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AN INTERESTING FEATURE! AND THEY SAID" READ IT WEEKLY ON EDITORIAL PAGE FOLLOW DONOHUE'S SPORTS COMMENT IN'OR SO IT SEEMS' EVERY WEEK ONSPORT PAGE WOODHKIDGE. N. J., FRll'.W, MAY If., 193f. PRICE THREE CENTS FROM OUR FRONT WINDOW s ,., t |.er the Pertk AmboJ Gil .1,1 Company (leeking higher !'.,) nor the parrnt outfit at ,,,(,rr end of the pipe-line, in ,,|,,.tl., will allow a. trarufer i, relit to periont who move .'„ Woodbridge to R»hw»y, or vr.rta. They in«i»t upon a , .vtid »ep»rate depoiit though ,1, || 1P Public Service and Tel- .,,„„„ Company iontinue the ,,lil without quntion. 3 CLOTHING FIRMS WEIGH MOVE HERE; NITE-CRAFT STAYS 600 Girls Wilf Be Hired If Allgaier Succeeds In Negotiations |KAUFMANDENIESMOVE Three clothing firms are estab- lishing factories in Wood- bridge Township, it was learned this-morning. About fiOO girls would be employed. t ii recent mover entitled Simultaneously, the" persistent ru- ind of a ton or twelve- mor that the Nite-Craft Corpora- deposit, from the' Gas my, was short-changed to . N ii.i'il of something under , .,nd tnlri this represented a ,.;,• seven years back. Did ,.i hear of the Gas Company .,-- a month's collection and •.." it go so long? Of course , ,,nsiinier took the loss, be- thfir own records were misplaced or destroyed but ,ilv remembered never hav- ,...,", nsked for the money, or IIK notice that a bill was due. And too, the inlereil allowed > the; company, on the above , |n,sit, wai not up to ordinary ..nclardi. It appeared to fig- ,- only 3% or 4 per cent., linrai the volume of caih the pany handlei in "Mm faih- i miifht easily hare baen eara- ;• more—one way or another—- i depoiitori should get it. 1 l'i another angle to be con- ,(. r.-d in our next request for schedule!. doubt Governor Hoffman honor rcquistions from al- nywhere in New York State,]' 1 the Brooklyn section. Andj ls ni'ht in this. That district , m Grinding in the Druckmani contemplates moving South was authoritatively denied,. The largest of the new com- panies interested in the township now has a .milling , n d knitting- plant in Yonkers. M. B. Roessel; speaking for the company, prom- ised loral officials that if the final decision by his superiors were fa- vorable, no* less than 400 girls would be employed. Building In- spector W. J. Allgaiet had in- formed Mr. Roesirel that the town- ship could not possibly compete with other communities which have offered to erect buildings at their own expense hut Mr. Allg-aiei dis- covered, however, 20,000 sfuare feet of floor space in Fords vhich met every requirement. The free-Watt- market anl the ithufldftlTCe frf" rTetft ^VAftrthli," to- gether with the remarkahle trans- portation facilities, Mr. Rressel said, probably will persuadi his firm to move here. Hai Second Protpect In th* wenfe that the Yoik«t» corporation decides against the move, Mr. Allgaier has a s<cond High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors Who Have Maintained Scholastic Averages Of 'A' For 4 Years Five Woodbridge High School students who have created brilliant scholastic records throughout their four-year courses will have prominent places on the Commencement program at the State Theatre .Thursday, June 1H,'Principal A. C. Ferry an- nounced today. All five of the group have main- tained averages of 'A' in nil cours- es, leading their class-mates by a wide margin, In line with the long- standing policy of the school, hen they will he honored as a grriup without aiiy effort to rate them nu- merically on fractional differences in their splendid records. Miss Marcia Lifshitz, Miss Betty Crozier, Miss Lillian Witovsky, Donald Aaroe and Robert Ander- son are the prize students in the class of IMG. To Conduct Sympoiium Misa Lifshitz will deliver speech of weleome and IUSR Wi- tovsky the farewell address. The three other academic aces will share in one of the most interest- ing Commencement features ever arranged here—a symposium on the proposed League of Nations for the Western Hemisphere. Mis* Martha Morrow and Miss •Cl'iu \,i recover hia lost prestige, h tin Wendel ense. Where idea of giving K--"a few days," he luce the Parkers"? uive them justice, iu r; . before we'll he- irnly clamoring. ovcrnor Hoffman, by-the- ly, In IIw first New Jcriey GOT- of ritlirr parly to be op- t-d » a delegate to the Na- n<i! Cunvrntion. And iueha Ifcing made about it that Hauptmann or Wendel iv IJO v.,trd for, tince they are hint; dragged into the contro- of which he was very istic today. That company engaged in manufncturirij wo- rn'* clothing. A thiril clothing firm is ctnsid- Caiitimii-4 nn paqp twrltf Marcia Lifshitz Betty Crczier Lillian Witovsky Ruth Erb of the class of KM will receive department ure assisting the trio in the collection of material while Examinations beginning 01 will determine the scholastic fate Alida Van Slvkc, Miss Mar- of the lower group of the class but garet Morganson and Mrs. n of the Knglish Department technical details of the delivery of todav was not sure ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED CROSSING FOES BELIEVE M x /*• Two-Hour Argument By IVlUSt bet Edison Climax Of New Credit If Grades Are Ever Doomed MAYOR, MCELROY HELP , -,-•„ ,,; L J OUTLINE LOCAL CASlt Inventor s ion Has Worked Long, Hard And l/n- selfishly FRIEND OF PRESIDENT If and when Woodbddjfe Township jjntdt' rrfrwings are eliminated through Federal icintr, credit for the achievement must he given to quiet, capable Charles Ed- he said, there are only u possible 12 failures. School practice which considers flunking of thu bottom 10 per cent nn aver- JMULSludi'.nt fsilnriiJKOjilfl allow 11)., 15 Other Honor Pupili (Idition to the top five, Drawn into the picture through ,- - •--, •: „• ..eMine J ) y . Mayor ..August P. whose performance in the remain- (Jreiner. Township Attorney Leon ing works of w&rk the school is E. McElroy and important mem- sure, there are 1\ more students hers of the Board of Public Utlity almost certain to wirTan honor Commissioners, Mr. Edison has set lilting on records of A's and H's. 'his heart on obtaining for the res- None of this section, however, idents of the municipality the safe- approaches the five listed Coniinutd on uatm i Aut hen.tic sources indicate that the White House is defi- . • nitely committed to an al- - location of Federal funds for Crade-crossinR elimin«tion in Woodbridgre Township. Although specific announce- ment to this effect is withheld, it: » in- uhilorstood from high Wash- ngton authority that President Ktxue'vrlt is entirely in sympathy with the local project and tr'.ll lend" the weiirht of his opinion to effec- tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from WPA monies. A long discussion with the Chief Executive w:is held on Wednesday by Charles Ediaonf <ri UiC.Nfttional Belief Council and C. A. Meade, chief engineei nf the State Board of Public Utilit • Com- missioners. Financial aid to the exte it indi- cated by recent conferences would Reformatory Official Addresses Men s Club Explains Functioning Of Parole SystemTrinity Unit Deputy Superintendent R- E. [Templeton of the Rahway Refor- matory spoke before the Men's Club of Trinity Church last eve- by cx-Congreitman Fort, [ning on the subject of paroling in- to thwart the Cover- c-u-t of hit activitioa llu' Lindbergh caie. I" ;o jnstes of that institution. He first related details of how the youthful charges of the State are taught useful trades and given hl ll flli pat k*. ns realize that tnei sc hooliiiK, as well, following psy- [ raised wages only eightichologieal tests of their previous and the cost of liviner'tralniriR- and mental and manual CT icnt. In other words,inabilities. i Hum Deal, all the way 1 Mr. Templeton then told of ! methods pursued in keeping rec- jords of each