society Doctor." In the,iew feature the romance withinhospital walla i« played by Ches-ter Morris and Virginia firuce,

".Society Doctor," in which alifetime of luve, drama and pathosis crowded into the brief span ofeight hours, tells the story of Dr.Morgan, young chief interne in anemergency hospital, and of hisfriendly enemy, Dr. Kllis, andthen- competition for the NIVI- ofMadye Wilson a pretty nurse.

—Please mention this paper toadvertisers: it helps you. it helps/taem, jt helps your paper.

Many Stars In "In Caliente" At The Majestic

they are, bub from lh« land of Curhnr.rha, whcr« th*T filmed 'he l»u|h»»r. the melodyfrcrtlivd, Califnli-. From Uft »i> rirht »h»T •" Onlorfi Del Rio, P . t O'Brirn, l.rn Carrillo, The DflMEdward Everett Morton (h»livw) and. lo tdr right, Winifred Shew and Horlon Ih*<« i l a n toffithniand k grand enirtnhlr nl aenorilMi «nd rahallrrrx «rr featured in the tropital nniiKal " In C»li"nt«." w

"iifo'i million dollar play-(rAnl*r) Glenda Farrrll,

minj nth*r film farorit^iprm at the Majestic tonite.

Star Of 'Glass Key' Favors CardsTo Win National League Penannt

Sf. IiOilis in the National Lea-gue and the Boston Red Sox fora long «hot possibility in the

Rftft.American.

That's the way (iHollywood's leading sports fan

to follow tilt' ball players fromHollywood Hi' plans to nttrnilthe World SiTies of HCU.. nomatter when it will he held nndis already winning studio exemfives not to «cheilule him for H

ind basebnll guesser. sizes up thetotentiiilities for the biiaebulllentuint raci; of lLKlT).

Kiifl, I'lirn-ntly starred in I'ar-• iiiouiit'M "The (Jlass Key," coni-ng hmight to the Strand Theatre,

was Imt boy for the New YorkYankees buck in the days whenthey were known as the "Hi(fh-andefs,1' and himself passed sev-

eral seasons as an outfielder withthe Spring-field, Mass. aggrega-tion. In all his time in Holly-wood, the film actor haa not yetnissed one of the spring training,'ames at Los Angeles where thePirates, Cubs and White Sox havebeen cavorting.

"Pittsburgh has a great club,"comments Raft, "and the Cubsook fair, but 1 don't see how

either team can overhaul the-ards. Too much Dean brothers.

in, i

lyu,.,,,starts

" Hctober,ot going to be in Hol-n tlic pennant grapple

i l t -

h

AGAIN THIS WEEK

FREE! ffi FREETO THE

S T R A N DPERTH AM BOY

WHO WILL BE THE 10 LUCKY PEOPLETHIS WEEK?

in "The Glass Key"lirst genuine "tough

guy" pin i :ince his triumph in asimilui rule in "Scarfare."

The piriure, from the book byDa.slnt'll llaiiimeat, author of "TheThin iMan," is a fascinating mur-di r inyMiiry centering about therivalry of big-shot politicians inNew York. Edward Arnold,Claire Ltodd, Rosalind Keith andCharles Richman are prominentin thu supporting cast.

I like Boston in the American asa strictly long-shot possibility.they've got terrific hltteni andmy guess is that Dahlgren will bea sensation at first. If everybodyun tht team lives up to hit beet,they can win."

But George Raft is not satisfied

ANN HAKDINC BACKIN DRAMATIC ROLE'Flame Within' Casts Star

Away From ComedyRoles Of Past

Ann lUrdintf will be seen int''use.dramatic role for the fir»tlinn1 since ohe abandoned the stagefoi thi' tulkinK scree.n when Ed-mund CouMinK's production of"The Flame Within," co-starringHerbert Marshall, opens a four-ihiys' en£a«ement at the StrandTheatre Tuesday.

Though she soared to stardomon linindway as a dramatic star.: the lir.it walet the niajuiily oftin outstanding picture vehiclesImve been of the smart, sophi*-tuateil comedy type, such as"When Ladies Meet," "Biographyof a Bachelor Girl," "Animalkingdom' and "Holiday."

hi Metro-Goldwyn-Mayers "TheKlnme Within," eho portrays afamous woman psychiartrist whodevotes a year of her life to theredemption uf a ne-er-do-wi'll,giving so much of herself to theman that she inevitably falls inl»ve with him.

Maureen Standi OutMiiureen CSulTiyan, as a hij;h

strunjj, emotional ffiri, plays themost dramatic role of her career,according to all reports, even in-dudinK' her atirrinx Ixytfayal in'•The Barratts of ^WStreet."

Louis Hayward, F^nglish pstar who captured the Vanity Fitiraward for the best footlight per-formance of the year in Noel Cow-ard's play, "Point Valaine," makeshis Bcteen debut in "The HameWithin."

Others of importance in the castinclude Henry Stephenson, fmor-ite character actor, Margaret Sed-don, George Hassell, Hey Malyonand Claudelle Kaye. The storyis an original by Goulding.

—A Clarified Adv. Will Sell it—

qu..,ion. below Th,n fin<, |In tb« diiplay «d. appearing lo tai> iituo of the INDEPENDENT.

au..tion . Af,.r , o u find ti >

n*4i*Uly to th. INDEPENDENT office.

TO THE FIRST TEN PEOPLE PHONING THE CORRECTANSWERS, THE INDEPENDENT WILL MAIL ONE TICKETTO THE STRAND THEATRE GOOD FOR ONE SHOWING OF

Miriam Hopkins in

mix sn ti i,Wfc«t nwrkat off.r. Frankfurter, for 12 M cant. p*r pouwl?Wl can you buy a UMkj car for f«6 ?

e«m«J b«*f tall, far 10 tent. « pound at what market7t tlor* 1< lacat.d at 7i Main S«reet, Woodbridga?

%)Ur« e«n y«Hi buy • KaWnator for no u.on.y down?#•&> Sliirl* ••)! at a for SI at what . tu r .7

kiiin«M h*iu« i« |o«a\Ud at 160 Now Brunswick JLnnu,

TWOFEATURES

ALWAYS CRESCENTCONTINUOUS

SHOWSDAILY

FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY

"PAT" PATTERSONAt The Crelcrnt

Janet Giynor CastIn 'One More Spring'Warner Baxter Is Starred

Also In Film FromNathan Novel

One of the most widely debatedHjitiong of private life, "I" Pla-tonic love poiwible?" is dnrinfflynnswrred in "One More Rprinft,"the new Fox Film picture whichreunites in romance the two stars,Janet C.aynor and Warner Haxter.

The answer in this tender idylof today i« an equivocal yos-nnd-no. During the Biircesinion ofdramntic Incidents which* involvethe principals, and the close rela-tionship which results, a beautifulprotective friendship develops.

It is the story of a young womanin searrh of romance—and a job

who while in a park in the deadof winter, encounters a (tranter,homelesg like herself, but keepingthe courage of his dream*.

Recruited by a penniless musi-cian and a ruined banker, theytake up their abode for the winterin a di«ued toolhouse.

Until Spring comes, Uie couplethink they are just pals. Theyhiivo gone through thick and thin,shared their lant dime, and be-lieved their fondness to be likethat of a si»t«r-brother relation.

When the buds come out, andlife is renewed, their patonk lovedrops like a cloak from their, theadjective Is relegated to limbo,and they become sweethearts.

"One More Sprim?" coming tothe Crescent is from the brilliantpen of Robert Nathan and wa« abest seller. Its problems touchour modern day. in which youthmiiFst fiffht. twice as hard to makethe opportunities for succetM thatonce knocked nt hi* door.

Fr<un other cities when1 this attract inn is playing come- eenmiafrom reviewer* prniRing its pillsating story mid the performancesof the principals, which reach anew liiirh in their starred careers.Hoth Janet (iaynor and WarnerHavler have roles unlike any theyhave essayed in the past. Theliirture'H tenw drama and tenderromance, make it something ex-ceptional, from all accounts, insenvn entertainment.

— Please mention this paperwhen buying from advertisers.—

CONTINUOUS TEL. P. A. 4-1593

ON THE STAGE SATURDAY 9 P. M.

HAPPY LEWIS OfSTATION WINS

AND

BATHING BEAUTYCONTEST

SAT., SUN., MON., TUES.(PREVUE FRIDAY 8:30)

iSEGYPI^WARNER OLAND

PAT PATERSON and STEPIN FECHIT—ADDED FEATURE-

SALLY EILERS in "ALIAS MARY DOW"— ALSO —

Chapter 10—"RUSTLERS OF RED DOG"Monday • Tuesday

ISlYCAUIP

Wfctt Jtichir, itiri Pa(!

«*.r.and opeq. loniibtfto the l.dioi?

JP! RAFT

W©dne»d«y • Thurtda

The ThrillingSucceaaar to. F * A T U R t

"We*in White"!

WgP.THUR.-FRl.-(PREVUE TUE. 8:30)

HUMAN DRrtMA

H A R D I N GH c r h i ' i t

MARSHALL'{£

FLAME

MAJESTICTEL 101O8 PERTH A MR. M

PREVIEW TONIGHT AT 8:30SEF. TWO PICTURES FOR THE PRICE Ol ON,

NO ADVANCE IN ADMISSION

WARNER BROS.

TROPICALiMUSICAL-

I

w i i h P A T O B R I E N

D O L O R t 3 D E I R I O

F d w ! \ ( , , t t H O R T O N

G I I N D A F A R R E U

1 I O ( A H H \ L L O

19 Great StMtiSoof tycctidetl

L

AMATEUR NIGHT WEDNESDAYU»t Time, Today—

JpAN CRAWFC

Page 3: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

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HUDAY, JULY Ify 1MI

It*U»« Q * M Vrrfta M » R a tAn almost ptrfort settling of **•

Madonna with th« Ohrlet Child t>her Mini nn on, of Hi* cliff* of anIsland off the sontJwrn roast ofNova Rentts has ntnwrf th« plae« tob« Oillwl "Vlrjfln's Island." Nn hn-msn l»lnn ha* i>v<>r got foot nn Hirock-bonnd Mi<>re<*, Frpquont lsp-pinn of wnvi-s nenlnst th<« ste^pCliff, (rtnrmn riml frost hnvp cre-ated tlio Mnil'innn rtrhlne.

Koran Helpl SlawryThe (trontcm nhstnrlr to thn

world nlclp nhnllttnn of ulnvory I*the Knrnn. hlhlr- nf MnhnmrmvlnnIRTD. ivMrli tnl<>rnt<>« ulnvp holrllng.

Taronfa Zoo Called Fln*ttThe Tnronun Park Zoo nt Syilnr-y,

AuMrnlln, In «nld to I*1 thi> flnMt Intho world

Smrnm At Last Become Some Fun!

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You Can Do Complete HousecleaningWith These Two Electric Cleaners

You Can Also Save $4.95 $ 1 Q1/ You Buy Them Together Js*

The Universal floor cleaner is the motor driven brush

type, combining strong suction with a sweeping,

vibrating action. All the dirt is removed from the rug,

the ground-in dirt as well as surface lint. An extra belt

is given with each cleaner. Purchased separately—

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The Universal Whirlwind cleaner weighs only four

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ing the inside of the car. Purchased separately—$9.95*

Carrying charge extra if you buy on terms.

IL ICTRIC ITY IS CHEAPER NOW.

P\7BLIC®SERVICE

•*»»« TiW rtmm • — * - n lTw* firm MI* laid la tktai e e w t t '

war* Imr-rtM fee* SMtakf ififtK »r i.'hn johMtou tad lall Hclay t*M nn hli firm (Mar O « a mH. T. T** ivrrmt of ihti f a M nprompts him to Import pattanMand h .r . til. mtcta hv fcaftd. l lIMS, • rwlihhnr. John T*UtoM, t »pnrtwi * "I.. n,,rtiln« frfln Kaftan*The «nrr.-, «nich th«m tas* *a<with a h r«1.ht^.«hiipp(l ttle) tootrncnnrmrH th- rapid aprMd «f tilldrain*!* In thli pnnntry. A * lilt*drsln HI* « •„ n)Hvi wMt) frtsbsbrjniwd In nril . irn t'ranr* SfcMt 1<B0Vot mull KiiKlanil tm»k np llM B « etli-p, h"»i.v..r, wore til* DMd MttM• Ivi- lv

Ikon Pafnllnf. RunUn ArtIkon pnlntliii; In <>n«> of the fen

original Kiis-Hliin arts. Before th<rnvnliitlon every housohnlrt, no matti>r how poor, hnd at leant one reMelons picture bpfore which an oflump constantly burned. The roo*famous center of Ikon painting w ufnli-kh. A remote little colony, Mkilometers from the nearest railrond line, produced work* of rannrt. These painting* found thelivMiy all over Itassla, Into (he pnlacetof rznra and princes ,n» well M th4homes of common people.

Tk.rmlt. Proewi ml W*MlBgThermite (alto thermit) Is a mix

tare of aluminum In One grain* 01filings with some metallic oxide, usually of Iron or chromium, On belntheated by priming with nmgneslunpowder and barium oxide the alumloam combines violently with thoxygen of the oxide, getting fretthe Iron, producing a ftiild alng enigenerating sufficient hPHt either timelt or bring adjacent piirln to thfwelding temperature. It I* \inetIn welding steel rails And for nthei

The Serpent's Jaws

By ARCHKY C. NEW

Sacral Society MasNathan Mule, the martyr, win

Krnve his life for his country In thtAmerican Revolution, was a memher of St. John's Lodge of Ne»York. He w»« al«o a graduate 01Yale university. MaJ. John Andrewho met the >nnie fate ns n spif»r the British arm;, was also •Mason.

LJha la* Sport"Some men," said Uncle Kben.

"runs foh office like dpy goes flshIn'. • Hey like de sport whether dejcatches anything or nnl "

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IIHiK nitOVK'S glance betmyedno slcn of nliirm at hla visitor's

anhen fur* and sunken ojrcn. jmr-tunds of n malignant Illne** illsown pink nihlcund faco vraawrpnthort In a happy smile a* heivse nli-rtly nnd leil her to s rlnlr.

"Well, npii, Marls.,™ he boomedcheerily, "(his Is Indeed a happysurprise. Haven't seen you alne»—"

"Not alnce Will's funprnl." she•greed wearily, tucglng at a well-worn (tlove. "I've been living withmy hny Hurry, fn New York thepart .vnnr. AftPr Will died, w e l l -yon IMH»—"

The Judge saw very clearly; WillRrook* — careless, happy-go-luckyWill Rrooks, had died a year ago,leaving what wns left of his coaloimtnPM—nshps—n«hes of debt—little else. No Insurance.

"Then Harry lost his Job," thewidow droned on. "He kept worry-Ing over me. After six months heJoined the navy. He sends m«> nil heenn out of his meager pay hut ItIsn't enough, with doctor's h|lls andall. I—I decided to come buck herewith .Tenny for n while." Her voicebroke and she dahhed a handker-chief at her pyes. "Judge, can't thelaw make a daughter support herneedy mother1?"

"Unfortunately," h* advised herSlowly, "your absence has made yona . nonresident. But good josh.Marln, surely Jennie hasn't turnedyon awny—her own mother."

"She was furious when I wentrhere this morning.'

"Sh-h-hl" the judge soothed her,thinking fnst. "Now. you listen tome. 1)111 Potter's still running thefdttcr house apd he'll board yoonwhllp fur nothln'. Tn confidence.mini! y<>. lie's been owln' me a billfor ycni-s, and can't pay. So we'llwork part of It out In trade, n lgive yon a note."

"Hut 1 can't let you—" she startedto proti-tit.