boy's aptitude and behavior, generally, favorable re- sults obtained in many instances; i how they are assisted toward s<- lo curing suitable employment after being paroled and pointed to ad- vances introduced in recent years in dealing with recalcitrants among first, second and third offenders. The informal fashion of the talk BOOS-MUNDY FEUD INFLAMES GOP WAR Woman's Unit Head Quits In Retaliation Over Relief Selection CHARGE PACT BROKEN Verbal guns boomed today as the political front of_ the First Ward became a noisy battle ground of charges and counter-charges among mem- bers of the Republican or- ganization. The flare that touched off the main-works was th» appointment of Mrs. Carrie Mundy to the relief staff of John Omenheiser. Im- mediately it became known, mem- bers of Mrs. John W. Boos' wo- men's club announced that they would cease "indefinitely" all po- litical activity. Further, as a ges- ture of diwatinfaetion at the meth- ods employed by the men's organi- zation in making the selection, Mra. Boos resigned her presidency.. The women, however, refused to accept Gas Firm f s Final Rate Rise Brief Ignores Tie With Elizabeth Plant Perth Amboy tompany In Asking Revision Of Schedule Says Change It Wants Will Cost It $4,170 Less Revenue A Year! Five Days Left To Answer •Anil yi-l another week h»i been ^ to the already lengthy tei- of tlic Legislature, with n; being done except rn 'till May 2Wt. Thii it called getting nowhere, :h..«gh the police still ne h t k i f i'cr heavy trucking fronii . , nee thoroughfares. Chief!" 1 " 1 both tive. Much of what was mentioned that the public is almost itinerant carnivals I'ort Rending) indulged •leeenciL's, the other day, •iveil immediate notice that arrests would follow the repetition. Good for the C liar let Editon, «on of the is Inventor, earned the Iliful acknowledgement* of dge, thii week, when he P<- a special trip to Waihing- |»i hit own egpeote, in an ef- tu hasten financial arrange- * for eliminating grade- ingi i n the townihip. We our cap to Mr. Edison. "vuiie was interested in the ^ Ltd and delinquents. Altogether, Mr. Templeton left the impression that the Reformatory is doing a work in which the State and country might take especial pride and local at luust ought to communities know about. President Ernest Raymond pre- sided ,at the session and the Rev. W. V. D. Strong invoked the bless- n ig. DOGS BITEJijIREE ll-Y«ar-Old Avenel Young- ster Nipped On Arm purformance of ehn; • Three pe/Sons were bitten by Tg airship which, if all dogs duripg the week. Fred Dales- ll, will have completed u^niulru, U, of Chestnut Street, p between Germany and Avenel, was bitten on the right liy within a week, allow-jarm by a dog owned by John Berg Iidi' time out for Dr. Eck-| o f Chestnut Street. Warren Webb, It" pay his respects to Prusi-;l3. r ( Schoder Avenue, Woodbridge, IliuoM-velt und other officials j was torn on the calf of the leg by '^hington und uermittiiiKln dog belonging to Michael Kar- piTsmis to inspect the KUtiiUnowski, Wwlgewood Avenue, and i" not to mention the op-jj 0 hu Monalian, Souttj Amboy, wus nity for Dr. Eckener's son'bitten by a dog owned by William p e r travelers to visit a few of mitli, -178 Ruhway Avenue. CARNIVALS BANNED BY FORDS FIREMEN Company Pledged Help By t. Mrs. Boos s^t»d last nifht thqt her quarrel involved no personali- ties, that it was purely a matter of Continued on paye trrdve 5 ACCIDENTS, A DEATH OCCUR MTWEEK HERE New Rochelle-Negro Killed On The Superhighway By Automobile Five accidents and ono death were reported to police this week, a routine total for the season, but abnormal in view of the success of the local highway safety drive. Sebron Muynor, 35, a New Ro- chelle Negro, died in the fatal ac- cident, He was hit on the Super- highway near New Brunswick Avenue by a car driven by Abra- ham Swemofsky, 57, of Brooklyn. John Vargo, 32, of 804 Amboy Avenue, was another injured pe- destrian. He was struck on New Brunswick Avenue in Hopelawn by a car operated, hy Stephen F. Stumpf. Also' in Fords, a car driven by Miehhel Terpak, Edgar Avenue, Perth Amboy, hit the left rear of a machine driven by Sophus Aiikkelsen, 1!) Warren Street Fords. Mikkelsen Was badly cut Severe cuts were sustained, too, by Michael Kocsik, 205 New Bruns- wick Avenue, who hit a pole on Maxwell Avenue, Fords. -r Mrs: Alice Flash, 42, of Lorch Street, Avenel, hit another pole on Ruhway Alvenue and was cut about tho face a i(( knees Mrs. Flash had n« driver's license but was given a suspendeiiisentence in court here because of the injuries to herself aid to her husband's car. Scrupulously avoiding any reference to its factual posi- tion of "middleman" the Perth Amboy Gas Light Com- pany has filed with the Board of Public Utility Commis- sioners its final brief in an attempt to support a petition to revise up- ward the rate schedule for smallest consumers. The brief waB prasantad to the Board by the company's New York counsel, William M. When-y. Five days is allowed for Woodbridge, Carteret and Perth Amboy to file an answer. Any consumer, according to the brief, wha uses 1,800 cubic feet or less, will play a 'slightly increased' bill while the larger consumers will be benefltted by a reduction. By the company's own estimate, the revised,schedule will result in "a decrease in the total revenues re- ceived by the company of $4,170/ Its purpose in taking a step which would cause such a drop in re- ceipts, is stated as placing 1 the com- any in a position where it can mpete with other fuel distribu- ra. The greatest criticism of th< roposal is based on the fact thai hfc Perth Amboy company merely cts as a distributing agent for th lizabethtown Gas Company. Th negation that such corporate dup- cation causes an added expense h must be passccf on to h onsumers—in this case the small st consumers and probably thos east able to assimilate the burden —is ignored in the brief. Arbitrary approval of its capi- tal valuations was also contained in the final argument but it is pre- lumed that counsel for the object- ng municipalities will challenge these estimates in their reply. These valuations constitute the iagts'for" figuring the return. loth' night clubs. forct on Main Street are be- e-furbithed of late And oft- ica of batter bmineis ii ping up, alt along the thor- >re. That'i the spirit 1 i(f hearings on a bill in « recently, Representative Republican, broke in with r.v worthy of the late Tom nil-to wit: "Would it not •ihle to at least build a Dam feiy deserving Democrat?" [appears that Emperor Se- i is cutting more of figure exile than he did on tha At least he hat driveif alian delegates from Gent »d his plenipotentiary will bly be able to prove that Mini's men blinded and a conliderable number :n and children, which •I've to continue, if not in- Ii the dangerous sanGtiont •d by other Nations, dent Roosevelt and Jim Par- tiKbe financing a hi_ tic campaign publicity De- t at Federal expense. It is pretty tough on the |is and a decidedly dis- Beparture from all previous I UM atrt u l * BIH UM IMN, I thy v b n they iri Crew Of Relief Labor UAderDavis Will Raze Famed Poillon Pottery Razing of the old Poillon Pottery, last remaining unit of the famous Salamander plant here, will begin as soon a.s local administration pt emergency relief permits qr- •anization of a wrecking crew re- .ruited from the recipients of township help. Township Engineer Clarence Davis will direct tho teanng down of the main building and the two kiliu nestling incongp ^ Tind a monument shop on R y Avenue new the Municipal BuilJ- ing. The buildings all ware con- demned by Inspector W. J. A"- gaier as part <rf his drive ^ Mr. Allgaier secured permission to t^ar down the plant from the ex- ecutor* of the Poillon Estate. Salvaga Valuable It is expected the salvage will be valuable since many of the tim- bers in the old factory are in good condition and there will be a vast pile of brick* when the job is done, together with conduits of several uests already are flow- ing into the townslup for, the brick* but they will probably be This morning, it appeared tha" the proposal to close the dead-ep( Poillon Street, now only a strip of grass BO-feet wide running along the property line of the Wood, bridge Lumber Company, and build on the situ a municipal ga- rage with the material saved from the pottery hud been abandoned. The township now pays $80 a month to rent a garage. Propon- ents of the building scheme ha<i urged it would cost nothing since local relief clients' labor could bi used. The Poillon works has not oper ated in many years but it had long and varied career, rangini from the manufacture of cla: smoking pipes through doorknob ta-thfi mak it'is»te .eMpwye Genteel ladies of the town iivfae TENANT NilLSDOOR,SO LANDLORDJREAKS IN! Messrs. Rose And Zehrer Go Right On With Their Feud The .musical comedy feud be- Lween a tenant and a landlord who ihare ii single entrance to their Jwcllintr in Sewaren acquired a new. twist this week, The tenant, Steve Rose of Cottage Place, had ignored Recorder Arthur Brown's id vice to move if his landlord, osepli Zehrer, persisted in keeping him uwake. Mr, Rose not only ignored that ndvice—-he also took measures in .his own hands. Said measures nsisted mainly of waiting until dr. Zehrer was absent and then lailinst the only door into the house ightly shut—with largo spikes, ilr. Zehrer, on his return, found it mcessary to break down the door -o get Into his own house! So Judge Brown ordered Rose o pay Sf2 for the door-—and again luggested he find a quieter, or at «a»t a mote distant, landlord, 6TH YEAR FOR STUDIO Lattanzio Observes His Fifth Anniversary Here James Lattanzio, skilled artist and technician in photography who operates the Woodbridge Studio here, still was receiving congrat- ulations this week on thefifthan- niversary of his establishment in Woodbridge. He celebrated the occasion last Friday but the friends Mr. Lat- tanzio has made in Wie half-decade in the "township continue to felici- tate him on the success he mis earned here after 30 years in the craft in Connecticut. Mr. and Mrs. Lattunzio came tu Wood- bridge to be near their children, several of whom live in near-by tO-WUB.- " Sam Fredericks Loses Immunity Long, Interesting Career Of Prize Parolee Hits A Climax Twenty-six-year old Sam Fredericks' long and inter- esting immunity from lega' punishment seemed definite- ly dooi ted today. Held in jail by the double lock of a demand for $500 cash bail and a detainer filed against him by the County Probation Office, the tall, good-looking Rahway Avenue cit- izen, is, until a jury finds him guilty, legally innocent of the as- sault And battery charge against him, hut the treatment accorded him indicated he will revert to the status of ordinary individual in future encounters with the law. ,Fredericks refused yesterday to waive indictment and trial on the assault charge filed by John Szur- ko, Fulton Street saloon-owner, lie insisted he had not violated his tive-year probation by entering a saloon in forbidden territory, by ooking for Frank Nagy, a bar- r.i'nder, with whom he has had pre- vious brawls, nor even by punching the bespectacled Szurko with solid left hand to the chin. Recorder Arthur Brown was un- impressed, particularly after Szurko, whose place, police say, has a good reputation, had testi uni-ty and improvement that the re- nteval would bring, Tho town could have no better friend at court, no one more effective. Pleasant-mannered in his per- sistence, Mr. Edison has literally slaved through countless hours of eonferenres, planning, calculating to secure for the Township an al- lotment of WPA monies which enn be used for this civic and humani- tarian work. Success is a matter of principle to him now and he will fight for his objective to the bitter end. Son Of Inventor Son of the famous Thomas Alva Edison and an intimate of Prov- ident Roosevelt, Mr. Edison has all Holding fast to their eight- of. those attributes essential in year-old stand against travel-i^tc'iR effective battle. He is first ling carnivals, the Fords ^i r e|necessity t ot r efim'natio 1 n e ?he C nece^ Company has vetoed import-jsity from the statiapoTht orsafety ation Of a circtla to aid in com- and future growth and dcvelop- Merchants In Series Of Programs DUlTON JUNE pany finances and announced today that with the co- operation of merchants of their territory. It plans n comprehensive series of monthly entertainmentjg. The first of the swies, to which Fords store-keepers have pledged whole-hearted aid, will be held on June 9 in' the Fords Playhouse. Four acts of vaudeville using com- munity talent will be staged, to- gether with a motion picture fea- ture and supporting films. The type of program is to be varied monthly. Officers of the company and i instead men t °' the area. He feels that progress here will be definitely stymied so long as the present condition remains. » His purpose In befriending the town is clearly altruistic. He him- self has nothing to gain. His vital interest is a physical and financial contribution for which he will never be paid, except in deep gra- titude. Soft-spoken but direct, Mr. Edi- son is a convincing solicitor. He is held in high esteem by all of Washington and it is no wonder, lie is sincere, frank, carefully an- permit an early beginning if art improvement eagerly son^ t for years by tlj* town. •» The President's inter -t ia traceable to that of his close friend and adviser, Mr. Edison. Merely because of his convii ion as regards the necessity and an.I value of the elimination, the laUer has taken up the cudgels for' Wood- brtdtre Township md has .devoted unstintingly his time and personal funds in his attempts to obtain the grant. Without his help, the cause would be lost long ag >. Mayor, McElroy Credited Mr. Edison's assistant - was irought about through untiring ef- ort& by Mayor August F, ilreiner ind Township Attorney 1. -on E. McElroy, in conjunction with Mr. Mende. Both accompanied him to Washington on Tuesday and assist, ed in preparing a.- compleU pre- sentation of the case to President Roosevelt. This argument was made during a two-hour interview in the executive offices. Although carefully refusing to consider the grant a certainty, th« conferees were highly optimistic. They felt that the President's word would stimulate diligence on the (Continued on page twilve) V » " . i , i g Vi VIIV W i l l W l l V aiLU IVO I . • 1 TT I committee in charge of social af- »lytic»l. He inspires a ready con- fairs canvassed the whole problem [ < fldellce '" h '? Judgment in com of carnivals on Wednesday night I> lex matters through his direct with a group of leading Fords bu3i- corresponding Olbrick, record- once derived a considerable tncomi from the decoration of the wan made there. Burned 40 Yean A»» Originally it was part of the liu'ge Salamander plant on the site now, occupied, by the lumber com- pany. • t h e Salamander waa built soon after the beginning of "Hie nineteenth century but was de- stroyed by fire 40 years ago when Woodbridn Cmt-overra. * idge Crst «i!»r«d th* IdlM »iffl « • A. J.Neiss Wins Contract On King Georges Road Job Work will begin »oon, County Engineer George Merrill said this morning on th» complete resurfac- ing of King George's Road, to be undertaken with WPA labor. A. J, Neiaa of Woodbridge won the contract for the bituminous oon- «et« which will be ueed. Hu bid fled that Fredericks had seyeral (Continued on page twelve), HELEN RYAN INSTALLED AS CLUB'S PRESIDENT Young Woman's Organiza- tion Holds A Card Party Tomorrow Miss Helen Ryan wai installed last night as President