"Itnsh!" be scribbled furiously,then, rlxlng. put the note tn herslinking Imnd nnd helped her to herfeet. "Finn along now and leaveeverything to me. Tint mind, noth-ing of this to Jennie, understand?"

"Judge, how could you?" hli sec-retary rebuked htm gently. "Yonknow Mr. Potter owes yon nothing.Suppose she tells hUn-*-"

"Now you hush !" His eyes gleamedmischievously aa he reached for hlihut.

"I hear your mother'*- at the Pot-ter house, Jennie." Marked cordial-ity masked the Judge's Inner feel-Ings as he met the younger woman'squerulous look. "S'pose she canwhack to settle your dad's estate,huh?" .

•'Are yon trying to be funny?"ihc ilttmaixled sharply.

"Seems to me," he said blandlyIgnoring her Impertinence and » « *t'liiu! n mns strip or paTW in " »hnnd. "that your father was can-nier than you >:lve him credit for.TIIIH ll«t fteems to prove It."

"What list Is that?" nhe asked."A ll.Hf of Judgments." he told her

Binootlily. "Court Judgments as-nlirni'd to your ilad which total theihlysuin of ninety-wvfii hundred andforty nine rt"Hnr» and sixty cents."

C!upldlty vteil with Incredulity Inher tono. "All th i t -m. i father's?'

"KIMMIIS so," he replied blandly."*!IM'HS «lu>n t!iPH« |ieople wwwKiit'il, your fHther'd stop In. pay«lint they owpd find then hold th*ImlL'ini'Nis ntniinst Vm to get theircoal IIMAIIICHII."

"•And we're the heirs?" she askednvhlly. "We get the money?"

"KHH.V, CIIK.V there!" admonishedthe Jiid«e Hteruly. "Your fatbet} left>i will v'know. Tour mother hasnrst Hnloi on these Judgment debtsir we collect >in. Ouees I'd bettergee her and ask If she wants me toround 'um up."

"PleitHe. I'd rather you wouldn'tJust ,rv(w." Her «rprassU>n changedswiftly. "Vmr mother, yon see, larath** til." The JndaVs poker facer * T « H nothing. '"She's coralnj telive"«rilh me, Rgdnt you better—rtiftV rs-corildn'f yon—let thematfti! awhile h)ttger? Even saynnthlni aboot them to her powTWawwe're M MHrtous to mak« Urust ten pM«rfa!."

ssebbe we eoold

,J|U Wv.*5»t If* * » » •

Qeppijivsu *•••«

TELLS HOW BANKSAIOED PROGRESS

Economist Describes the Way*Looal Institutions Have Con-tributed to Business Growth

Th. S o . | "Swwt Aisthn""Snwt Adeline' m written hj

llnrrr Armstrong and Dirk Owrsrtlit nun |iul>llshed In 1008 after aiIciKiiiilnlnua roreer as "Swe»< RosaHi'1 While !!"• composers were tryU\i to ««-ll (lie wing Adellnn I'attl:IIII IIIT fan-ut'll tour. A pnbllsbet«nui;'''tc<l iho chnnge In title Thi

snllK Win anlil. hut a» "Swwt Ade.line fnlled t» heooni« a hit. AIHIUHint time thp Quaker ('Ity Four, IMimlivllle quartette, tried out thihnllnii nn a Ilroadway aodtenc* ao4nt<>i>|"M) the show. In a few wecbIt nun a national rag* and sincittn'ii oror 2,000,000 copies hart

Th« wood HboD la a lubaperlaaof tht American blsoa Its aooiotl-cnl name li btsoa aBwrncanas atba-bases*, Cnllka a common bison,which ta a plaint dwsller, thfi Is awoodland animal, aa Its name lndl-eatta. A few snail herd, mm in-habit UM wooded region of north*™Alberta, Canada. It 1| Unh a grsierand a browser, facdlng an gr>M sodon the iMves, twigs anil bark oftreat

<••*) Yewaf andwith N«w and M<xten

P«rMMialityCrfigiwlo «r Spiral

PERMANENT WAV*Self Settlnff WliMNn. with :

5 K o _Charts*

from 6to 1 ye«r

Work Done by Exp«rteAMERICAN BARBER

BEAUTY SHOPS. RUSSO, ProprWtor

SB Rooewvalt Ay.,tn Amoiataeat

Phone: Cart. 8-1161

I " tMOU NOWH-

S«crtt«rialCounts

Ca« sr WHH Im Htm Ca*a*M

DRAKEMCRCTARIAL COUXOtt

WM. C COfE,

117 SsWtk StrMt HRTH AMMf

OMAHA. Nnhr Prlrately ownadbanking, dnspllo Its fnulti. hasserved Amorlcn well, William k. Irwin. Profensor of Economics, Washbum Collage, Topeka, Kansas, da-clared In a recent address h«<r« nn"Ranking In a Changing World."

"Under the le&dnrshlp uf tnillvlduals hanking has helped to bring thiscountry to a (orommt plac« In economlc developme .t among th* natlona of the world." he said. "Thesmsll community has been de-veloped by the Individual bank Thefrontiers of America have be«npushed forward by the help andcounsel of the Individual bankerThd ihnrki of war* and riepr«f»!"n>In a cantury and a half have beenwithstood with the assistance of th*Individual banker.

"It may be that w* have readieda tide In tha affairs of Amarica whennew methods are needed. It may ethat wa have coma 0 a point wheretb* Individual should be submergedfor 'th* greatest good of th« great•st number.'

If Chani* l« NsetssaTT"It may *v«n be that eompUt*

•antralliatton of th* banking sra-tarn has become ao economic nacaa-sltr In our complicated social IU*.But tht banker ought to bt Mtlafiadthat thes* things ar* so before) heshould give up his light tor th* sys-tem wa have known. We cam* togreatness under that kind of banking; we should not glv* It up without unmittakahl« proof of the abso-lute necessity of such a change.

Professor lrwln a»'d that tht ;posal which has been advanced forco-ordinating hanklug operationsIn the national Interest anAtr "s'Supreme Court' for ban 11 g tatypically American and ought tob*r« the most serious considerationof those elements which are clamor-ing for political control, which istypical!. un-Araurlciu." It Is notwise, h« said, to oppose change assuch, but that b&ikers should "»e«to It that change, If and when Itdoes come, shall preserve all that Isgood In thu past and stick as close-ly as possible to the American pat-tern of things/'

Banking Is properly a conserva-tive profeiilun, he pointed out. andshould cllug to practlcea and prlnclples of banking that are, sad al-ways hava b«an. fundamentallysound.

"It Is to Its credit that so large agroup of Its members osver faltered,•ven In boom tlm»s, In thalr alleglanc« to those sound principles," btdeclared. "We probably owe ourssUvttlou from chaos to that fact."

FARM"The Origin«l Low Priced224-26 SMITH ST.

Market In Perth Amboy"PERTH AMBOY

CHUCKPOT

ROAST

MILK FEDROASTING

VEAL

Dvctor Maei«The effect of music on the hu-

man organism has been known sinceancient times. The king of Israel.Saul, tormented by melancholy, sentfor David the shepherd hnv rn playon the harp.

Qdite, Qall* SacnlCoral fishermen of the Island of

Zlarln, along th« Dalmatian coastof Jugoslavia, often go out to theirreefs at night, to keep their choicestgrounds a secret. The best reefslie tea miles offshore and a tboo-sand f>rt helow the surface,, .

*T>tir ft'-,t '' . f i e H' t ' " h e

aw If tli* <ll»<-orery were startling.iVell, s-'il-day!""Judge," asked his secretary

"when that poor womnn was her*)yesterdfiv, why didn't yon tsTt h«ffabout all those JmlnnientsT"

"Jean, rm reminded-of King Ltar.Remember? 'How sharper than •serpent's tooth It Is to have a thsjlfe-IMS child.' Tbst Jsnnle huasjr f*>

Inded roe of s serpent's Jaws Hf»g in (obhle op those JodgmsBtt"- « « jroo'rt not going to M "Mr

t i » » r"Why Dotr grinned the Jadf*, H

Mt 'M for htr. Spent sll day | g »terday seeln1 eilsnts of u lH«t|U»f 'em tc dig tp *U UMwoHhless, totally uncoUecUble•eat* the; hud and assign > •

dat«s to WW Braokf.sreo food scrap ptpw.

Wn t«t H#f nlMhoput «B » false Mihchtw s*'

Grand Opening

SALEOF THE

W00DBR1DGE HARDWARECOMPANY, INC.

NOW LOCATED AT7 4 MAIN•** STREET'WE INVITE EVERYONE TO VISIT OUR

NEW STORE" '

JUST A FEW OF OURNUMEROUS SPECIALS

R«g. $1.50 PAINT98c

Screen Wire SlashedBronte 5c aq. ft.Galvanized 2Vsc sq. ft.

CUPS 3c udb

PAPER SHADES9c

HAMPERSLvfc Site $1.29

BREAD

GLASSES . . 3 tW l f tc | Qn*rt MASON JARS

Zinc JAR TOPS

23c W

To * • CHns>m

Page 4: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

FOUR', JULY 19, 19U5

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, H.BO 1'T V"»r

T»l*t*«ni r»rt«T#» B

PuhHshrrl !>y Cartprpt

C. H. BYRNE E l 1 l t o r

liTCYBK ROSENBLUM.... Spnrtu Editor

ftrt^rod M second class matter Jim* 5,19t4, «t Csrteret, N. J., Port Offir*, underth« Art nf March 8, 1879.

Parents' RettonmbWtyBvery facility in the Borough should be

employed to atop immediately the epidemicof thievery and vandalism which has vic-timized the hiffh flchool playground.

The first step in combatting a situationof this kind is the very simple and obviouione of making examplen of the offender*.Parent* who are well aware of the possi-bility that their children are to be held upto public shame if implicated in an outrageof this kind might think twice before per-mitting the youngster* to go abroad atnight without knowing precisely what Istheir destination and purpose.

In the last analysis, the responsibility isnot one for the police so much aa for theparent* themselves. The former are pretty•well taken up in protecting society fromthe more mature offender while the latterhave a distinct obligation, not only to thecommunity but to their off-spring, to makethem keenly aware of the difference be-tween right and wrong.

And if they refuse to meet this obliga-tion, the shame should be placed upontheir brows, and publicly 1

'tripsinto Kwwx to iIT to upset Dr. &e|*o dad on) what .lr««> Salmon's figuring ondoing.

In addition, there are the spoils of thesales' tax enactment which will have to bedivided pretty soon. And that will takftime, too, h i>c a use Frnnk Hague is no bar-gain hunter. • •

G. Winter ThomeThe ranks of New Jersey newspaper

publishers received a severe blow last weekwith the death of G. Wisner Thome, formany years editor, and at his death, presi-dent, of the Newark Sunday Call.

Mr. Thome was a gentleman in everymeaning of the word. He was kind, had astern code of conduct for himself but wasnever intolerant of others, was charitable,never faltered In doitg the right as he sawit. In Newark and in Essex County he wasa civic leader who looked beyond the merebounds of financial and industrial develop-ment to the broader cultural possibilitieswhich long were neglected.

He builded a great newspaper. He liv-ed a full life. He died with a legion of de-voted friends. Could there be more?

What About Mr. Bishop?We wish that some arrangement could

be devised whereby the police departmentcould retain the services of WilliamBishop,

Mr. Iiishop heretofore has given train-ing to the police in markmanship withoutany remuneration. Under his tutelage re-markable strides in developing the profi-ciency of the men in the use of firearmshave, been made and it would seem that heis entitled to something more tangible inthe way of municipal appreciation than animplied' thank-you.

Public records are full of tragic detailsof policemen who lost their lives in combatWith the underworld because they werenot adept and efficient in the use of theirweapons. Purely out of civic interest, Mr.Bishop has tried earnestly to do his partto keep the names of local police from thatroll of death. He has been a willing, con-scientious teacher.

We don't expect those people who areteaching elemental lessons to our childrento perform this service purely because theyhave pride in the Borough and a fondnessfor the boys and girls. We recognize thisfunction as a necessity and find ways andmeans to finance the expense that is in-volved.

Ry the same token, what about Mr.Biohop?

Cross-Eyed

SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy CHARLES E. GREGORY

WHEN THERE'S A BOY IN THE FAMILY ; , w

Dear Editor:—Scroggins ketched biggerseta turtle any guy ever seen around here. It's thetalk of the whole burg. All his relations is gone ona soup diet, I seen it first when he's showin* it toa bunch o' guys but I don't ask no questions thenabout how he got it cause I figured he'd do a loto' braggin', When I got him alone I talked aboutthe weather for a while an' how everybody's beatin'it to the shore. Then I says:

"Where'd you buy the turtle?""Buy nothin'" ha says, "I ketched it where it

was washed up on a sand bar by a tidal wave.""Where was this sand bar?""Well, it wasn't just exactly a sand bar. It

was a sort of little island off Darnegat Light."'They ain't been nothin' in the papers or on the

radio about no tidal wave.'1

"Well, it wasn't no tidal wave exactly but itwaa like one," Scroggins always hedges that waywhen you dig into his fwh stories. "You see," hewent on, "they's a guy named Steve has a placein Charles street, an' him an' a minister and acoupla other prominent fellers went fishm1" roundTuckelrton, an' Steve fell overboard, or maybe hethought the water wasn't d<»ep an' jumped over-

A Break For The CustomersOriginnlly, I had intended In write this week of a no-

ion which I have been carryiriK :i round at the roots of mylair. But I have lost confidence in it (the notion, not thriair) because all and sundry upon whom I aprungr it lookHI at me a little wild-eyed, gathered their children abou!hem and scurried out of my immediate vicinity.

Maybe it was just one of those hot-weather dream?which overtake and overcome most of us now and againDUt I remain adamant in my insistence that;it's far moresubstantial than that. It concerns the restoration of smallmunicipalities such as thU, physically, morally and finan-cially and it's as scientific and as practical a plan as mylimited equipment can evolve.

And so until I can at least enlist one sturdy soul inta support I shall not attempt to inflict it upon those whonay, in a dull moment of abandon, read these words.

Instead, I offer for the edification of those limitedfew, one «f the smartest pieces I have ever encounteredin a newspaper. It was written by Mr. Weatbrook Peglerwho capably and entertainingly conducts the column'Fair Enough" in the New York World-Telegram. He iswise and understanding, a master of sarcasm and has anamusing and subtle approach in his translation of thosesupposedly complex governmental theories into their real

significance.* • » « •

"Ever since," writes Mr. Peglw, "the President decided to beatHuey LonK to it by taking first sock nt the rich I have been scanningthe industrial and personal possessions of the upper classes, tryingto decide whiit to choose for -my own share of the surplus when thedistribution is made. It is not an easy selection.

"A Rolls-Koyce, an long as a hook-and-ladder truck, confiscatedfrom some Un* Island scion, would bo very tempting, but under theterms of the distribution, I would be entitled to no more than a halfinterest in the car. The other half wmild be allotted to some totalstranger, nn mnmipntible character who would want to use it on thevery days for which I would have plans nf my own.

"I can hear him even now—a Rabby proposition who thinks huknows it all and tries to tell me about the Tunney-Dempsey fights indetail, although »'• attended by radio only whereas I was there andsaw them. He doesn't believe I was there, and I didn't save the ticketstubs; BO I am just a liar. He has put a radiu in ihe dashboard of thecar which he insists upon playing at all timerf—loud. He thinks WillRogers is a «reat American philosopher who will really live and is Joan

Feted On BirthdayTwo-year-old Gloria Donoghuc

was honored on her recent birth-day at a party given by her grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jef-ferys of Grand Avenue. The

friends present includedMiller, Joan Ruddy, Louis

jj m u e

Drimel, Eleanor and Thomas Don-oghue, Grace and Charles Farrand Itaymon Angus.

always telling me the good one that Will got off in the paper thismorning about tMm boys down there in Washington, and what'sworse, teling it wrong.