of the Young Roman's Club at a meeting held atHhe home of Mjss Jane Dunne, Green Street, Miss Dunne waa inducted as vice-president; Helen Hawryliw, secretary; Helen . ing : secretary j Ethel Sullivan, treasurer, and Mrs. Lee Smith! counsellor. . , Plans were completed for a card party to be held at the Sewaren Land and Water Club tomorrow and Miss Lorraine Warter, chair- main of the committee arranging a dance to be held at the Sewaren Club June 5 announced invitations will be issued next week. Miss Helen Kingberry was pre- sented with a past president's pin, Mrs. Smith with a silver tray, and Mr». James Dunne with a pair of •silver candlesticks out of| apprecia- tion for the use of her home for club meetings. APlagueOfKellys Haunts David R. Hunt Six months ago David R. Hunt of 57 Fifth Street, Fords. Mrvad a workhoase term in default of a $12 nne^ exacted on" jTreckleaii drivihjr* charge preferred by Corporal Austin Kelly of the Avenel State Polik Tuesday, Hunt allegedly glanced off a ear on Ford Avenue and continued with- out stopping. He wUl be heard on that charge next week when the driver of the other machine'will testify. His name is Austin Kelly! The- two oemiJlaioanU are not rehkU4 The Meient ac-. nessmen. Un&nimoui Vote On a formal vote, the company Officials unanimously decided that they would not retreat from their considered belief the carnivals in- ure local business, despite the re- cent increase in the number of township organizations sponsoring such affairs. ''Instead," one uifficer said to- lay, "we hope to give Fords clean, wholesome entertainment that will not only benefit tho company but keep Fords money in Fords." 3 HIGH SCHOOL BANDS GIVE CONCERT FRIDAY Theodore H. Hoops Will , Direct Groups In Gymnasium The annual concert by the junior, intermediati 1 and senior bands of the Woodbridge Township High School will be held in the gymnasium next Friday under the direction of Theodore; H. Hoops. "The program is arranged, says an announcement, "to show the progress of the boys from the beginning of their instruction. The Junior Band, composed of begin- ners will open thii program. The Intermediate Batid follows with se- lections to sjiow their progress and 'the Senior Band will appear last, representing the finished work of tht^ Department." Tickets may be obtained from any member of the band or from school principals. Dancing will follow the concert. Music Group Of Club Praised For Concert soning. And in addition to all of that he is, as they say, a swell guy. REAL ESTATE BUREAU NEEDED BY_JOWNSH1P Municipality Now A p- proaches Necessity Of Organizing Agency Woodbridge Township will soon t>e required togo into the real estate business on a large scale, and to set up a fully-equipped ad- ministrative agency. Activity in the tremendous job of liquidating tax title liens, which will undoubtedly cause reversion on a big scale of private proper- ties to the Township, is continuing at a brisk pace. Once a nucleus is obtained, it will be necessary for the municipality to rent or sell the parcels it owns in order to convert these assets into revenue. The Township wlH attempt to handle its newly acquired proper- ties through existing offices for the time being, but as soon as they begin to pile up it will be necessary to create a new department so that every advantage^ can be assured promptly, Woman's Unit Is Lauded For Success Of Event; May Be Annual Enthused over the success of its first Spring musicale, members of le • Music Department of ' the Woman's Club are considering a imilar event an annual cu.;tom. Great praise was heaped upon Irs. L. R. Whiting, Mrs. George . Urban, Mrs. J. P. Cooper, Mrs. Jeorge H. Rhodes and M>s. Wil- iam B. Krug who are in ch:age of rrangements. The concert was onsidered a fine-success, equally rom a financial and artistic view- loint. Such outstanding personages in he music world as Catharine Pyle "Joel, Lou Stuphin Lawshe, £d- yard R. Wojtowicjs, Ruth Louise Krug, Gladys Krug,and Mrs. Ur- )an, were heard. At a meeting of the department at the home of Mrs. Nathan Duff, lare Avenue, the development of the sonata was traced. Mis. Duff played a Mozart sonata and phan- tasy and accompanied G.-rtrude Varncslta, violinist. AJI early Beethoven sonata was played by Mrs. L. C. Holden and also oy Miss Ruth Erb. Housedenanted By Bill Will Co On Block Monday On Monday night, some- thing of a collector's item will be auctioned off by the Town- ship Committee, the house once tenanted by Mac G. Bell. In addition to being one of the most desirable properties in Woodbridge, the house and lot to go under the; hammer also havo the distinction of being the outstanding 1 dead- heads, in point of service, of any real estate on the Town- ship map. No taxes were paid upon them for a dozen yean. Situated on the corner of Grove and Linden Avenues, the property should bring some spirited bidding. A number of offers have been re- ceived by Committeeman Frederick A. Spencer, but he tt, insisted upon th« publio e&k» afl that a fair opportunity to obtain the place would be of- fered to everyone. Marriage Is Announced Ot Florence Mae Hask'o Announcement was mad* toda: bv Mrs. Alice «. Gordon of 168 West Girard Avenue, Philadelphia, of the marriage in Blkton, Md., of Mists Florence Mae H**ko of Se- waran and Ceil J. Farrow of HW- ^oaghl'ms Have Daughter A daughter, Joan, was born at he Perth Amboy General Hospi al to Mr. and Mrsj James Cough in of Fords, Bufh mother and aughter are reported doing nicely. SOLOIST AT CONCERT G«rtrud« Varacska off 112 Hig Street will be violin soloist at the concert of thd pupiU pf Samuel Appleb&um tomorrow night at tha X. M, and Y. W. H. A,,auditonum in Newark. She will be uccoin panied by Miss Leonora Sindell o Newark. 10 Garagemen Still Lack Licenses; To Be Prosecuted Less than ten of the township's garage owners have failed to se- cure the safety licenses required by the Township Committee, Fire Inspector William J. Allgaier said today. Reaction to the amend- ments requiring the permits at an annual fee of $5 his otherwise been splendid, he said. Prosecution iji the Recorder's Court must soon'bte begun, Mr. All- gaier added, against garagemen who continue to operate without a license.. "I have no qhoice," he statod, "aa the ordinance specifi- cally says I mUBt take them into court if they do not fill the legal requirements." Administration Officials Praise Work Of Omenheiser On Relief High praise was expressed by administration officials to- day for the celerity with ich John Omenheiser' and his skeletonized township relief staff have mastered a vexing problem. They expressed Unit Votes To Give Profit To Stadiam All proceed* from the gate entertainment at the State Theatre on Friday, June 19, will be turned over to the Stadium Commission, mem- ber* of the Township Busi- nessmen's Association, decided this week- Five acts of professional vaudeville will he a feature, as will performances by out- standing- local amateur*. The m«tivnV«tur# wiU be "R#d complete confidence that Mr. Omenheiser and his five assistants would soon have complete control of the job once handled by an ERA personnel many times the size of the staff here. That staff was completed here yesterday with the appointment of Mrs. Alice Schmidt of Sewaren as stenographer. Mrs. Carrie Mundy had already been named investiga- tor for the First Waul and Arthur R. FranU of jMiar Hill investiga- tor for the TmFd. Mrs. Clifford Dunham is elerk and Alfred Job- lei' agent for the Third Ward. A deluge of requests for relief poured in on the office this week but nevertheless a net reduction of nine families was effected In the case load. Readjustment of bud- gets, abandonment of supplement- ary relief and the end. of the need for heating fuel resulted in 18 fa- milies being droppwi. four new

FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

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Page 1: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

AN INTERESTING FEATURE!AND THEY SAID" READ IT

WEEKLY ON EDITORIAL PAGEFOLLOW DONOHUE'S SPORTSCOMMENT IN'OR SO IT SEEMS'EVERY WEEK ON SPORT PAGE

WOODHKIDGE. N. J., FRll'.W, MAY If., 193f. PRICE THREE CENTS

FROM OURFRONT

WINDOW•s,.,t|.er the Pertk AmboJ Gil.1,1 Company (leeking higher!'.,) nor the parrnt outfit at

,,,(,rr end of the pipe-line, in,,|,,.tl., will allow a. traruferi, relit to periont who move.'„ Woodbridge to R»hw»y, or

vr.rta. They in«i»t upon a, .vtid »ep»rate depoiit though,1, ||1P Public Service and Tel-

.,,„„„ Company iontinue the,,lil without quntion.

3 CLOTHING FIRMSWEIGH MOVE HERE;NITE-CRAFT STAYS600 Girls Wilf Be Hired

If Allgaier SucceedsIn Negotiations

|KAUFMANDENIESMOVEThree clothing firms are

estab-lishing factories in Wood-bridge Township, it waslearned this-morning. AboutfiOO girls would be employed.

t ii recent mover entitled Simultaneously, the" persistent ru-ind of a ton or twelve- mor that the Nite-Craft Corpora-deposit, from the' Gas

my, was short-changed to. Nii.i'il of something under, .,nd tnlri this represented a,.;,• seven years back. Did

,.i hear of the Gas Company.,-- a month's collection and•.." it go so long? Of course

, ,,nsiinier took the loss, be-thfir own records weremisplaced or destroyed but

,ilv remembered never hav-,...,", nsked for the money, or

IIK notice that a bill was due.

And too, the inlereil allowed> the; company, on the above, |n,sit, wai not up to ordinary..nclardi. It appeared to fig-,- only 3% or 4 per cent.,linrai the volume of caih the

pany handlei in "Mm faih-i miifht easily hare baen eara-;• more—one way or another—-i depoiitori should get it.

1 l'i another angle to be con-,(. r.-d in our next request for

schedule!.

doubt Governor Hoffmanhonor rcquistions from al-nywhere in New York State,]'1

the Brooklyn section. Andj l s

ni'ht in this. That district , m

Grinding in the Druckmani

contemplates moving Southwas authoritatively denied,.

The largest of the new com-panies interested in the townshipnow has a .milling , n d knitting-plant in Yonkers. M. B. Roessel;speaking for the company, prom-ised loral officials that if the finaldecision by his superiors were fa-vorable, no* less than 400 girlswould be employed. Building In-spector W. J. Allgaiet had in-formed Mr. Roesirel that the town-ship could not possibly competewith other communities which haveoffered to erect buildings at theirown expense hut Mr. Allg-aiei dis-covered, however, 20,000 sfuarefeet of floor space in Fords vhichmet every requirement.

The free-Watt- market anl theithufldftlTCe frf" rTetft ^VAftrthli," to-gether with the remarkahle trans-portation facilities, Mr. Rresselsaid, probably will persuadi hisfirm to move here.

Hai Second ProtpectIn th* wenfe that the Yoik«t»

corporation decides against themove, Mr. Allgaier has a s<cond

High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five SeniorsWho Have Maintained Scholastic Averages Of 'A' For 4 YearsFive Woodbridge High

School students who havecreated brilliant scholasticrecords throughout theirfour-year courses will haveprominent places on theCommencement program atthe State Theatre .Thursday,June 1H,'Principal A. C. Ferry an-nounced today.

All five of the group have main-tained averages of 'A' in nil cours-es, leading their class-mates by awide margin, In line with the long-standing policy of the school, henthey will he honored as a grriupwithout aiiy effort to rate them nu-merically on fractional differencesin their splendid records.

Miss Marcia Lifshitz, Miss BettyCrozier, Miss Lillian Witovsky,Donald Aaroe and Robert Ander-son are the prize students in theclass of IMG.

To Conduct SympoiiumMisa Lifshitz will deliver

speech of weleome and IUSR Wi-tovsky the farewell address. Thethree other academic aces willshare in one of the most interest-ing Commencement features everarranged here—a symposium onthe proposed League of Nationsfor the Western Hemisphere.