"He has a wife who stops us along the road to buy pumpkins andsweet corn and an annoying little kid who wants to sprawl all over meand squawks murder when I insist on my own rights as half-ownerof the car and shove her over on her own side. He also has a mother-in-law who prattles and a no-good brother, a terrible bum, who tookcash money for his share when the wealth was distributed and lostit in a crap game the same night.

"This broth* is plastered all the time and regards us as idlerich because we still have the car which we received in the distribu-tion. Now he wants the government to divide the wealth again andcut him in for a share of our car and a charge account at all thesalo6ns,

'The mother-in-law has hung the car over with pennants from *<*u"" !: U'^H "„? th^Bo'lTr».l Sor.^,™ ™A rt« M.nfmnth f-.vo ,nA ™h»n I nhio,f .h« sued refunding bonds of the Bor-

ough «f Carteret in thu County of

AM ORDINANCE PROVIDINGFOR THE ISSUANCE OF RK-FUNDING BONDS OF THEBOROUGH OF CAKTER17T, INTHE COUNTY OF MIIHH.K-SEX NEW .1KKSEY. IN THEAMOUNT OF *:r;:..ooo.HK IT ORDAINKI) 1IY THE

MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF THEBOROUGH OF CAKTERKT INTDK COUNTY OF MIDDLESEX,NEW JEKSEY:

1. That there be i«-

fiirs. Christensen Recovers—Mrs. Andrew Christensen, of

Roosevelt avenue, who has beena patifht in the Perth Amboy

General Hospital since 4 , ,, ,,,rwent an operation two K ^ , a,,0|is expected to return h,m,. ,week-end. She was undo h. ,»„.of Dr. WtiHato WiletiU.

boardcross-eyed cat.

Scroggiiw stopped to play with the

The School ProblemThe plan of Supervising Principal Miss

B. V. Hermann and the Board of Educa-tion to eliminate the congestion attendantupon the large enrollment in the hijjhschool should prove to be an effective solu-tion.

The depression years have seen ourschool population grow by leaps andbounds, yet they have depleted our gov-ernmental treasury to the point where ad-ditional facilities are out of the question.'The difficulty thus presented offers tothose charged with the responsibility ofmeeting it, an almost insurmountable task.That Miss Hermann and the Board havemade a sane attack upon the problem iseasy to see.

They will employ during the comingschool year a stagger program which willbring- the pupils to their classes at differenttimes but will permit all of them to usethe high school. Their proposal will elimi-nate the confusion and congestion whichthe unusually large classes have brought inrecent years but at the same time it will notsacrifice efficiency.

But it is doubtful whether the citizensof Carteret realize the time and thoughtwhich was put into the working out of thesituation by Miss Hermann and the Boardmembers,fact.

They should appreciate this

Butiness Of StateGovernor Hoffman, pleading over-

work, is asking the people if they won't:ease let him alone, not write him letters,d refrain from seeking appointments,

business of State, he infers, will be ne-ected If the practice continues.

Yet the Governor has had hour upato'hour available to toy to spread peaceharmony amopg t^e warring factions ofhis party. He spent* whole afternoon attempting to aettlfi | h j ( Bttini-\Vaodru|frumpus in Camden and -countless periodaSeeking to,rwoncll« ti&gjj^-rooted d ^ } | n r Louie

"What's this guy, Steve got to do with the tur-tle?" I aeked.

"Why, when Steve flopped into the water itdisturbed the whole ocean an' bay. That's whatbeached the turtle."

"You're some liar," I said, disgusted an 'a littlebit jealous account Scroggins is a leal artist whenit cotmes to tellin' tall ones.

"No, Honest!" said Scroggina, "the water wasrough fo* leagues around. This guy John Caikowas out in a boat an' it made him sea sick. Therewas a other guy out, too; a brother of the fellerput the bakin' soda in the hamburger. He thoughta yacht sunk or was blown up, only he called it aya-chaw."

Scroggins kept on gabbin' but I don't pay nomore attention to him, I was watchin' the crdeg-eyed cat playin' with a newspaper. I looked closeran' darn if that fool cat ain't manicurin' his clawson a piece of stone under the paper.

"That" said Scroggins, "is a trick the cat learn-ed from Bddie Demish."

"How d'ye mean, Eddie Deraiah?""Eddie has one of them Leisure Time jobs

manicurin' dames fingers. He goes round ridin' intrains with gals an' fixes up their nails. Alwayshides what he's doin' under a newspaper. I had thecat in a Central train the other day an' the catseen him. That cat's got good eyes even if theyain't straight,"

"They ain't much life round town these hotdays u they?" I was ftfelin' him out to see whathe knows.

"Plenty life if you know where to look," Scrog-gins said as he picked Up the cat, "Take this herecontest between Hudson street and Roosevelt ave-nue; that's plenty hot;"

"Them streets don't run the same way, Howcould they be a. contest in between 'em?"

"I don't mean no contest Bome place betweenthem two streets, "Scroggins aayi, "I mean likethis: Hudson Btrett used tp boast it had moresaloons than any other street in town. Then thatstretch of Roosevelt avenue from John street tothe Ferry got sore and yelled Hudson street waaa cock-eyed liar because they'g more saloons inthat hill section . . . . "

"Which one its right?" I knowed they's plentygin wills in both streets but I afoi't never heard ofa content like Scroggins says.

"K1r.it one h ahead an' ;tfien the other," heM3»s, "It looked like Hudson street had the .lead awhile but one guy KOt to jwnpta' hia saloon trainplace to placal til you couldnH count right. Hud-aon street is licked now, all light, though.'*

Hotr come?" . •• . i

"You see Hudson street got ahead whep Jpkti,Walkaf an1 Henry stauh.acb'got the work* flowPM1 TUrk an1 Frank Asheri.htrt taken up ^k» par*gin Jjy openin" hvu m«we onei an' they's an extialuat 'round the tuni« in John street. M»yb« that's

prosperity is. Another wallop for poor oldi street U Dundee closing We place account

Turk is goin' to take all hi* ttfcde away.".^'What's naw about the post office JobT" I ask-

< "Hey, layoff that, t .told you before to plp«down on t h r t a fceiir a little Inside stuff »bout Tta»

| Montreal, Saratoga and the Mammoth Cave, and when I object shesays, all right, she will hang the pennants on her half of the car assoon aa I make up my mind which half is mine^—which can't be done.

"The kid haa a mutt dog which has muddied up the, upholsteryand yaps constantly at other mutU along the road, besides leavinghairs all over my clothes. The sticky kid has smeared gum and taffyon all the door handles, in addition to which she broke Ihe cigaretlighter the first week and once turned on the ignition and burned outthe battery for which I had to pay half.

* * * * *

"The rum-pot brother speaks of the car as his car even now andunless I want to Bit in my half day and night, to the neglect of everyother interest, he is going to sneak it out one of these nights to takesome dizzy wench out riding ami wrap it around a tree. 1 can't sparethe time for this, because I have to hustle for the money to pay lastyear's income tax; so the wench is killed and her family sue me for1150,000 as co-owner of the car,

"In addition, six other people who lost a little hair and skin whenthey were run into a ditch as the no-good brother tore along the leftside of the roud with the wmich. wrapped around his neck, is suing mefor half of $500,000, plus $1.50, the cost of filing the complaint.

"The rum-pot brother turns out to have gpont three months incamp in Chattanooga in 18SJ8, most of the time in the guard house, forbeing drunk and disorderly; so he now puts in for a pension of |jtoO amonth, and get;, it on the gmuihl ilial (.lie knub <m bis In ad, wlik.h wa.iraised there when he wrapped the car around the tree is directlytraceable to his having had indigestion on active service, due to aration of embalmed beef, forty years ago.

"From the very first I have been regretting my choice and wish-ing that I had selected instead, us my share of the wealth, an interestin Mr. Al Smith's Empire State Building. But the day after the wreckof my half car I met a friend who took an undivided ten-millionth ofthe Ford plant at Detroit and hi« face hangs down to his knee-capsaa he tells me I am lucky.

"It turns out that some crazy man living on roots, berries andbull-frogs in a side-hill cave down in Louisiana drew for his share ofthe Ford plant a little gadget which controls the zing in all the Fordsand won't let the rest of the ^harehodars use it because he thinksSod doesn'Uike Fords. So till the rest of the shareholders arc. out ofluck and the taxes are eating up their share of the wealth.

" 'Ob,' I say, 'but that Umpire State Building is different,' andmy friend says, 'Yes?' and 1 haven't heard that the people who drewthe ground floor of the Umpire State got together and moved theirshares out from under?

So,' he says, 'the whole thing came down, spraddled all overthe lower part of town.'

"I wish I had taken cash money like the no-good br.otb.er of my

Middlesex, New Jwsey, in theamount of three hundred seventy-five thousand (1375,000) dollars,or such lesser amount as shallhereafter be determined by reso-lution, for the purpose of re-funding, pursuant to Chapter 233•j{ the 1-aws of New Jersey of1034, as amended, entitled "Anact relating to the funding or re-funding of outstanding bonds ornotes by municipalities," all orpart of the following outstanding Ibonds and notes which are herebydetermined to constitute valid out-standing obligations of said Bor-ough of Carteret, no part of whichwere issued in untifipation of thetaxes of l!)3ii or subsequent h'scalyears, and all of which are sub-ject to refunding under the above-recited act, to wit:

$100,000 6". Tax Revi-taueBonds d*tod December 30, 11>34,and maturing December 30, 1935;

$11,000, 6% Emergency Re-lief Bonds dated July 1, 1934, andmaturing July 1, l!KS6;

$128,000, ()'..; A.sse*ime*ntbonds dated December HI, 11*31,and maturing December 31, 1985;

$120,000, 4^4% Tax Revenuebonds dated July 1, 1935, andmaturing on demand on or beforeDecember 1, 1935,together with accrued interest,

ciniumggions andof issuing said

partner in the Rolls-Roywouldn't have made much

it in a little while I realize that itdifference. The cash-money patriots allwuuuiu i imve iiiaue mucn imurence, ine casn-money patriots all

spent their shares or lost the money gambling, and tha cash againhag gravitated into the hands of the smart people who quietly buyup all the millions of shares in big industries at panic prices. Roose-velt is out. Huey Long is the richest Wan in the country, there is astandpat Republican President with a cabinet of magnates and mer-chants, happy days are here again and I am still plugging along at myjob but paying 80 per cent of my earnings into tha U. S. treasuryin return for a half-interest in a u»ed car that climbed a tree yearsago. It i driving me crazy.''

legal expenses,other expensesbonds.

Section 2. Said bonds shall bedated the first day of August,1935, and shall mature on the firstday of August of each year asfollows:

$ 5,000 in each of the years

The Hoffman - Clee DebateS«y§ Hoffman to Clee:Your economy pl««I* known at "the old rabbit punehi"I me It campaif mapBut not for nwintainiagThe Mprit de corpe of tile banco.

Tile boyi in the •*«>•0 1 boottinf my Um*Or court* expect payvwnt In fullj .To K t tben a frtcijoa.Would brine the metionOf bavin* me only the b«U.

Tarn Clot* «biw«r«.t>ackiNo polkU.I h.ck !C«n kid the Ciena Qarerament Le«f M|We're oa to the taAotAd to •K«ffc>V

all i M

GrandFamily Outing

Carteret DemocraticOrganization

Sunday, July 21Afternoon and Evening

At MARK WALT'S GROVEEast Rahway Section

Everybody Cordially Invited

Free Bus TransportationEvery Hour

Buses stop at Salem avenue, Hudson street. Cook and

Washington avenues, EnoU Drug Store, Brady's Cor

ner. COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS.

Races, Baseball Game, Wrestling Match, Rolling Pin

Throwing Contest for Women

ALL KINDS OF REFRESHMENTS

D A N C I N G

GREGOR'S GREENWICH VILLAGE ORCHESTRAA Good Time Guaranteed

taxpayer* sM touabb "1 iL d"

1937 and 1938,$10,000 in each of the years

1939 to 1954, inclusive,$15,000 in each of the years

lD5,r> to 1961, inclusive,$20,000 in each of the years

1962 to 1966, inclusive.Said bonds shall bear interest atnot e*:e<-'ding 4V4 per centum perannum; may be issued either atone time or from time to tumiand the exact rate of interest,form and other detailx and themethod of sai<l and/or delivery ofSaid bonds or of any aeries orpart then-of, which may lie dif-ferent for the several series orparts, shall be determined by res-olution to be adopted hereafter byvote* of not less than a majority»f all the members of the govern-ing body of the Boruuirh of Car-teret.

fiction 8. The full faith andcredit of said Horoujjh of Car-teret shall be pledged for tlje pay-Went of the principal of and in-terest on all of the bonds issuedpursuant to this ordinance, andprovisions for the raising of thesums required for suoh paymentshall be made by resolution.

Section 4. This ordinance shalltakfc effect after Its passage andpublication {pursuant to' law.

NOTICEr/he foregoing* ordinance was

regularly passed-and adopted ata regular meeting of the BoroughCouncil on JoW lftth, 198B, andapproved by tb* Mayor 'of theBorough of Casuist, NtW tapey,on the same day, '

i. vo. run,Borough Clerk.

Introduced J«Iy 1st,' 1986.

D o n ' t Mi s s [THE BIG

SEMI-ANNUALCLEARANCE

SALE!NOW IN PROGRESS

AT THE

SURPRISE DEFT. STORE578ROOSEV&TAVE.

I N C ,On The

ices pen tiew , p jo jb |

' Ttv tag art to w«il «M * «Vf<VTkafs kfJUiBf •»!•»•«* * «,

V'tlAdvi with Notfce of

ju*t tUltil p»W« tftf

MARY DOLORS SALONWASHING!

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HoUar(1 Party Here

V nlvSix Attend Swtion

pr Mertini In0 0. F. HtB

,.|,i A nhort buninens'(silny niRht. in Oddjiftpr which there

nos. Thoae

i \|,-«. Arthur H«U, Mrs....-ti-nhnder, Mr». Louinl Wnltpr Vonah, Mr.i w Mnss, Mrs. AllrftiMi- .lames Baird, Mrs.

i ii,,ti, Mr*. Peter Peri Mntthew Sloan, Mrs.

I l l l

!,n RichRrdson, Mm.! ,,,ni(in, Mr* George Pnt-[i< Matthew Duffy, Mrs.,.„!, William Donnolly,^•hrimph, Mrs. Thomns

Mrs. Herman Fisher,un Brown, Mrs. DavidMrs. LPO Rockmnn amis<-hwartx.

Itunton Plans Completed

,il, v I.odfe in WestfieM ha^, |,,ii*n M th» place fnr th^

,,, Hnnre which 1» to mark,.,-(in(l reunion of the Clans nf,,f I'arteret Blftl School. The

, mil b« s tUM August H.].;,;.<• Danlefi, John rhnat,

,, i urric, jMMh Qaydo* and1 Turnw tat craif*.

19,1935

Pawns Of Fate In A Story tS Dirtctots

At the annual mp«t<ne of tfeaRjwiwvplt Bulldinj; mm! I/»n 'A*.B<wintion Friday nijfht th* follo#-ln({ dirpctors wire (•lwtwl: Wil-liam I> <'««ry, MumnFr MNN,Harvey VO. Platt, William A.Day, fxinis Vonah, David Ulman,Sumii'l Srhwartr., Th^nrfore Bis-hop, Arthur A Tayl<ir, ThchiadMoss, Thomas C. Konyon, William.1. I-awlor, Timnthy J. Nrvlll, Ru«-•mll I, Miles and John H. Nevill.