Mis* Martha Morrow and Miss

•Cl'iu

• \,i recover hia lost prestige,h tin Wendel ense. Where

idea of givingK--"a few days," heluce the Parkers"?uive them justice,

iur;. before we'll he-irnly clamoring.

ovcrnor Hoffman, by-the-ly, In IIw first New Jcriey GOT-

of ritlirr parly to be op-t-d » a delegate to the Na-n<i! Cunvrntion. And iueh a

Ifcing made about it thatHauptmann or Wendel

iv I JO v.,trd for, tince they arehint; dragged into the contro-

of which he was veryistic today. That company

engaged in manufncturirij wo-rn'* clothing.A thiril clothing firm is ctnsid-

Caiitimii-4 nn paqp twrltf

Marcia LifshitzBetty Crczier Lillian WitovskyRuth Erb of the

class of KM will receivedepartment ure assisting the trioin the collection of material while Examinations beginning 01

will determine the scholastic fateAlida Van Slvkc, Miss Mar-of the lower group of the class butgaret Morganson and Mrs.

n of the Knglish Department

technical details of the delivery of

todav was not sure

ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTEDCROSSING FOES BELIEVE

M x /*• Two-Hour Argument ByIVlUSt b e t Edison Climax Of New

Credit If GradesAre Ever Doomed MAYOR, MCELROY HELP

, - , - • „ ,,; L J OUTLINE LOCAL CASltInventor s ion Has Worked

Long, Hard And l/n-selfishly

FRIEND OF PRESIDENTIf and when Woodbddjfe

Township jjntdt' rrfrwings areeliminated through Federal

icintr, credit for theachievement must he givento quiet, capable Charles Ed-

he said, there areonly u possible 12 failures. Schoolpractice which considers flunkingof thu bottom 10 per cent nn aver-JMULSludi'.nt fsilnriiJKOjilfl allow 11).,

15 Other Honor Pupili(Idition to the top five,

Drawn into the picture through,- - •--, •: „• • ..eMine J ) y . Mayor ..August P.

whose performance in the remain- (Jreiner. Township Attorney Leoning works of w&rk the school is E. McElroy and important mem-sure, there are 1 \ more students hers of the Board of Public Utlityalmost certain to wirTan honor Commissioners, Mr. Edison has setlilting on records of A's and H's. 'his heart on obtaining for the res-

None of this section, however, idents of the municipality the safe-approaches the five listed

Coniinutd on uatm i

Aut hen.tic sources indicatethat the White House is defi- . •nitely committed to an al- -location of Federal funds forCrade-crossinR elimin«tion inWoodbridgre Township.

Although specific announce-ment to this effect is withheld, it: »in- uhilorstood from high Wash-ngton authority that PresidentKtxue'vrlt is entirely in sympathywith the local project and tr'.ll lend"the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 fromWPA monies. A long discussionwith the Chief Executive w:is heldon Wednesday by Charles Ediaonf<ri UiC.Nfttional Belief Council andC. A. Meade, chief engineei nf theState Board of Public Utilit • Com-missioners.

Financial aid to the exte it indi-cated by recent conferences would

Reformatory OfficialAddresses Men s ClubExplains Functioning Of

Parole System T«Trinity Unit

Deputy Superintendent R- E.[Templeton of the Rahway Refor-matory spoke before the Men'sClub of Trinity Church last eve-

by cx-Congreitman Fort, [ning on the subject of paroling in-to thwart the Cover-

c-u-t of hit activitioallu' Lindbergh caie.

I" ;o

jnstes of that institution.He first related details of how

the youthful charges of the Stateare taught useful trades and given

h l ll f l l i

pat

k*.

ns realize that tneischooliiiK, as well, following psy-[ raised wages only eightichologieal tests of their previous

and the cost of liviner'tralniriR- and mental and manualCT icnt. In other words,inabilities.i Hum Deal, all the way1 Mr. Templeton then told of

! methods pursued in keeping rec-jords of each boy's aptitude andbehavior, generally, favorable re-sults obtained in many instances;

i how they are assisted toward s<-l o curing suitable employment after

being paroled and pointed to ad-vances introduced in recent yearsin dealing with recalcitrants amongfirst, second and third offenders.

The informal fashion of the talk

BOOS-MUNDY FEUDINFLAMES GOP WARWoman's Unit Head Quits

In Retaliation OverRelief Selection

CHARGE PACT BROKENVerbal guns boomed today

as the political front of_ theFirst Ward became a noisybattle ground of charges andcounter-charges among mem-bers of the Republican or-ganization.

The flare that touched off themain-works was th» appointmentof Mrs. Carrie Mundy to the reliefstaff of John Omenheiser. Im-mediately it became known, mem-bers of Mrs. John W. Boos' wo-men's club announced that theywould cease "indefinitely" all po-litical activity. Further, as a ges-ture of diwatinfaetion at the meth-ods employed by the men's organi-zation in making the selection, Mra.Boos resigned her presidency.. Thewomen, however, refused to accept

Gas Firmfs Final Rate Rise BriefIgnores Tie With Elizabeth PlantPerth Amboy tompany In Asking Revision Of Schedule

Says Change It Wants Will Cost It $4,170 LessRevenue A Year! Five Days Left To Answer

•Anil yi-l another week h»i been^ to the already lengthy tei-

of tlic Legislature, withn; being done exceptrn 'till May 2Wt. Thii it

called getting nowhere,

:h..«gh the police still neh t k i fi'cr heavy trucking fronii . ,

nee thoroughfares. Chief!"1"1 b o t h

tive. Much of what was mentionedthat the public is almost

itinerant carnivalsI'ort Rending) indulged

•leeenciL's, the other day,•iveil immediate notice thatarrests would follow therepetition. Good for the

C liar let Editon, «on of theis Inventor, earned the

Iliful acknowledgement* ofdge, thii week, when he

P<- a special trip to Waihing-|»i hit own egpeote, in an ef-

tu hasten financial arrange-* for eliminating grade-ingi in the townihip. Weour cap to Mr. Edison.

"vuiie was interested in the

^ Ltdand delinquents. Altogether, Mr.Templeton left the impression thatthe Reformatory is doing a workin which the State and countrymight take especial pride and local

at luust ought tocommunitiesknow about.

President Ernest Raymond pre-sided ,at the session and the Rev.W. V. D. Strong invoked the bless-

n ig.

DOGS BITEJijIREEll-Y«ar-Old Avenel Young-

ster Nipped On Armpurformance of ehn; • Three pe/Sons were bitten by

Tg airship which, if all dogs duripg the week. Fred Dales-ll, will have completed u^niulru, U, of Chestnut Street,p between Germany and Avenel, was bitten on the rightliy within a week, allow-jarm by a dog owned by John Berg

I i d i ' time out for Dr. Eck-|of Chestnut Street. Warren Webb,I t " pay his respects to Prusi-;l3.r

( Schoder Avenue, Woodbridge,IliuoM-velt und other officials j was torn on the calf of the leg by

'^hington und uermittiiiKln dog belonging to Michael Kar-piTsmis to inspect the KUtiiUnowski, Wwlgewood Avenue, and

i" not to mention the op-jj0hu Monalian, Souttj Amboy, wusnity for Dr. Eckener's son'bitten by a dog owned by William

p e r travelers to visit a few of mitli, -178 Ruhway Avenue.