All of th<"P*» dirsctors were re-clortcH. No imp was named to taie-i-rnd Runlpy Rogers, a directorwho diH a few weeks ago Officer!of the association will be electedat a m«"ptin(t tonight.

Citizens PimTo Attend Firemen'*Picnic

H.roicture, "On. Morr, Sprin»."G»nor. Ih, • .» . , . (h.t t,,|

hich W.rner B»ter .nd J.nftn,,ihrr," p|.r ,hr prinrip.l p«r t.

M 1

Daughters Of America

See Woodbridge Ritual

A (froup (if member* nf Pride

NO 1)1 I AVS

of I'uritjiii ('"iiitcil, N'o. .'12,Daughter* nf America, Rome ac-company,) by their husbands,went tn Woodbrirffre Wednesdaynifht to nltcnd • public inatallR-lion nf the office™ of the councilthere, in the Maaonir Hall. In thi>(froup were: Mr, and Mrs. J. JDrown, Mr. and Mr*. James Martin. Mrs. Edward A. Strack, Mr*.Cornelius Doody and Mrs. SusieSt:iiibach.

Advance sale of tickets here:li'-ntes a Wife number of Cu-

tercl residents will attend the bo«texcursion nf the Port ReadingFire Company Sunday. The tripi« to Rye Mendi on the Kte»merWilliam I'enn which will stop atPort Reading at !> o'clock, and atRenjnmin Moore's dock here at!):30 A. M. Ti<ketR arc on mleat Mittuch's and Rra<tley'* DrugStores. RuokreiKPl's Flower Shopand (Jentty's [of ('roam ParlorCombination ticket* for rides atthe beach will hr »ol<l on the boat

The arrancementu arc in c>f a committee including ("McCIpUitran, Jamei Tonejr, Car-men J. Zullo, Anthony Coviao,Benjrtnin Martino and Jacob

Ptumi BmBxam

live committeday nightI T Koviator John E

Harry Luhern of 35 SalemAvenue was one of the suc-cessful candidates for admis-sion to the tar. He «a* noti-fied Ian! week he had pannedhis "'xnmination, and will es-tublish his office in theChrome section of the bor-

JiuinCtcditGUARANTEED

f>>r 1Z moiiihs

road hazards

! Troop 87 Of Boy ScoutsReady For Hike Tomorrow

Members of Troop 87, BoyScouts, will hike to the Woo<l-bridtre Clay Banks tomorrowmorning, leaving St. Mark's par-ish hall at S o'clock. The troopmet Monday niicht at the parishhall at which time Bernard Ray-mond was (nade quarterm-^iterand Frank Mairaar scribe. WilliamGraeme, Jr., patrol leader, wainamed assistant to senior patrolleader William Hart/. HaroldCromwell, scoutmaster, conductedthe meeting, and William Graeme,Sr, member of the scout commit-tee, was present.

Instead of a regular meetingnext Monday nijcht the memberscouts will report to the scout-master at the Rahway SwimmingPool.

iO W* *m few to nrtteb to wtwM tenout

KELLY-SPRINGFIELDfatiyue-proof TifCS

JERSEY TIRE COMPANY. Inc.147 New BruiuwicU Ave. Phone P. A. 4-1775 - 1776

Laylors Give Party

On Daughter's Birthday

In honor of the birthday of theirdaughter, Marion, Mr. and Mrs.William F. Uwlor, of 99 Waah-intrton Avenue, pave a party Wed-nesday afternoon. The littleKuent of honor received manyIfifts. The (fuests were her littleplaymates: Mary Theresa Bonner,Margaret Bulfin, Muruant Knorr,Heruadette, James ami WendelPhillips, Eileen, Irmu and CliffordCutter, Ludwitf and Henry Sz&bo,James Johnson, Betty and HarrietPalton and Joyce Garber,

Schiavo, all member* of theompany.

fire

Harmony Social ClubSponsors Moonlight Sail

The Harmony Social Club ofarteret will sponsor a moonlight

»ail up the Hudson to a point be-yond the George Washingtonbridge Friday night, August 2,The Steamer Mayfnir has beenhartered for the trip and willeave Moore's Dock in Carteretabout 8 P. M. Returning it willarrive in Carteret about I A. M.Saturday. The Harmony ClubOrchestra will furnish music. Her-man Gerke is chairman of thecommittee in charge.

Lawlor ChosenFor K. Of C. Shore Retreat

William F. Lawlor, of Washinirtoti avenue, has hen announcedas r< treat captain for CareyCouncil 1280 Kniifhts of Colum-buK and will arrange for members who so desire to attend theK, of C. retreat nt West End. Ata meeting of the council Tuesdaynight it was announced a series ofCard parties will he sponsored !)<•ginning latt in the summer amicontinuing^ through the fall midwinter.

Reeetly elected Officers of thecouncil will he installed in Sep-Urnber. There were visitingknights from councils in SouthAmboy, Perth Amboy and Sayreville present at the meeting Tues-day night.

Htpitd Fund CrompConHnis riant For fate

The orfarmntion formed re-cently as Suhv-ntwit to the 8ol-dipm Vtemnrm l|.,,pit»l Fund of'Curteret will - •ntunie to wek da-ta ieif»rdinif !i>.,.,. *ho inbacrtb--<vl to the f11r•• • I . »,,•>) jt wan start-

"if" An fxecuihe group Fri

ufted Attorn*-,• work with 8*«

- - - - - - Inn who WM en-Itag-ed hy Kdw»rd .1 Heil to findout if the nmnev mny be returnedletrnllv with H<<ni<.it interert tothose who donated it or to thf <•«.tatct .,f truiie who have died.

Mr Heil'i careful handlin|t ofthe fund during- th* yearn he his!

e*-n ireamiier was highly prajn-I by the committee.

Delegation Of RebekahsTo Attend Rites In Amboy

A d e l a t i o n of members of!

Deborah l-ndgr, daughters of R«.bekah, will go to Perth AmhnySaturday night of next week to;witn<"n installation of officers ofthe Odd Fellows Commanderythere Arraniremetits for the tripWere made at a short business

. of the lodffe Wednesdaynight The meeting was follow-ed hy n card party at which seventallies were in play. It was incharge of a committee Including:Mrs. .lames Reid, Mrs. AugustKostenbader, Mrs. Robert Sloan,Mrs George r»aterson Mid Mr«.Matthew Duffly.

Ben Bernie, George Raft Play In "Stolen Harmony"

A tip to Bernie fans! Turn off your radio and go downto the Crescent Theatre Monday where you can see the oldmaestro himself in Paramount's "Stolen Harmony," Itwill afford you as much enjoyment as a month of listeningto him. And, even if you are not a Bernie fan, see him andbe converted.

Starred with George Raft in a j — ~•ilm that is an adroit blend ofcomedy, melody and drulna, BenH h d

y ,and his lads, romp along

with a brand new Gordon andKevel Koore, scattering laughs andthrills every foot of the way.

"Stolen Harmony" presents themaestro in a role where he canact himself. He is the leader ofa troupe barnstorming through thestates in an enormous bus..

I CHALLENGE EVERY AUTODEALER IN TOWN TO SHOWYOU A VALUE LIKE THISrl S, I include 'all three' lowest

need cars in this challenge'I of course, all the cars that

11 "(• more.

11-now lota of you motorists are'". co quit wasting your time

It-ring so-called bargains,- '-"u come in and make me> K)d on my assertions.

1 k now you're going to be aston-1 • l>y this gigantic new Studc-"i tlue because t lot of you still'•- the idea that Studebakers are> i K li for your blood—too costly')"ur purse.

Indies and gentjfcmen, that's• Muse you haven't priced a'ker for—well, bow long has

'> been?1 !1 .igree with you that Stude-

'lo luoh expensive—that they^ Hi i- materials find specincationi

i costlier cars.

Big, New 1935 5-Passenger Sedan

DEUYERED IN PERTH AMBOYWITH ALL EQUIPMENT

WITH SAFETY GLASS

NOTHING MORE TO PAYEXCEPT STATE TAX

THIS IS NOT A

FACTORY PRICI

WITH A IOT Of

IXTRAS TO PAYrot »tro«e YOUCAN USf THE CAR

CARD OF THANKSWe wish to thank all those who

aided us in our recent bereave-ment in the death of a belovedhusband and father, Joseph Zatik.We especially thank Rev. L. C.(hany, of Trenton, Kev. Julius

s«, the U. S. Metals RefiningCompany, the employes of theCopjix plant, L. W. Bahney, the

Is of the Broom & NewmanCompany, Camp No. 8*J Woodmenof I ho World, White Carnation

t>w No. 34 Lady Woodmen,

State Manager Grogan of theWoodmen, the choir of St. Eliza-beth's Church, Undertaker T. J.

oimey for satisfactory service.Those who sent floral pieces andmass cards, and all others whosided us In any way.(signed) Mrs. Elizabeth Zatak

and daughter, Betty.

SALES GIRLS—ZEETA IS YOUR

BESI FRIENDW!n!i ynii HufTt-r from iHTB|tlrhi>c, MnM

acliliiK- tmrJLlntf fet't, watpr hilwierH, ZrctuIH iir> n i-li'iiuio an th*1 boy frifiul,

i .-, h i j t l r ! l & H i l l l U l . - M i t l i r l l l ^ M > U Urctli'f -t>oL riocilitng, healing comfort.

i i . ! i\ run to day Jitid rub />vta **u yourff.'t. HprLnklf It !li your BhiU'H arnl you\wi\ t liiliul the \uhii liuurn you HUml onyour f>j(_'t.

V.\'f(a, tin' JLiiltHt'Litlc ilcixiurriiit ]M>W<I»T, IH recouiDfleiidfd hy d<Hitorn. clnruyijdt LH, leading Orugglata liverywlit-re.

CARD OF THANKSWe wish to thank all our friends

urn! rclntlve-i who came to our aidin our hour of bereavement atthe death of H devoted husbandand father, Adam Zy«k. W« es-'pecially thank Rev. Joseph Dlia-|dosz, Furifral Director JonephSynowiecki, the Polish NationalAlliance the Holy Family Society, iChief Harritigton and the Police \Departmrnt and all relatives,friends and others who aided nsin any way.

(signed) Mrs. Adam Zyskand family

Jack's Tavernand Ballroom

424 MARKET STREETPERTH AMBOY

Dancing & Entertainmentevery Saturday

FEATURINGHASHIE HENRY ANDHIS HIGH STEPPERS

Free Sandwiches

JACK ISENBERG, Mir.

—A Classified Adv. Will Sell

SORE MUSCLES

STOMACH GASANJLACIDITY

9«» rid of ritfjaeld m y°ot "'o"11"'11

and Touil (*t Hd Af most at yuurstomach trouble*.

Acid cau»«« l l l e '*xJ t o fermeut -1thin cansw gas— the fan dixtends th«Btomach and then your di6tri«» starts

soinetuaes y»« feel that you ure no-ing to BiSocate.

Now the maliora of n«>tta huiulnK"'hue pcrfet-'t«0 » tablet to uvercimwthis acid condition ami help Jo awaywith stomach puiun aud mi»ery.

The tabUHn ure .•ullwl KIMOIDHthey net swiftly when distretis cnui'sahtl eatiiig—and for acidity, K"3,sour Jtomacli, dyaiwpsia aiul imliK<*tion they are wond«rful -A»k yourdruMist for a <H& ceut bottle if<KUiOID&—they alwaja work.

' »'sc not. It's exactly whi |" '<• utitled togetfotyourmon«y

'" '"lomobile,"

with 21 MfM

Jy, automatic rid* coocrol,.npfr (uw'di, s'pan tic* and

i

J.ARTHUR APPLEG ATEMIDDLESEX COUNTY DISTRIBUTOR

3«3 DIVISION STREET 31« BURNETT STREETNEW BRUNSWICK *HONE n«»

TUJ>F.B KER C.

qrwlth"RRR': RubIt in. Stimulateslocal circulation.

, lt» comforting' warmth »oothei

muscular vchet and paini.Uicd for 87 yean to relieve itlffjoint*, neuralgia and tpralni.Rcducei Inflammation. Pene-trate*. Doei not blister.

RADWAY'SREADY RELIEF

GAS PAINSwind colic aad ttomach dittreumore quickly relieved with" R R K". The comfortingwarmth of a teatpoonful In aglau of hot water expelli ga(and bringt you prompt relief.Great for that "morning after"feeling

K M |1TM *«aat«rtiAg wanathbtanuUjr M»4 UtarwOlr

MARGIE'S SPECIALSFe»thrrweight Permantnt $4Frcderict Vita Tonie $5

All Craquignole

F^nch Oil Ware $3Bring a Friend 12,50EACHITEM 35' - 3 for $1

477 RAHWAY AVE.Tel. Wo. K-1213 0p«n Eve'i

DR, WALTER FAGANSURGEON CHIROPODIST

FOOT AILMENTSP. A. National Bank Bldg.

313 SUU St. Room 403ItoUKS: Dallr >:S1 A. U. la 1:00 P. U

ISvanlDg*—Moinlay, Tu««J^ly. Frld»y

Pb<»« P.rtk Ambor 4-1142

Borough OfficialsMAYOR

Joseph W. Mittuch

Borough Council

William GreenwaldMichael Yarchesky

Hercules EllisDr. H. L. Stmndberg:

PhUip TurkJames J. Lultach

Harvey VO. PW*. cltrk

Department Haaxi*Joseph Jomo, Borough EngineerI'rank I. flartford, Building In-

spector.Williun D, Casey, Tax Assessor.Alfxj5d«r Combs, Acting Collec-

tor oi Taxes.. •„Oui-ire B«u4u](>k, Str«et CommU-

Bioner. . "Henry J. Harrington, Chief of

Police.James J. Donovan, Chief of Fir*

Department.Abraham. D. Gla*», Borough At>

torney.Louis T. Kovact, Police Justice.Mis. Wtltfr Vouah, Overseer of

>nn* . . .1'oor.Meetings first «hd thhd Mo«d»y« i t 8 2iM- in Borough HalL

BOARD OF EDUCATIONDr. H, L. Stnmdbeiv, Pres. Joamh GalvanekFr«nk Haury* MatflilM BeigertCharles A. Conrad Janaw J. LukaehAtigust Medveti . Jd>& 3. BrwMCharles KrywewsW Mr* Haury, tlerk

MIM Barbara V. Hermann, SvparvWngMm. Pardlnand F. Simoua, School Nun*

Meond Wadnatdty at I P. M. in Boroaffa Hall

BOARD OF HEALTHAdam MakwtaiHJohn K«ml»ermkyHerman Gorki

Act. J. P> QodarttadBodnar, Board Nttn« .

Price* on Fine SummerMerchandise at BriegsTake a Nose DiveGet in and get yourshare of the bargains.

"CLEAR THE DECK"SALE

Starts Today Friday,July 19th

If you liuve any thought ofeaving money on n grandcool outfit do it now,for you can never tell justwhen the man who wantswhat you want will be inahead of you.

With prices a* they arethere's no telling how longthe (foodtt will last.

MONTHSTO PAY JO

No Money Down

Irikh Linen Suit* $12.50Fancy Sport Suits $24.50Tropical Worsted

Suit, „... $13.75'Sanforized" Cotton

Slack. $1.79White D. B. Angora-

Spun Suit* $13.75Manhattan Shirts

(Fancy) $1,65 & $1-85Manhattan Shirt*

& Shorts .. 39cStraw* A

Panamas $1.00 to $2.85Bathing Suits $1.95 up,

f t WtifhtSweater* 89c up

Polo Shirt* _ $1.00Palm Botch Suit* $15.71

BRIEGSftatith St., P.rlli Ami)

M July «nd August

A

KELVINATOR QUALJTY( a*/ynt JLWW miat tJbf metmrnt)

at the lowest price in Kelvinator hlitory

H«r«'i tti« mo«t tglksd about valo* In •todik

— a K«Wnator, ttw roiulJ of 21 yaari' «xp«ri«ne«, at a prioa

you would pay for an ordinary aUctrfc rafrtgerator. II b

»up«r-powarvd with ih« >om« ryp* m*chani*m u««d ia MM

larger models. It hat the torn* quality cabinet conitrvcttoa

and mony of trie famous KeMnaror feotwre* of d*«iga. Wt a

great bargain ond we will gladly ihow you

ill many fearurei. S«e It before you buy.

WOODBRIDGE HARDWARECOMPANY, INC.

NOW LOCATED AT7 4 MAIN 7 4• * STREET •**

SUNNYDALE170

SMITH ST. MARKET PERTHAMBOY

Specials For Friday and SaturdayCOME IN AND BE CONVINCED AS

HUNDREDS OF OTHERS HAVE BEENDURING OUR PREVIOUS SALES.

SAUL WEISS, formerly of P. A. City Market

SWIFT'S GENUINE

Legs ofLAMB

RMOUR'S

SmokedHAMS

4 to 6 lbi.

BROILERS2 to 2M Ib.'tvg.

22 LB

SMOKED

CALI m iHAMS(SMALL)

19TJUICY

CHUCKROASTFRESH-MADE

CHOPPEDB E E FMILK-FED

Rumps andLegs of VEAL

GOOD. TENDER

Cross-RibR O A S TSOLID MEAT

Legsof 1 PMDHON 1 0LB

8 to 10 lb. avj.

FRESHKILLED

FOWL3 to 4 lb. avg. 19LB

U. 5. GOVERNMENT

INSPECTED 12FRANKSOn Sale 10 A, M. to 12 M. Only

1'211

BREAST OF

VEAL

BEEF 10 G

LEAN | | | L BBOILING

Wa Have No Connection With Any Other Market

HARD. RIPE

TOMATOES3 lbs.

CALIFORNIA

RING CHI

Smddst d0I.ORANGES 19

FREE STONE

PEACHES

Page 6: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

FRIDAT, JULY 19, 1985

QUESTION, PU

The World Color Prtf. Co., St. Ijwa, Mn.

' f t * *>•><* i w ?

TOX X ) Kit** »«.%**• M*

T O

"Himha la i punl* to we "he'a • panic to other*

loo I nTM-hpurd M l * Snohl tb»otlior dny ordering htm to explainBlrn«df."

THArS TROUBLE

6-OIP w<?AVf . I FOONP IT

"Why should he need all thaimoney? He's not a fntnllr man*

"N'n, but he hJU a v*rj piponihr*aet or rtnliita in support."

NOTICETnke notice that FRANK ASH-

EN inlemil to apply to the Bor-ough Council of the Borough ofCarteret for a Plenary RetailConaumption Ikenae for premised(Hunted at 546 Roonevelt Ave-nue, Carteret, N. J.

Objections, if any, should bemade immediately In writing to:Harvey VO. Platt, Borough Clerkof the Boroug-h of Carteret, N. J.

(signed) FRANK ASHEN,646 Roosevelt Ave., Carteret, N.J.G, P. 7-12, 19.

8HKHIKI*'* HALF,IN CHANCKKY OK NF.W .IKIWKY

Helween IHAIXll tK HCH WAKT7.Complainant, mill MTUVK KKK-K l ' J U L I A l ' " K H K U . e t u l , 1 > I - -

f r n d a n t s . F l . K B . f o r t h « » « ! ' • <>f

11 , I 9 J 6 .By virtue of the alum- stilled

WMl . In me directed im delivered.1 will ex|> to ««](• III Plllilli' van

WKItNKSIiAV T II K HKVKNTHI>AY c>K AUJIWT, A. 1). NINK-TKKN HWNHltKI) THI11TV-KIVK

at l i n o'c lock. l l H y l l g h l H a v i n gTlri i t - In the a f t e r n o o n of I f ir s l i l i l

d a y lit lli.i H h i > i i r r » ( Irt lcc I n t h eCity of New Hruuswli'k. N .1

AM, that certain lot, Inn tparrel of land and premlsi-*.innftrr particularly cl*«i' rl h*il.Hate, lying and being Inough of Carteret, In IIIF.Mlddlaaei and Htale of New Jarsny

IIR1N0 known and designated uputi ll certain map tiled In the Conn1) Clark » Office of Mlddloaex Counly, untitled "Map of Trait 1, Centrall'urkway, sltuutad In the Horougliof I'arleret, County of Middlesex.New .lerMey." dated May. WZ4, nur-veyed and mapped by Fred F. .Si-mons, C K., and known as lol Num-ber 95 i> 11.1 the adjoining ten 111''Ifeet of lot No »*. and the adjoiningfive |6'I fett or lot Nunber it onsaid map. located on Herman ave-nue

HelnK the nretntstffl commonlyknown und designated at No. ISHermann avenue, Carterel, NewJersey.

Th« approximate amount of thedecree to be satisfied by said saleIs the HMIII or Flva Thousand Kifty-three lJollars if6.O53.00l, togetherwith the costs of this suit.

Together with all and singularthe rights. prlvili*K«H. hereditament*and appurtenances l lureunlo be-longing or to anywise uppertalnlnK

ALAN H. EI.Y, .SheriffM1UNKY J. BROWN,12( 78 Solicitor.C F 7-1! IS, It. 8-:.

slt-

:>oiiity of

os;1 •' r-l (T1* TOO

T U . U 41 i M ^ M a P S S X "" *mS-K

f4

IPHO ^ * * ^ '<5

LOH* *v »TOII ,

TOO WHA.1 Vvkrw

'''I',

&*«*4|ksVaW

' ' \

\

• \

•A

T.M - THE KELLY KIDSAH. ITS pee SYMBPOM Of

KWZOOMtKi IE IS ClVEPER VUNCC Of EB

r-1

IT» SftOOTl nMN<EVERY CNCf WAWHILI iHMP

PAIN* CUT HE LIKI A KNIFEIUiHMB>lKNIFE J

SALEIN CHANtrblltV OF NKW JKItMKY

-Between ISIDORE HOHWAKTZ,Complulnant, and JOHN UACSKO-CKY. JULIA HACHKOCKY el all>efenJ«iila. Fl. I'u. Uit I)M- n lvof mortgaged premise* dated June11, 1936Hy virtue of the above ntut-nl

Writ, to me dlrei'tcd and .k-llvered,!I will expime to aul<! at public veil-;due Oh |WKDNKSDAY, T H E HUVENTH 'DAY l)F AllUUST A. 1) NINE- ITKKN HUNDItED THIItTV-FlVE '•

at two o'clock, Daylight HavingTime, In the afternoon of I h« midday. lit the SlierlfCii Olilir In tlu-City of Naw Brunswick, N J

ALL THAT certain lol, tract orparr<;l of land and premises, herein-after particularly deni-rlli«d. situate,lying and bring hi the Honniuli ofCarteret, III the County of Middle-sex and State of NVw Jemey.

UEINO kiiowii und designated up-on a certain iniip riled In the Coun-ty Clerk's Olltce of Middlesex Coun-ty, entitled "Mnp or Trai't 1, Cen-tral I'urkway, ultuatid In the Bor-ough of Curteret, County of Mid-dlesex and Htat,- of Nrw Jerilay,"dated May. 19^6. surveyed and mup-ped by • red F Simons, c 10.. uths easterly twenty lit)') f,.,.t orlot number 8» ami the atUolninirwesturly tWDiity (2(J'| feet or lotnumber 71 on mild trart loratud KIIthe southerly aide nf Hermann uv«-nue. eighty (UO'I rert easterly'fromLinden street.

being the preinlnes ••onununlvknown anil dr»lguatcd an No 1

. Hermann avenue, Carteret Naw-Jersey.

Ttio approximate aninunt of the•decree to h« suttsflrd by said salela the sum of Flva Thousand blightHollars (16.008.0(1), tugethar withthe costs of this sale.

Together with al! and singularthe rights, privileges, heredita-ments mid appurtenance* thereuntobelonging or In anyway appertain*Ing.

ALAN H. EI.V, Sheriff.ELMER E BltOWNinto Molk-ltor.C. P. J-U, 19, t*. S-2.

BHirPS »AI.EIN CHANOBRT OF NBW JE1WET

—Between ROO8KVKLT UUILD-INO AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, »eorp.. Complainant, and 8AKAHROBEL and MAX HPBKK herhuaband. et als. Dafendants. f:.Vx. tor the s*l< of mortgagedpremites dated May 'it. 1>JS.By virtue of the above ttatttd

writ, to me directed and delivered,1 will «Kuoae to *ale at public ven-due onW THE 24TH DAT OK

hfcVlg?9• t two o'clock. Dsvyllgtit SavingTime, In the afternoon of the said4*7. at the Sheriff's Om. e | n theCl(i of New Brunawlck, N. J

]1 t(i« follswlng tract or parceland premises hereinafter

Jj described, tltuate, lyingIn the Borough of Car" Ctnmty of Middlesex

,J«r*ey.(take In th«

IMVtTt A»«ni«,dlalaot

•Wtarly' 4k» ill* down

' : Clwh'a

^ ! |

HalSraj

jNOW WMCMWR.'AH'ISS VUN DtNl! L)MT OWN' 1*5I ANOOiTH UMT DfY (5S NOT CO'tELATlPM HCMAL(AttlihtUPCNCE. IN KK HULL nMtMAZfXmcAt. r-

J^\ DtfTlOHAUT IT <tXH NO "OOCH'')

1i

I ^

with Mid KoouvMt %r*nue, formerly Hallway Avenut, five (6) feat to

l k ta t ft* w««t*rl]r linely Hallway Avenut, f i e ( ) t toa (lake ta t ft* w««t*rl]r line of Lotl l B l k 7 "a (lak ta ftllil. Block 7, a*map; thence (4)allel with Gattt*a itake In the ILot U l afurtMld:orly and p*Mlle)lway Avenue, nSO feet to a Ieornar of dot(*l southerlyGanti Avanue)•if ll«*lnnlng.convey Lou II'an uroreaaldfeat in width

Also kiiovnAvenue,

The atoai

on aforesaidIjr. and par-

t i feet tooorntr 4f

wu»t-ltan-

Avenue,rtheaslthense

r with saidto the uolM

tended toBlock 1•trip 1

Togother with all and singularthe rights, privileges, htrwlltanwit*mid appurtenance* thertunto ba-louglng or ID anywise appertaining.

ALAN H. KUr. Bherlft.KM11. BTRKMLAU,fit Hi Hollaltur.(' P. I-1I;T-I. 11. II.

NCFIRMsMtVOU

ANUMTCUTOIM>K«OUOCS.'MOWVUMtr

AiNOJD BAI> IXUf MIT A MOlLEItlN PATIENTMTTOWID NAVIN* A KKFOOZHNMOT 5CXJMM LIKE MOPSYT

MERE i»S IT TWO mtf lWl lOr i * ! VUN r»SOtLOKO*O«1 KK MR ICI04 1>NT WE*

ACID M* YOU.» MLL f EtL MIKH B<TT«

HON * I t PER lHOID ONT M ?I TtMt I ASK YOU TO «At *AM*JI USStM.' 4AY IT LIKE W t —

ad mCHABL NA- surveyor, Roosev.lt N. j (i> la a westerlynortherly line »f

i t t

INBetween

l l

^ T Si W JKK8II-JACOB CAHPHNTEK.l d JOMBPU BtH-

BIH»BII«

nt of

Time In the afta)rti»on of ths s«ldday. at the Mharltt! Offlc* In theCity of N.w Brmwwtck, >< J

ALL thois uertaln 'Mta, tract* <Jrparcels of land and pMnUea here-inafter partlcuUHK »M«wll»e)5, •Uu-ate, lying ana boIMr Mi the Borouah

i t ;

Flv. (I> _on "kUp of _HhotweU," on 111*Clark of Mlddli

on a Hap of Proixrtr of rShotwal' on »U tn the oOUe OfO l k of Ulddltsi^ cSSS «

« d b

on a "Hap ofS h t l '

b* loU ao»|W kfOl Uddltsei^ c S . «Jerwy «• a»d b * loU a o » | W kf

« R a t t d . lent ID t i t * Win*

of D*ed* for MIMIMAX County atnafe «7 etc.

Jelng lh« uraroltes commonlyknown and d*slgnatad*aj No. 1 Ba-lent avanua and i»-t l Harcer street,Carterat, N. J.

TUt awiroxlmate amount of thed»or«« to b. aatlaBed bjr Mid salela th« nun) of «*r*n Thousand andfljfll Hundrad and NJnjty Dollar.(friW.M), to«*tber with the oo«l»of this aala.

•; T»f»lh« with all Md singularth. rights, prlvtlMM*. hereilta-mania and BMwrtWuVM thwe-

ftJ^' '" ***** *»•

••wrieiiKBI, BH S W U S L Kit.

find^a^J^^ra^i"'orjgaged prtmlaaa dajtad June

expose to sal* at nubile vtn-

HUNDRIO»< two o/clook «Time In the aH«

iiT<

jatha

a

traa* or parcel

asfffW^aon Kdwln street aa•hown on said map.S*Jntv|»"« point if m d by the Inteasterly n f

Page 7: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

R B

ar^Diamonds, Stars Win Junior League GamesBy MEYER

CirterdSp«rts Chb ( d o s e Ones On The Diamond

ABOUT JOE MF.DWICK

. „; jroinjj t.o write another piece dhmit, Joe Medwirk,, ,((;h there have been complaints from my reader*,„ over-doing- it, that is, devoting t 0 0 much spRce to

\ i tn -all, doesn't he deserve it. Hasn't he done more,1-terrt. on the map thun any other person? Isn't

• •omil figure? Isn t h«> one of the rmmt dangerousin both leagues? Isn't he th,. second !«<»<HnK hit-,M, li-difties. Ktirely one who has done so much

-.idcrnMe spare in n himie town paper, parti-, Hint person comes from the hometown. Ami

, •! ., k in a native of Carien't, horn hack in NovemI, m a two-story brick building on Union Street.

past week, in goinjr through the metropolitani i MII across Grant land Ricp'* column, which ii

,| in hundreds of newspapers throughout theM r . R i c e , w i t h o u t d o u b t , i» an a u t h o r i t y on

II,' is one of the oldest living sport writers todtu .' MM naked by a fan to pick an all-star team from j\nierican and National leagues covering the past

-vs. But Rice, admitted he could go back only, \enrs. Afid in his selection HE PJOKED JOE

ii K OK CARTERET ON HIS NATIONAL LEAGUE\|; TEAM. Only two players actively engagedre selected by Rice on his AlkStar team The

Kill Terry.haa seen Medwjck play not once but many timed.: that Medwick is one of the greatest free-hittersly the present generation but also of the era cov-

. past thirty-five years. And he picked him to the•-,!• team. No greater honor has ever been merited

all player than to be selected by America's dean.•••I writer* to his all-star team.l , All-Star teams follow :

AMERICAN LEAGUEt . , hers—Mickey Cochrane, Detroit and Philadel-i: II Dickey, New York.

IV'-hers—Walter Johnson, Washington; Ed Walsh,,Vn Bob Grove, Philadelphia; Chief Bender, Pliila-

hi-4 base—George Sisler, St. Louis.ind base—Eddie Collins, Athletics.

Mittstop—Joe Cronin, Washington and Boston (at

Beaten By RaritanC«rt«pe»'t Six Game Win-

ning Str«*b Snapped AtRaritan Township Field—Sc<*« 7 to 4.