CARNIVALS BANNEDBY FORDS FIREMENCompany Pledged Help By

t.Mrs. Boos s^t»d last nifht thqt

her quarrel involved no personali-ties, that it was purely a matter of

Continued on paye trrdve

5 ACCIDENTS, A DEATHOCCUR MTWEEK HERENew Rochelle-Negro Killed

On The SuperhighwayBy Automobile

Five accidents and ono deathwere reported to police this week,a routine total for the season, butabnormal in view of the successof the local highway safety drive.Sebron Muynor, 35, a New Ro-chelle Negro, died in the fatal ac-cident, He was hit on the Super-highway near New BrunswickAvenue by a car driven by Abra-ham Swemofsky, 57, of Brooklyn.

John Vargo, 32, of 804 AmboyAvenue, was another injured pe-destrian. He was struck on NewBrunswick Avenue in Hopelawn bya car operated, hy Stephen F.Stumpf. Also' in Fords, a cardriven by Miehhel Terpak, EdgarAvenue, Perth Amboy, hit the leftrear of a machine driven by SophusAiikkelsen, 1!) Warren StreetFords. Mikkelsen Was badly cutSevere cuts were sustained, too, byMichael Kocsik, 205 New Bruns-wick Avenue, who hit a pole onMaxwell Avenue, Fords.

-r Mrs: Alice Flash, 42, of LorchStreet, Avenel, hit another pole onRuhway Alvenue and was cut abouttho face a i(( knees Mrs. Flash hadn« driver's license but was givena suspendeiiisentence in court herebecause of the injuries to herselfaid to her husband's car.

Scrupulously avoiding anyreference to its factual posi-tion of "middleman" thePerth Amboy Gas Light Com-pany has filed with the Boardof Public Utility Commis-sioners its final brief in an attemptto support a petition to revise up-ward the rate schedule for smallestconsumers.

The brief waB prasantad to theBoard by the company's New Yorkcounsel, William M. When-y. Fivedays is allowed for Woodbridge,Carteret and Perth Amboy to filean answer.

Any consumer, according to thebrief, wha uses 1,800 cubic feet orless, will play a 'slightly increased'bill while the larger consumers willbe benefltted by a reduction. Bythe company's own estimate, therevised,schedule will result in "adecrease in the total revenues re-ceived by the company of $4,170/Its purpose in taking a step whichwould cause such a drop in re-ceipts, is stated as placing1 the com-

any in a position where it canmpete with other fuel distribu-ra.The greatest criticism of th<

roposal is based on the fact thaihfc Perth Amboy company merelycts as a distributing agent for thlizabethtown Gas Company. Thnegation that such corporate dup-cation causes an added expense

h must be passccf on to honsumers—in this case the smallst consumers and probably thoseast able to assimilate the burden

—is ignored in the brief.Arbitrary approval of its capi-

tal valuations was also containedin the final argument but it is pre-lumed that counsel for the object-ng municipalities will challenge

these estimates in their reply.These valuations constitute theiagts'for" figuring the return.

loth' night clubs.

forct on Main Street are be-e-furbithed of late And oft-

ica of batter bmineis iiping up, alt along the thor-

>re. That'i the spirit 1

i(f hearings on a bill in« recently, Representative

Republican, broke in withr.v worthy of the late Tomni l - t o wit: "Would it not•ihle to at least build a Dam

feiy deserving Democrat?"

[appears that Emperor Se-i is cutting more of • figure

exile than he did on thaAt least he hat driveif

alian delegates from Gent»d his plenipotentiary willbly be able to prove thatMini's men blinded and

a conliderable number:n and children, which

•I've to continue, if not in-Ii the dangerous sanGtiont•d by other Nations,

dent Roosevelt and Jim Par-tiKbe financing a hi_

tic campaign publicity De-t at Federal expense. It

is pretty tough on the| i s and a decidedly dis-Beparture from all previous

I UM atrt u l * BIH UM IMN,

I thy vbn they iri

Crew Of Relief Labor UAderDavisWill Raze Famed Poillon PotteryRazing of the old Poillon

Pottery, last remaining unitof the famous Salamanderplant here, will begin as soona.s local administration ptemergency relief permits qr-•anization of a wrecking crew re-

.ruited from the recipients oftownship help.

Township Engineer ClarenceDavis will direct tho teanng downof the main building and the twokiliu nestling incongp ^Tind a monument shop on R yAvenue new the Municipal BuilJ-ing. The buildings all ware con-demned by Inspector W. J. A"-gaier as part <rf his drive ^

Mr. Allgaier secured permission tot^ar down the plant from the ex-ecutor* of the Poillon Estate.

Salvaga ValuableIt is expected the salvage will be

valuable since many of the tim-bers in the old factory are in goodcondition and there will be a vastpile of brick* when the job is done,together with conduits of several

uests already are flow-ing into the townslup for, thebrick* but they will probably be

This morning, it appeared tha"the proposal to close the dead-ep(Poillon Street, now only a strip ofgrass BO-feet wide running alongthe property line of the Wood,bridge Lumber Company, andbuild on the situ a municipal ga-rage with the material saved fromthe pottery hud been abandoned.The township now pays $80 amonth to rent a garage. Propon-ents of the building scheme ha<iurged it would cost nothing sincelocal relief clients' labor could biused.

The Poillon works has not operated in many years but it hadlong and varied career, ranginifrom the manufacture of cla:smoking pipes through doorknobta-thfi mak it'is»te .eMpwyeGenteel ladies of the town iivfae

TENANT NilLSDOOR,SOLANDLORDJREAKS IN!Messrs. Rose And Zehrer

Go Right On WithTheir Feud

The .musical comedy feud be-Lween a tenant and a landlord whoihare ii single entrance to theirJwcllintr in Sewaren acquired anew. twist this week, The tenant,Steve Rose of Cottage Place, hadignored Recorder Arthur Brown'sid vice to move if his landlord,osepli Zehrer, persisted in keeping

him uwake.Mr, Rose not only ignored that

ndvice—-he also took measures in.his own hands. Said measuresnsisted mainly of waiting until

dr. Zehrer was absent and thenlailinst the only door into the houseightly shut—with largo spikes,ilr. Zehrer, on his return, found itmcessary to break down the door-o get Into his own house!

So Judge Brown ordered Roseo pay Sf2 for the door-—and againluggested he find a quieter, or at«a»t a mote distant, landlord,

6TH YEAR FOR STUDIOLattanzio Observes His Fifth

Anniversary Here

James Lattanzio, skilled artistand technician in photography whooperates the Woodbridge Studiohere, still was receiving congrat-ulations this week on the fifth an-niversary of his establishment inWoodbridge.

He celebrated the occasion lastFriday but the friends Mr. Lat-tanzio has made in Wie half-decadein the "township continue to felici-tate him on the success he misearned here after 30 years in thecraft in Connecticut. Mr. andMrs. Lattunzio came tu Wood-bridge to be near their children,several of whom live in near-bytO-WUB.- "

Sam FredericksLoses ImmunityLong, Interesting Career Of

Prize Parolee HitsA Climax

Twenty-six-year old SamFredericks' long and inter-esting immunity from lega'punishment seemed definite-ly dooi ted today. Held injail by the double lock of ademand for $500 cash bail and adetainer filed against him by theCounty Probation Office, the tall,good-looking Rahway Avenue cit-izen, is, until a jury finds himguilty, legally innocent of the as-sault And battery charge againsthim, hut the treatment accordedhim indicated he will revert to thestatus of ordinary individual infuture encounters with the law.