The Carteret Sporto Club,formerly known as the Car-feret Baseball Club, had bet-ter stick to Carteret—if theywant to win games.

Riding on the wave of asix-game, winning streak rennrded on their home grounds,the Sport* Club took • trip toRaritan Township last Sunday fnrthe expremthe Karitanin a (rHmi1 of h**eh»ll Now they

E"1

To

rpose df enKaginjrwniihtp Field Club

• • •• By BARRON MeNULTY

THE CUNTS FALLON EVIL DAYS

THE GIANTS «eem tohave fallen on evil days. In-juries to Fitzsirnmons, Ca»-tleman and Mancuso rivalthe casualties that shot theinfield to pieces during theiria»t Western trip It i* » goodIhinu that they have a comfort-able lend, becaime if things pro-

« us thpy have heen, they willreturn with no lend at all.

Thi Cards, Cubs and Reds allhave cnjnyod lonjj *trin(T» ofstraight vritnries »t the hands of

the season will stop t lot of (tor*i*S which would have Keen writtenabout the Bab*', chance* of ret-ting tn<" Jon. »nfi <" * milfhty goodthine, since McCarthy really de-servH the job.

CANDIDATE FOR MEDAL.THE CARDS' MR. FRISCH

Jedwtas DefeatRikwayJU.8-2C*rt«r*( T«am Victorioua In

Final G*m# In R*hwayTwilight

Big Crowds Witness OpeningGamts On High School Field

the impotent Dodgem, Philliesand Bntvpn It «<-em» » wonderhow any ntliir E*»ti-rn team

arc sorry they ever madi-the trio, icoiild rnnke ovrn a fni, ,t,o'j hpraunc the township tossers dp winning A pennant with dil-

ated the Tronlto nine, 7 to 4 mendoim odd* against themhe setback snapped a nix-frame The Reds

oftre-

. '. t*ama in thr leairue lit up »ndillrtll and snatch victory fromitake notice They so f»r thin wa

the grasp ,,f the Troekomen json have bmon the hardest teamCarteret wo red th* first run^for th? C.ianta to bent, and they

" ivZi "?"n(i w l i o n Jncksnn jUiwsd in by-gone season* to beralked, stofc second, »nd ram* in their favorite push-overs. Nowti Marsinlak's one bane hit Con- they arc no longer the soft spotinuinif in the third round, thejwhere pitchers could rent and gel

Troitko towera scored three more r*ady for the Cards and Cuba.

' • • " •third base—Jimmy Collins. Boston Red Sox.outfield—Ty Cobb, Detroit; Tris Speaker, Boston:

h N Y k Marciniak, rf, pDapolito, et, 2bGolaaiewtki, 2b .

Jaoeba, rfIf

Dudash, lbGlenn, lbSlover, cf .Allen, cKubiak, rf

CarteretRaritan

IvKuth, New York.NATIONAL LEAGUE

Catchers—Johnny Kling, Chicago; Roger Bresnahan.^'rk. | Zagleiki; cfI'ftcher*—Christy Mathewson, Nlew York; Grover

gander, Philadelphia; Nap Rucker, Brooklyn; Jackliro, Pittsburgh.First b«M—Bill Terry, New York.Second base—Rogers Hornsby, St. Louis.Shortstop—Hans Wagner, Pittsburgh.Third base—Arthur Devlin, New York,Outfield—'Fred Clark, Pittsburgh; Jimmy Sheckardiklyn and Chicago; JOE MEDWTCK, ST. LOUIS.

BEAT THE JEDNOTAS, FIR&TA certain sports scribe who is well known in this bor

gh has, without any apparent reason at all, takenfit" at me because I made certain remarks concerning

(arteret Baseball Club, which ia now known as therteiet Sporting Club. It seems that I have said on

Ire than one occasion that the newlj> reorganized CarBaseball Club wouldn't make the grade, or words teffect, f also severely criticized Manager Josepl

ko for discarding some of his older players and fillingplaceH with ex-high school performers.

And now, because the team haa won something likr seven straight games, this certain scribe has seizedpportutiity and made me the target of an attack.IN defense, and in an effort to vindicate mynelf, I wishi ke it known that I still don't thing the Carteret Sports jI'ould step with "first class" opposition. True, the

, lias won six or seven straight games, defeating some• ••• "better" teams from this vicinity. But didn't the

"Mow one" to the Raritan Township Field Club hist!i.v. And the Raritan Township Field Club is by far•lie best team in this section.I am willing to make a wager with those who belicvr'in- Carteret Sports Club can stand up against thi

!:'iK teams in the county. I understand the Sports Clublash with the Carteret Jednotas next Thursday in

"'-t of a series for the borough crown. I will pick thei' i is to take not only the first game, but also the series.I nly if and when the Carteret Sports Club should de-i iiu Jednotas, I am willing to "eat my own words."

JUNIOR LEAGUE OPENSThe opening games in the Carteret Junior Baseball

pp frinning streak of the Cartertt

earn.It wouldn't be »n bud, but the

-Uritan club won the ball gnmethe last inninjr. cominjf fromi d to score four runs in the

enjoying aih

are at thin writingairing of sevenjg

straight wins, which is a record inthe memories of Hedlanda' oldestInhabitants Thisting ready to

K<v1 teammake the

(re(other

FRANKIK FRISCH cer-tainly deserves some kindof H medal for the mannern which he is keeping theCards up there and fighting.

Nobody1 except a manwd in the Mrdraw school ofiiiirht ciiiild keep that side dhow

in uny kind nf order. McOrawraised KriBi-h tn he hi« *iiccpaRor

f the Ciiant.i and thenlittle more like Mac

than the boss himwdf, hopped •>train in St. Louis when ne watwith the (liftiitfl and came home

Nothing much wt> Mid about itat the tiiii.', hut during thr winterhe was traded to the f'ards forHornshy with anothpr playerthrown in, just to make him feelbad Now he in the bin; boaa outther<\ hut if he doesn't win thepennnnl this year, may br just aooarh sonic other place

The ( anls are nntorioiiRly short

tins With a four-run le«d, CUTeret appeared to be well on thiay to victory.Raritan scored its first run in

RUPPERT RENEWSMCCARTHYS CONTRACT

BABE RUTH received a^1 "S'L*?'' *ri()*i lT° lY11"' iniblow to his fondest dream

'J1'' jthe other day when Ruppert* r 'gave Joe McCarthy a con-

tract, for two yetrs more M

The Carteret Jednotaiplayed their final game in

!the Rahway Twilight lea-gue last Friday night anddefeated the first half rhnm-pinimhip Rahwiiy A. A. rluh by an8 to 2 score.

As a result of this victory thehave won three and loot

two and will finish third in thenreend half. They wound uji insecond place in the fltlt half.

One bijr innings—tha fifth- wsnall the .lednotan needed to win. Inthis round they scored seven runto hr.uk * l-i deadlock and withefin.

T

WILL DEAN COTO CHICACOT

DURING THE conning

... Carl M»r-Iniak, who had pitched fairly

good ball up until thin time, blewup, and Raritan scored four runs manager of the Yankees.:o win the ball gnmt.

Th» boi score:Cartcnt Spor

omba, lbDfxon, « 8Ruaao, MBaranciuk,Jackaon, If

Club (4)AB R. H.

3b

3444344341

E.0 0

0

McCarthy •>•[< he hai b«'m.n«r.r K.4 H i m finitkxllowar lh»» IKOIKI, aiuj K* it th«only man in tka kklory of baM-ball to h«v« won p«nnanti ia»Mh Uafuci and n«T*r to K»re>Uy*J ia cithrr

The fact tlmi Kuppert saw (itto give him R new contract at this

the oldcl<»e of

date without wailing fnon* to expire after the

winter there will be a tradeaffecting Dizzy Dean. It hasbeen rumored that the Cub."offer Chuck Klein, Lon War-neckp and eighty grand.

Personally, 1 think the <'nrrii<are itettintr much th« better ofthe deal With the famous l>i'«ntemperament, I don't believe Ishould want him, even if he nev«»lout a K:H!IH' And the Cubs willhave to ifct a different managerthan (Irimm before they can

rirolk from Dean's arfmitt*! hril-iance mi (he mound.

(Jiimin cant even handle themild cut ups hv has now, muchless II I Van.

hy a comfortable mar

hox score:

F. TJ n ,Stutike, cM foil, cfKosel, rf

lb

Marciniak, pV

Mayorek, 3bMascuMn, If

(•)AB.

.. 44S

. . . I3

.... t.... 8..... 8.... 8_... 8

R.11aIIooiI

t7 8Rakwar A. A. (1)

AlB. R.Twaaka, 2bClialliet, 3b ....Henderson, uSloca, lbXarwky, IfUllenfield, cfEarly, rfH Colli.n HeIhirano, p

44

. S

. 33

. 82S3

28

000003000

The Cards whipped thetohin". fit,, s the Diamonds

t h<* Sarred Heirtfl,to 1, and the Stars turned

ark the Hears, 3 to 1, thisveek in the opening gamesf the Junior Baseball Cestfue,

initnrr<1 hy Joe Comba and (liasworker, HerBian Horn. All

hrer p m » were played at th*Ifh School Kielil.Nent Mowtsy nithfthe Seniorop will jfet under way at the

lijrh School Field with the Olov-playing the Rover* in the

opening mime. On Wednesdayhe Ace» will take on the Uke«.

The Intermediate league willopen next Tuesday with a contentbetween the Buddies and theRambler* The Roc'.ne* meet theTrojans on Thursday

The scores of the Junior lea-gue games follow

CardsDiamond*Star* ...Robin* ,

BASEBALL LEACUtT U B StaaJiag

Wednesday1! R M M f lW. L, PCT,

l.Nt

.ukMiak, rf ...Novak, aa

Plectyikl, IfrYokopiak, p .Mamyiuki, lbBrtotoakl, lhFinn, 8bGlochoaki, cRialow, «f

Yoong Ukes DivideDoable Reader HereLo«« Fint Game To B««raA. C, 7-1, But Win Second

From Port Raiding C001-eta, 7-1.

34 4 9 14RiriUa Towaihip F. C. (7)

AB. R. H.Toth, M S 0Virjillo, 3b ' 3Kopp«r, 2b 4

010100211

Intermediate Baseball Carteret Jednotas PlayLoop Opens Next Tues. In Jersey City Sunday

Play Buddie* InJJ Rambler.Opening Tilt At HighSchool Field — Rockn«sMeet Trojaiu Thursday.

82 7The Score by Inninjra:

8 0

013 000 000—4000 001 024—7

Two-baae hlt»— Virjrillo, Allen,Russo. Stolen bases— Baraneiuk,Jackson, Slover 2. Double play—(iolaszewski to Russo. Struck out

-By MullenRaaeti on ballsMarciniak 2.Marciniak.

4; by Dudash 7-Oft* Mullen 7; offLosing pitcher—

The Ramblers will playi' Buddies next Tuesday

Locals Victorioui Over Hud-son County Foe*, 21-3,Earlier In Season, ExpectAnother Field Day.

Minim four players, the CarteretJednntaa were forced to cull off

The score byRahway A. A 010 001 0—2JednoUn 000 170 x—8

Although Bill Boben collected•even hits three in the first u»in,and four in the second, the hen'the Young Ukes could do oveithe week-end waa to aplit * double-header. They lo»t the openeto the Beam A. C, 7 tn 7, andwon the necond, 7 to 1, ovar thiPort Reading Comets.

The box score*:(Fint GanM)

You., Uk., (I)AB. R. H. E.

The box acont;

B.102101100

n.1

King, aaPiur, SbLucaa, cf ...M. Vlrag, IfPluU, rtW»lah, 2b ..Foxa, lb ....

24RaUa* (4)

AB.I4

A. Viraf, P

44S

s3t2

29

f

».v,.iiiriir «t t h p Hi irh SrVinol t h e i r K a h l * w l t h E l 1 I H b ee\ MutiK at the High School S u n ( l a y > t t h e H i g h s<.hoo

field in the opening game of ,xhe game will be playo.the Intermediate B a b l l l l t dthe

pgIntermediate Basebtill

sponsored by thelater date.

However,

Field,d at a

the Jednous will* , p y hCartrret Recreation Commit-,™eetJ«rsf }•"* in a New

' New Y k I ttee. The Kocknes will meet theTrojans on Thursday.

Two (tiirnes will be played week-ly in tht- Intermediate League,

Hankinson Auto RacesAt Lancfhome TrackFinal Meet Of Eattern Sea

«• -n To Take Place Sun-day, Aufuat 11 — BillyWinn Head, Field.

the first on Tuesdays and the sec-mid on Thursday*. '

The schedule of the intermed-iate IcHgne has been released as

Mows:ROUND 1

JULY —23--Muddies vs. Ramblers2h—Kocknes va. Trojans30 Trojans vs. Rambler*

AUGUST—1—'Kocknei vs. Buddies6—Trojans va. Buddies8-Ramblcw vs. Rotknes

A U G U S T ™ U N D "

' New York I/eague contest next' Sunday afternoon at Jersey City.

'! past performances mean any-hing, the Miglect-Poll alugicers

should have a big field day, xincon their previous meeting Car-fret buried the Hudson County

aggregation under a 21 to 3?core.

The probable line-ups follow:

Fired to a feverishrecsnt weeks,scramble for

duringhecticprized Eastern A. A. A. au-

the2*—Rocknea vs. Buddies22—Rambler* vs. Trojans27—Buddies vs. Ramblers

Sunday, Aug. 11, rh the Anal, .sponsored by the Recreation Sports Committee i""'™"'' ? " " ' „ " ' "" T*

I by Messrs. Joe Comba and Herman Horn, wentIK tins week. Crowds that filled the field to capacity

pi'"-st!d the ball games. The junior league games are1 in the afternoon, with a game each day from Mon-

jf Friday.Next week both the Intermediate and the Senior

will get under way, with the opening game in the|i»i- Loop scheduled for Monday between the Rovers

ie Clovers, while the Intermediate Circuit is slated" on Tuesday with a contest between the Buddiesu- Ramblers. With four teams in each loop, twowill be the bill of fare weekly in each league.

laborate pan's are also under way for the formation| l | | ' tennis tourneys.

mile track.Ben Shaw, hard-riding

vitle, N. J. pilot, manning thesame Miller Special in which thelaU Johnny Hannon drove to the1934 title, is the current pace-setter. But Shaw ia hard pressedby both Doc Mackenzie, the beard-ed sensation of Eddingtoit, Pa.,and the determined Bob Sail, 1933winner, who has bteii staging abrilliant cutaebuck campaign dur-ing the ptust few weeks.

With those three baltliUK fi>>

cr, Loa« To

<k In Practice

'"i-ihint out of the or-took place on the

1 works Field la*t Sun-<<ternoon. It (tamed

"'« tUmbUrt w«r«I'd to play tome Wan''erth Amkoy «t 1

K und the awvan WereL • tu meet the Bh» Com

1 Newark. Weil tomakaK stury ihort, tile Aln-

>'um failed to make anAnd by »S b , the

did not h«v« a full"" the tteW. 80 the

l'a *hu were aupixjeed<-• played a team from,A"»boy, took on the, Comet* inttead. It

i;1"-1' > • practice gwne,ll" (mneu won by 5 to

"'

""• at Trap*flower* that etoM lm-

"in

"•• the

extrtct th.animal, tod birds

One, •

Route of faul RevereDraws Tourut Crowd*

HOKHMI. - l'«iil Uevere, the fauiiiiisinldnlght rider who was born twoci-imirlw nt» [his fear, remainsnn« of hlsiory'i favorite figure*

never tire of painstak-ingly pursuing thr circuitous route•ver which he rode to ImmortalityIn 1775.

Figures show that during thepast year no leaa than 28,000 per-sons have climbed the- Old NorthChurch tower where the signal lau-lern was hung for (terete.

Meanwhile, at the other end nfthe Ilevere route, 18.000 visitorspassed through the Hancock-Adams

h J h

lb

CartarctYap, 3bJ. D'rlirilla,F'. Poll, saM. Poll, cfWiegolinski, cT. D'lurilla, 2bMasculin, IfMHynrok, rfMarciniak, p

Jariey CityJ. Hickson, BS

- W. Hicko, cf. . Popowich, If-... Makely, 2b

Hissen, pRusnak, lbWolchak, c

UIKJ, rfOrlowsky, 3b

Sports Chb To PlayJednotas Next Thurs.First Game Of What May

Be Three Or Five GameSeriea To Be Rayed OnLeibig'a Field — JednotasFavored — Boro Cham-pionship At Stake

A baseball "natural," iithere ever was one, will bepresented to the Carter^;fans next Thursday eveningat I.eibig's Field, where theCarteret Sports Club willplay the Carteret Jednotasin the lirst nf what may' later

l»]i into & three or five-gameseriea foi the borough champion-ship.

rinsing tnKi'theT the twoinvr hust'ball uKgreg-atiotu of

the borough, (he contest ia er-pectt'd tu draw a record crowd. '(niterct fans never fail to turn Iout when two liicul teams clash.And furtht-i•in»ret a local aerieialways K°<'K "Vl'r I''K-

It will lie tin1 first (fame of iUkind to he played here in manyyears, since it !f> the lirst time inrecent years that I'arlertt has hadtwo teams inoie or leas usual inluting.

The content will undoubtedlybu tht' outstanding feature of thecurrent biiaehall s'iison. Up untilnow the Jednotas have been com-

W. Boben, cM. Keto, 2bI>. Bohanek, 3b

Lucas, ssYatchy, lb

, KarmRiin, rfJ. Wadiak, IfJ. Haluko, If, pC. Bohanek, p ..N. Hamadyk, rf .M. Boben, rf

434i443410

. 1

Th* acore by Innlnn:Roblna 102 001 ft—4Card! 500 100 1—41

(•)AB. R. H.

Tontctuk, e 3 2 1Stropotkt, 3b 4 0 1Kovaca, rf 0 2 0Kurdyla, rf 0 0 0Kachur, a« 8 0 0Poltaikaa, 2b .•-. 8 1 0Zimmerman, lb 8 0 1Milik. ef 8 0tKurdyla, If 3 0 1Klelman, p 8 1 0

as 6 4Saarad Heart* ( I )

AB. R.Zulick, lb .Bfclaris, ef 2Hresko, c 1Dondrechik, e 2

5 032 2B..r. A. C. (7)

AB. R. H. E.tlasek, lb 4Mwlvetr, 3h . . 5

assy, cf 2Sziegeti, p 3Kalash, ss 3(linda, c 2Makoski, 2b 4Slinski, If 2Harna, rfI'hoban, cf

Maskarinec, «•Jackson, 3bKraaak, SoKafcsur, IfSiulimowski, rfKovacsik, p

8 228 7The score by innings:

Young Ukes 000 002 000 2Bears A, C 312 000 Olx—7

H.000t1•0000

22 1 tTh* score by inning*:

Sacred Heart* 000 100 0—1Diamonds 380 000 x—4

Guraey, SbSipos, rfTi

Gam.)Start (3)

AB. R.

Tutin, lb 2Udtielak, p . .. 2Bartha, c 3Stopinski, a8 3

.Zawatski, If ... 3(Second Cam*) Sobieaki, 2b iYoun, UUtt (7) IClerwanac, cf 3

AB. R. H. E. ,Mochan, cf 1Boben, c ....Kezo, 2b

tornobile""racing" champion-1^—Kocknes vs. Trojangahip may be decided onceand for all at. Lancrhprnpl Wa\le» P.r.Qvei to Youth

He'* Really t PrinceVletinii —The prince of

nent » nin/nlflcerii toy rallwn.v nnii* personni card to little V,Schmidt, living In the Vienna KnrlMnn Hof. and proved hlni»elf 1prince.

When the prince, of Wales waa InVienna he visited a oumlier of workmen's spnrtment bousea. ainonK(hem the Karl Mitn Hof, the lifini-(luarterii of the Socialist Schutr.-I111111I (luring (hi; revolution of Fellriinry. UKU, i>n his roumlH hi- raim-

house In I/Mlngion. where JohnHancock and Siirrtbel Adams wereawakened by Revere And warnedthat the British were coming.

the apeed tufra, a terrific pai.- i« | tsvitable. However, chief honors I

may be carried off by tin- redoubtable Billy Winn, diminutive1

KunsaB City star, who has enteredwith a new Miller Special, the la-test «p«ed creation of the cele-brated car builder, Harry E. Mil-ler.

Powered by a 250-cubic inchdisplacement motor, this car israted the last word in speed con-struction. A sum close to S20,000wa» spent to build toe car.

Winn has long been concededtu be one of toe foremost dirttruck pilots in the nation, al-though in recent yean, he hasbeen handicapped by the lack ofa suitable car.

However, with inferior cars hehas succedoi in establishing animposing string of track recordsthe countryover. And, in addi-tion, he ha» won the HankinsonNational Circuit Championshipfor the past two years and hasplaced hirh in the Eastern A. A.A. title chases both seaaona.

Pawl". M, IU»IU W«Memphis, T»n«.—Memphis tmwl-

ere, celebrating In honor of theiroldest adherent of . the sport. tv<>r<vtreated to an exhibition h> JimKelly on his eightieth birthday Theelderly pain rolled three g a m e s -MQ, 1T1 and 224—for • total of .W

Women wereto 1W7.

No CL..M"I should like tu educate the

U»te of my neighbor*," Hid HI Qo,the sage of Obltutofcn, "but cat-tonis are hard to conquer. Try asI might I could not hope to turnthem from a s<>usa marcb to listento the delicate tone differentiation*in Chinese music,"

' NaWi.l« Naaae4 WUHllo, second e l* In Americt'i

midPfclOc territory of Hawaii, Ifnamed tfter the bnneo-bickad part

whom legend Mrs piloted th»

the klnderKurten. In which Unl.-son of tin unemployed RIHII

was playlliK with other children"fiet up and nmke your U>tr 10

1I10 prlni'H." the hoy was tnlit.Little Ueorce. however, replied

with the tumnntiice of nl« fl»eymra, "This Isn't a prince, for hehasn't n crown.''

The heir to the Hrttlsh crowndidn't fnntfl the ..nly person whodoubted hi* Identity In Vienna.

l.litle (Jeorg-e heiletes now In thexeiiMlneneHS of the visitor.

Kalin Pitches 3-HitterAs Clovers Win, 8 to 3Shut* Out Ukes After First

Inning As Clovers RallyFrom Behind To Triumph.

With Leo Kohn holdingthe opposition to three hits,the Clovers rallied from be-hind to conquer the CarteretUkes, 8 to 3, at Leibig's Or-chard last Sunday after-noon.

Kohn was invincible afterpoor start and shut out the Ukesafter the first (ruine. He strucko«t tea men.

The Clovtrs, trailing;, 3 to 1, Intin' op*4iing round, tied the scorein the fourth with a two run at-tu>k. They broke the deadlockui the seventh, scoring five runsi win th b l l i h l

omnjr alontf pretty well, but theyiren t the world ht'uters of pre-vious years. They dropped thef i t t f h

W. Boben, c 5 3 4M. Kezo, 2b 4 1 2M. Rohen, p 4 0 0

ucas, ss 4 0 2D. Bohanek, 3b 5 0 0M. Yatchy, lb 4 1 2W. Karmazin, rf 8 1 1J. Wadiak, cf S 0 0J. Haluko, If 3 0 0

... 1 0 0. 1 0 0

C. Bohanek, cfC. Orena, rf

37 7 13 2Port Reading C«Mti (1) '

AB. R. H, E.

00 260 B w u (1)2 AB,0 Hacek. lb 30 Medveta, 3b 30 Mukway1, cf 30 Srieceti, p 30 Kalaah, cf 30 Ginda, c 20 Makoaki, 2b ...S

_ Marciniak, If 32 Barna, rf 2

J. Zullo, IfG. Vahaly, 3bM. Tet*. 2bTet*. 2J. Bylecki,Friek, pA. Zullo, cM. Denties, lbE Z l l f

rst two irunie.1 of" the campaignan I have won the rest. The Car-teiet Sports Club, like the Jed-notas, jot off tu a poor start, but E. Zullo, rfafter reorganising the club, have ~ ~

IIUK' I to win six or sevenstrui^ht games.

As has been the custom in all

44443343

T. Fritx, cf 8

32

100000000

1

H.010II01001

H.

A

00

The icore by innings:Bean 100 000 0—1Stan 201 000 *—*

1 5 3

0 Motor Cycle RacesAt Irvington Track

to win the first (fameby u !) to 3 score.

Alibi Run* Speeder toHospital, Then

. — A "perfect

win the ball game with plentytn spare.

Next Sunday the Cloven will(ravel to Perth Amboy to meetflu- Boys' Club at WonderlandHurk.

The box score:CloT«rt (8)

AB. H. H. B.IWlowsky, as 3 1 2Muuluch, cf ...- 5 1 1Homan, lb 5 2 2J Terebecki, If 5Jim Resko, c 3

alibi"railed so John dlthArt hart to sp

hefnre Pollr* Judfe JacobSt*c«l to answer charges nf speed-, ««bencnilc,Ing A4 miles sn hour down an Kastside »trt*t here. When • motorcycle policeman stopped Gilbert.

Smith, 8b 0Masiyka, 3b ...'..!..'. 6Kuhn, p ^

the latter said -be WAS taking hiswife tn a hospital. Huston *pednhwiil of the nilhert car wltb sirenscrramlnir. clearing the way of(riffle and pedestrlsoa. 4t thehrnpltll, attache* said Ollbert Midmade utt reservations, doctart uldnothing was wrong with U n Oil-bert, and Bu«ton»bookBd Gilbert forspeeding.

4. WNIBI «mmMM by OanMiiMi Midlen in,

U iUtnta,

9 487 8Carter*! Uk«« (1)

AB, R. H. B.Bobenchik, 3bBubnlek, lb %Uamuskk, c 8Bolmn«k, laSkooyp*et pDobro, f

Greg-or, rfGinds, rtPukaa, If

30 3 - 3 aTh» wore by inning*;

C\»vnt. _.„ 100 goo 500—8«00 000 M

HUNT FOR OIL THATENDURES FOR AGES

Ingredient Ui?d by In-dian* in Mixing Paint*.

Stadium R a c • (Wednesday Night

—E*»t M«eta Wa*tWe«k.

.— Search for an oilwhich forum a hnnlc ln)n-edlent ofpaints which are knowu to havewlth«t<K>d exi«i«ure Tor at leust 1W)years on the unprotected faces ofmountnln CIIITD In miuthern CHII-

fornla will he one of theof Or. John H. Harrington,aonlan Institution ethnologist, whenbe resumes his field work amongthe Mission Indiana

By extensive Inquiries amongthe Indlani last full ItoWnr Har-rington confirmed the fact that thisoil I* preased from the seeds ofthe cblltcothe. 1 siiecles of wildcucumber, It It now quite rare,bat grows In the southern Califor-nia mountains In places known tothe Indians, formerly, closely re-lated plants were found over moltOf the United Mtntea. but they havebecome very scarce.

Doctor Harrington will try to ob-tain enough nf the chlllcothe cu-cumber* to yield a sufficient supplyof the oil for experimental pur-poses, to determine whether It i*tbli ingredient which gives thepaint It* remarkable lasting qual-ity. Ifce Indian* obtain It Iu thecrudest aoft of way, merely crush-Ing It out of the seeds with a stonepestle.

Five Color* Obtalntd.

Using thi* oil a* a base, live ca|.on of paint are obtained, liedpigment 1* manufactured by lullingclilUcothe oil with red acum fromthe turface of iprlng* who*i watercontain* a high percentage of Iron.Whit* *ud yellow (WlPts are ob»

B«*lng t»* P» wltb

shli-li ri'iuhik Its ITII*K for yeuia. Isniiiile hy mtilng the nil nnd oxidenf manganese. Blue can be nh-tnined from it mixture nf the oil andpowdered aznllte—a mineral com-mon In the neighborhood.

Apparently, no other substanceenters Into any of these paints,which wlthstnnd all the vicissitude*of wpnther HterHlly for centuries.

These rock pictures are referred 1 _ , . . . .to h , ihr |nd1.n. a. "spirit paint- i""""« '" N e w J e r 8 e y -Ings'" Fresh one. still api*ar from j K c - i > m i t h ' »ecr tUry of th*time to tlnip In the depths of the | K e r n i n g body of cinder t n e kmountains. Near the irrtsslonn sre J motortyi'le iming presented Ctrl

American Motorcycletion officials, guest at last weekVA. M. A. motorcycle racing; meet-at Tri-City Stadium in Union paid!stadium officers high complimentfar the development of the OM-fifth mile track night speedway

some which are known to be »tleast I.Vl yeiirs old, having antedat-ed the cniiilrm of the Spanish ml*-slnnnrles.

"Spirits" Work at NightThe "spirits" always work during

the night, their handiwork appearIng In the morning. The paintings,of course, are the work of medicinemen. The altitude toward themof the people as « whole Is a curl-on* mixture of belief and sophlatl-catlon. Few actually believe, ttmt"•plrlts" produce the picture, but•ome still hold that they are the.work of supernatural agenciesworklug through the uiedlclue mail.It waa from some <>r (h» ehaiunntthemselves that Doctor llarrlogtouobtained the formulas for thepaint*.

The oil Is also used extensivelyby the Indian women as a sunburnlotion. These women, Iu spite oftheir red nUtis, hum badly whenexposed to the summer sun fur longperiods. The oil presumably notonly absorbs those wave lengths ofthe aolar spectrum causing sun-burn, a* do until) preparations reg-Olarly sold for the purpose, but•lfo tend to muke 1 lm akin redder,jledneu I* considered an attribute

I my

;.3nst three

Schwartz, preaident of the Tri-City corporation with an officialA. M A. banner which will sym-boliie A. M. A. sanction of theweekly Wednesday night meet* Mthe Union arena. "This stadiuftkhag presented ail the good thing*of motorcycle racing in a manalrwhich makes for the rapid develop-ment of th» sport in, the ~said Mr. Smith.

Track Manager Andy Watt*,who ha* been manager for Tri-City since it opened its door* .three yean ago, announced thai Jthe policy of the Stadium would i,3retuain unchanged. "Our wtsts . :"ly Wednesday races have bad thtapproval of the fans for tseasons. We try our beat, th*racers work here both for tk«sport and for the fan* and tfcf} ,fans show how they appreciate';'«everybody'* efforts by toe turft- vnuts of around 10,000 fans ea«VWediiMday," says WatU.

Wedneaday the battle b«twMnEastern and Wejtorn 8t*o willcontinue in both the champiship-spirit counting hand'scratch tpur-lap race*. 1 .—cani of Garflsld, Jim Oibb of :1 * "rooky Bawdir

. and Gordonuf Bloomfleld, and BobOklahoma, now UviUff — ~.mare the leading «ja*jatj*tea Jnlthese fteld*.

Two special«d withThe

Page 8: CARTERET PRESS - digifind-it.com€¦ · o cross-eyed cat listens scroggtt^ %ow-d0wn" today's editorial page carteret press read commtoct fot utest evert week 0« sport akteh&f, n~

;F KUiHT FHtPAY, JULY 19, 1935

REEMOPELANDftnm

i n r t t T f i L o d t « Of "Mwill 'ipnnnor » W f l l i

l•(I

f u r i . - i k i n p I ' 11 p r . n h i m s e l f I " ' '| , ) i . i . . i M . i | i l i « m a d e o f h ) » i ' " i " 1

11 ,1 , ! 1J, I ! , i- ! - h i i t h i m <->T '

t p | | m ( f l i n n I " l , c - f | ' « w i i y i n ' •{ R , . v t f . . ( v l | « - , .,'.! • I n p ( h e !,.•

n u t n f I l i n i ' \ !••' ' « d e t i l e !•

r n n r k . I o f " 1 ' 'H''] : l '" > " i " ' H l | P

f U . m n l u - i l t h e W . i f i - I ' o f i i ' l A i i ' !x i i i t ) h e " s i r i n V i n '•'•!' •'• ' ' • ' I M \ l i e

A l l . . r ' n i . v \ I ' f l l » - •'•• | | \ ' r

I t . o i l l . v \ M - i r , , . v K i n l '•••• m l i n

Telephone CnrtenM R-0482

For Your BEERFamily Liquor Store

SPECIAL FOK THIS WEEK

King's Pilsner BeerLight, Dnrk or Ale

THIS WEEK ONLY

$1.75 per caseOakmellow StraightWhiskey pt 59cGlen Ridge 90 Proof Illinois

Straight WhiskeyFull Quart $1.39We also sell Kruger's, Bal-

lentine and Feigenspan's

n t y HI

h l

'H

y l lw Slovak nnThe ilnor award will • » half

II "f ••"•! Thar* wil1 !•<• manyin-r vnlunW* aw«nl« At th*1

HI. t ime the Samii: :''<'< ('lull'• <\n*r n ront«*t fur jt radio.•ii mir «"'l or | 5 0 in <t*li

mmftt«« flr- Mip N, of R u n w a y , .ii'l'n!' W M O M Btxl \ i

For Quick DeliveryCall Carter*! 8-0482

Nagy's Family LiquorStore

99 Roosevelt Ave.CARTERET, N. J.

M A J E S T I CRADIO CORP

M I D G E T

Willinm Brown, William Cole,p . i. Wonrlhull, (ifnrgp Swon-•••!. Hi-nr Anderson, WilliamI. inf.-ulicriffr ami former Coun-

lin HI 1 rank Andres went on «li 'in .' trip to Tuckerton yester-IIM.V ami returned lnnt night with:i i.mfi' cHtch nf fljth.

IVter Terubccki, 21. of 300t-thinir avenue, and George Ro

nianownki, 17, of 42 Randolphitieet, were arrested last nightfor alleged theft and destructionof a fence belonging to the Car-teret Kerry Company.

Committee NamedFor Ride To Corny

Louis Kady, John Marci, An-il row I^katoa and George Uha*zarc in charge of the sale of tick-ets for th« bus ride to Coney .Isl-and which the St. .lamei! Club ofSt. Elizabeth's Church will holdAugust 11.

RECREATIONContinued fram pag* o**

i ' ' • , s w r e t a r y , M<'l<'ii Kieln » i * t a n t s«cr»'t«iy, Filn'l

i p This c lub in under ih''••lp of Miss Hlnnche li.'uiil inapt* Tiip^lnv

, la-, nximinfrs nl in "to j"in may

to study the matter >ri only th« nnjpTprint'i of p«r-'iiwl Wiik» ^u(rg-f«lion« for putting ,Ons arrni(<>H for an indictable o P

t into eff<--t I'oliri. ar«'wp««Ully ' f p K,,r(.«lghte,| plapt o'nt<-rented m the int«Nhang« of • r <.Minn ln'twoon 'iepartmentg inlifferent loralitle*.

Ctrtmrri RccordiA( |i i .»»• nt C m l t i e t poll

City of RoitiMonterMen. whlrh ti the pre

ferred resort city of the people ofBueno| A'ri's. In called the "City ofIlosef," Its pnrks hoRStlng morethan 800 vnr|pl!p« nf the (lower,

Rlr.r Nil.' . Silt SappljK(fri'I'» »lver Nile distributes silt

over approximately 90.000 squaremiles.

C L A S S I F I E D A D S

FOR RENT — Fine furnishedrooms, with or without kitchen

privilege. Simmons bed, two win-dows. Clean and airy. Call Car-teret 8-1858. 26 Locust street,Carteret.C. P. 7-11.)

FOR RENT — 5-room flat. In-quirp «2 Carteret avenue, Car-

trret or phone Carteret 8-0924.('. P. 7-IH

ftnrh walnut finish. A"khoautiful and efficient <ot I

ISPECIAI.FPRICE

LOW QC]

PHILCO!PRICED FROM $20

|RCA and Cunningham]RADIO TUBES

U«t Cbolc

[RADIO and REPAIRS1

ICall Elizabeth 2-8900'

NOTICETake notice that the Kosciuaz-

ko Democratic Club of Carteret,New Jerney, intends to apply tothe Borough Council of the Bor-ouith of Carteret for a club li-cense tu sell liquor to memberBof the club only, for the premisessitunlcd lit 77 Union Street, Car-l i ' i i l , Mew Jersey

Object ions, if any, should beiiKnlr immediately in writing to :lliuvcy VO. Platt, borough clerkof tho Moroujrh of Carteret, N. J.(sinned)

KoHciusiko Democratic Club,Anthony Marciniak,II Charles St., Carteret, Pres.Kiiwiinl Kominski,,J'.ii.Ht Rnhway, Secretary.

'• !'. 7-111. 2fi

I'1 . pri'icnl membrrnlii|ifnili"(^ Many Miplmok,Nnio, AiN'le Tysiewich, Carnn I •Sfiwii'ikn, Mnry Batna, Tlu-i • •( hppi'r"!i. Helen Vernaol'i"Siiphu- Mnynnek, Frttin Cntt>"Tili'on ''iittci, Rii-n" \'iraif,

Helen Kierman. Helen Onp*.ie.Mnry l/cnsrt, Mildred Mimk'.Irene Yakinoff. Mary Mavlink.Selma Drevieh, Father Shimney,Helen Suber, Sophie Sliimney.Catherine Men(fe, He-len Nydmvel, Heatrice Boilnnr. Failli VVilp i s , Cecelia Medvetz ami Aprm"Hoffman.

Another ClubThe Story Hour Club bus jiI•=.•

organized, »ii*l electwi the foll"win? officer-. President, Hilda W"lIschlaRfTPi , vice president, Hentrie* Bodnar; secretary, Airne-Hoffmnn, Militant «eoret»i>,Fanna Huth I.efkowiti; tpynu'tnanntc'r, I'crelin Medvetz. Tryouts for miiiilicr-hij) will be hen!a week from today at the play(round Thnse wishing to try outmay nyistrr there with C«celinMedvets Trymit.i will consist oftelling or ien'liri(r H story or presetitinf; a :itnry written by the apnliranl.

MISH irr.msliRiim in aluo orjrsniir a ila.is in clay modelling.

COUNCILContinnerl from wiV ('•<

will inwHtiuate before the permitin (franted. To the name enrrtmit-tce WHS r*^erred applioHtions ofFrank Ashen Of fi4<> RooseveltAvenue, Harry Berber of 45 jSiiletn Avenue, and Emil Mntefy1

of H John Street, for liquor li-1

cetweR. |Saloon Aik i Refund

A liquor license was jrrnnttd toJohn Miulrak of Randolph Street. 'Jacob Klein wag grante<l peiinis•ion to move his liquor lnisinesn Ifrom 6!> Washington Avenue to17 Cook Avenue. Oannin Zullonotified the council he is uiving'up his u loon business at 61) Hudson Street and ask mi for ft refundof hifl license fee. A resolutionwas adopted to refund the moneylean ten per cent, iirwl a pro ratachance for the time the saloon isoperated under the present licen.se

RADIO TUBESTESTED FREE

JERSEY STATEELECTRIC CO. INC.B R O A D S i . at Kliz. Ave.

F.l.IZABETH

BUS R I D ETO ASBURY PARKWednesday, July 24

Bus "Miss Carteret" LeavesAtlantic Stn-et at 9 A. M.

Phone for s*>ats Car. 8-0612i ROUND TRIP $1.00

FISHERMENCoitinued from vogt oni ;

Kulcy a rather frtghtemnfr nrdeal. Kor Mr. Kutcy fell overboard, anil for thn.se who don'tknow Mr. Kutcy, explanation istriade lliitl he tips the scales nearthe <UII niiirk. However, ii mtghtyatrtinu'le brought him back intothe lioat none the worse for wearand without any of the others go-ing into the water in their efforts1

Bt rescue.The Fiihernnaa

uthers on the trip were Mayor•In-e;.h W, Mittuch, Street l'»m-irn-ioner George Benaulok, .Inlin(inidii and Michael Halowchuk

Fish were said to have heenplintiful about the borough Hienext iliiy, and many friends of th-M\ enjoyiKl fish dinners. AVhoevi-r they were, they were luckierth:m (lie chronicler of this tale'

MOONLIGHT SAILUP THE HUDSON RIVER

Sponsored By The

HARMONY SOCIAL CLUB OF CARTERETSTEAMER MAY FAIR

Leaves Moore's Dock at 8 P. M.Returning at 1 A. M. SAL AUG. 3

DANCING HARMONY CLUB ORCHESTRA

Tickets $1.00

The Indian "Coroplanter""Coriiplaiiter" (1732-lMtl) was A

celehrnted hnlf-hreed chief of theSeinm Indians, the son of n trailIT named John O'llall. I>urlng theFrench mid Indian war he led a wnrpnrty of the Senecas which hurtJulned the French agulnst the bnn-Huh, and took part In the ilefrmt ofHrndilock in 1755. During the Ilevo-lultonary war he Joined the Kng-Huh, took an actlre part In thebonier conflicts In New. York, andseems to have been present «t theMassacre of Wyoming. Afterward,he became A steadfast friend of the;whites anil with rted Jacket, direct-ed the affairs of Ills tribe for nmnjyears.

Quick, Wat.on, th* TraptHow old should a boy be before

he In declared of age? The law Inmost countries says twenty-oneyears In .olilen times the Apacheboy was declared a man ami giventhe freedom of the camp as soon ashe was old enougk to caieti a nilwithout help— Washington 1'ost.

TONIGHT (Friday)

AT STEVE KUTCY'S PLACE13 Charle. Street, Carterot

Clam Broth, Clam Chowder, Steamed ClamsShell Clam* on Ice

PARKING S^ACE IN THE REAR

Coiy Room for Family Parties

TOMORROW (Saturday Night)

Always A Good Time AtKUTCY'S PLACEWe Treat Our Cuitomers Right

HNGERPRINTS

.' U-IIM travel connidernlilv nrover reported ss rs.rryin(r with\ rtfrordK of their flniferprintitlir purposes of idontificntinn,

GRAND RE-OPENINGUnder New Management

PERSHING AYE. BEER GARDEN65 Perilling Avenue, CARTERET, N. J.

TOMORROW NIGHT, SAT., JULY 20

SPAGHETTI SUPPER FREETO ALL

ntMisfjt BeOurG«e*t\ •'•••-'• ' ••! ' i ' 3

from pane nutpossible resiatance on the part ofolder persona. Parents udopt. aninnovation easily when the chil-dren bring the idea home fromschool.

This idea of recording the fin-gerprints of the law abiding partof our population has spread withamazing rapidity in r e c e n tmonths. Probably the determina-tion to stamp out the crime fromwhich the nation has sufferedcreated the idea in the first place;possibly it came with difficultiesencountend in discovering; theidentity of persona involved \n ac-cidents. At any rate the sentimentis spreading and gaining popular-ity as more and more localitiesadopt it.

Now Being DoneHew York City police now have

records of the fingerprints ofmany residents who never haverun afoul the law, persons whovoluntarily put their fingertipa on-to tin ink pad and th«n onto a pu-Hcu rceord card.

Chief Willard B. Hutchinsonnf nearby Metucheh is now re-mrding voluntarily-(civen fincer-printa every Saturday morningand urging all residents of this

; burough to avail themselves of theservice. But neither of thene cora-niuniticw U believed to have adopt-

i t-d the, excellent idea of giving a! record to the subject himself uswell as the polipe.

California fingerprints ita ,r«»i-ilenta, according to infonnationbrought o a t a t the convention o(polkiii chit fa from all over theworld which wa» hel4 in AtjantieGI^,H#AiW««k. Th» «onv« -ii

Schindel's Smashing SavingsBring Record Breaking Crowds

i'

TOMORROW-SATURDAY!Last week we staged our first 69c Day. You know what happened - - - it was a riot. Everybody lor miles around

with an eye for values rushed in. Tomorrow we expe ct an even larger crowd. The belated hot weather

has sent prices tumbling, enabling us to offer thousands and thousands of dollars worth of beautiful _ S | | ( ) |

summer merchandise - - - timely items for yourself and your family priced ridiculously low. But ^

here's a tip — quantities are limited on many items so drop everything and be here prompt-

REDUCED ^ |y at 9:00 tomorrow morning. Hundreds of bargains not advertised.

ALL

WOMEN'S

SUMMER

DRESSES

Bu;GROO.RY

DEPARTMFNT

Dollar Day Bargain* in Our Domestic Dept.

CANNON" TURKISH

TOWELS

5for

l,«r|(e, li c a V J doublrlinnlrl H li fl il ( I. AIHO

Ihrrnd. Solid colors IDulilte »i<li enhVul bor-II<T«. 'Me MI Him.

FULL SIZE SHEETS 2 for $1New SUMMER CURTAINS 2 pr. $170x80 DOUBLE BLANKETS pr. $1VOILES, LAWNS, PIQUESORGANDY, GINGHAM, BATISTE 6 yds. $1

Sai/e.29c WOMEN'S

RAYON UNDIES

39c Porto Rican

GOWNS

CLEARANCE550 PR. WOMEN'S SMART SUMMER

SHCES

Whites—Combination*

Blondes—Greys 3 to 8

69c BOYS' SNEAKS 39c

Women's BEACH SANDALS 44cChildren's Play SANDALS 67cWomen's BATHING SHOES 29c

59c WOMEN'S

TAFFETA SUPS

BROADCLOTH

S L I P S

4 tor

on$1 WOMEN'S

WASH FROCKS2 Mi

WOMEN'S

SILK HOSE3

IMiue*.Women's, Misses'

BATHING SUITSALL WOOL j 4

Reg. $1.25 JL

Men! Look at Thew Dollar Day Vain.,

A GREAT SALE OF MEN'S

POLO-SPORT andDRESS SHIRTS

2for

Come on, fellow*, here arethe bent shirt "buys" of thesrason. Every one brandnew. Cool mesh polos in allcolors. Short sleeve broad*cloth sport shirts. Solid andfancy broadcloth d r e s s»hiit». All s i z e s . Realvalues,

BOYS' POLO SPORT -DRESS SHIRTS 2 for $1

V

39c Men's SHIRTS - SHORTS 4 for $159c Men's UNION SUITS 3 for $119c Men's Fancy HOSE 8 pr. $169c Boys'KNICKERS-SHORTS 2 (or Ji69c Boys' WASH SUITS 2 for $1$1.49 Boys' 3-Pc. ETON SUITS $1

Girls' Organdy

DRESSES2

A GREAT PANTS SALE

STRIPED PWHITE rapsKHAKI PANTSWORK PANTS

If it'* pants valuesyou want d«p«ndon S c h i n d « I' f.ChooM from thelargest pant* stockin town. All siie*.Reg. $1.49 value*-

Women'*—Childr«>'»

RAIN CAPES-

« .no-am .«<m*r ur Mt 1

of «,*4]

IDEPARTMENT STORE

Women'. Silkand Acetate

DRESSESValue.to $2.96

Unit