,Fredericks refused yesterday towaive indictment and trial on theassault charge filed by John Szur-ko, Fulton Street saloon-owner,lie insisted he had not violated histive-year probation by entering asaloon in forbidden territory, byooking for Frank Nagy, a bar-r.i'nder, with whom he has had pre-vious brawls, nor even by punchingthe bespectacled Szurko withsolid left hand to the chin.

Recorder Arthur Brown was un-impressed, particularly afterSzurko, whose place, police say,has a good reputation, had testi

u n i - t y and improvement tha t the re-nteval would bring, Tho towncould have no be t t e r friend a tcourt , no one more effective.

P leasan t -mannered in his per-sistence, Mr. Edison has literallyslaved through countless hours ofeonferenres, planning, calculatingto secure for the Township an al-lotment of WPA monies which ennbe used for this civic and humani-tarian work. Success is a matterof principle to him now and hewill fight for his objective to thebitter end.

Son Of InventorSon of the famous Thomas Alva

Edison and an intimate of Prov-ident Roosevelt, Mr. Edison has all

Holding fast to their eight- of. those attributes essential inyear-old stand against travel-i^tc'iR effective battle. He is first

ling carnivals, the Fords ^ire|necessitytotrefim'natio1ne?heCnece^Company has vetoed import-jsity from the statiapoTht orsafetyation Of a circtla to aid in com- and future growth and dcvelop-

Merchants In SeriesOf ProgramsDUlTON JUNE

pany finances andannounced today that with the co-operation of merchants of theirterritory. It plans n comprehensiveseries of monthly entertainmentjg.

The first of the swies, to whichFords store-keepers have pledgedwhole-hearted aid, will be held onJune 9 in' the Fords Playhouse.Four acts of vaudeville using com-munity talent will be staged, to-gether with a motion picture fea-ture and supporting films. Thetype of program is to be variedmonthly.

Officers of the company and i

ins tead m e n t ° ' the area. He feels thatprogress here will be definitelystymied so long as the presentcondition remains.» His purpose In befriending thetown is clearly altruistic. He him-self has nothing to gain. His vitalinterest is a physical and financialcontribution for which he willnever be paid, except in deep gra-titude.

Soft-spoken but direct, Mr. Edi-son is a convincing solicitor. Heis held in high esteem by all ofWashington and it is no wonder,lie is sincere, frank, carefully an-

permit an early beginning if artimprovement eagerly son^ t foryears by tlj* town. •»

The President's inter -t iatraceable to that of his closefriend and adviser, Mr. Edison.Merely because of his convii ion asregards the necessity and an.I valueof the elimination, the laUer hastaken up the cudgels for' Wood-brtdtre Township md has .devotedunstintingly his time and personalfunds in his attempts to obtain thegrant. Without his help, thecause would be lost long ag >.

Mayor, McElroy CreditedMr. Edison's assistant - was

irought about through untiring ef-ort& by Mayor August F, ilreinerind Township Attorney 1. -on E.McElroy, in conjunction with Mr.Mende. Both accompanied him toWashington on Tuesday and assist,ed in preparing a.- compleU pre-sentation of the case to PresidentRoosevelt. This argument wasmade during a two-hour interviewin the executive offices.

Although carefully refusing toconsider the grant a certainty, th«conferees were highly optimistic.They felt that the President's wordwould stimulate diligence on the

(Continued on page twilve)

V » " . i , i g Vi VIIV Wil l Wll V aiLU IVO I . • 1 TT • • I

committee in charge of social af- »lytic»l. He inspires a ready con-fairs canvassed the whole problem[<fldellce '" h '? Judgment in comof carnivals on Wednesday night I>lex matters through his directwith a group of leading Fords bu3i-

correspondingOlbrick, record-

once derived a considerable tncomifrom the decoration of the wanmade there.

Burned 40 Yean A»»Originally it was part of the

liu'ge Salamander plant on the sitenow, occupied, by the lumber com-pany. • the Salamander waa builtsoon after the beginning of "Hienineteenth century but was de-stroyed by fire 40 years ago whenWoodbridn Cmt-overra. *idge Crst

«i!»r«d th* IdlM »iffl « •

A. J.Neiss Wins ContractOn King Georges Road Job

Work will begin »oon, CountyEngineer George Merrill said thismorning on th» complete resurfac-ing of King George's Road, to beundertaken with WPA labor. A.J, Neiaa of Woodbridge won thecontract for the bituminous oon-«et« which will be ueed. Hu bid

fled that Fredericks had seyeral(Continued on page twelve),

HELEN RYAN INSTALLEDAS CLUB'S PRESIDENTYoung Woman's Organiza-

tion Holds A Card PartyTomorrow

Miss Helen Ryan wai installedlast night as President of theYoung Roman's Club at a meetingheld atHhe home of Mjss JaneDunne, Green Street, Miss Dunnewaa inducted as vice-president;Helen Hawryliw,secretary; Helen .ing : secretary j Ethel Sullivan,treasurer, and Mrs. Lee Smith!counsellor. . ,

Plans were completed for a cardparty to be held at the SewarenLand and Water Club tomorrowand Miss Lorraine Warter, chair-main of the committee arranging adance to be held at the SewarenClub June 5 announced invitationswill be issued next week.

Miss Helen Kingberry was pre-sented with a past president's pin,Mrs. Smith with a silver tray, andMr». James Dunne with a pair of•silver candlesticks out of| apprecia-tion for the use of her home forclub meetings.

APlagueOfKellysHaunts David R. Hunt

Six months ago David R.Hunt of 57 Fifth Street,Fords. Mrvad a workhoaseterm in default of a $12 nne^exacted on" jTreckleaii drivihjr*charge preferred by CorporalAustin Kelly of the AvenelState Pol ik

Tuesday, Hunt allegedlyglanced off a ear on FordAvenue and continued with-out stopping. He wUl be heardon that charge next weekwhen the driver of the othermachine'will testify.

His name is Austin Kelly!The- two oemiJlaioanU are

not rehkU4 The Meient ac-.

nessmen.Un&nimoui Vote

On a formal vote, the companyOfficials unanimously decided thatthey would not retreat from theirconsidered belief the carnivals in-ure local business, despite the re-cent increase in the number oftownship organizations sponsoringsuch affairs.

''Instead," one uifficer said to-lay, "we hope to give Fords clean,wholesome entertainment that willnot only benefit tho company butkeep Fords money in Fords."

3 HIGH SCHOOL BANDSGIVE CONCERT FRIDAYTheodore H. Hoops Will

, Direct Groups InGymnasium

The annual concert by thejunior, intermediati1 and seniorbands of the Woodbridge TownshipHigh School will be held in thegymnasium next Friday under thedirection of Theodore; H. Hoops.

"The program is arranged,says an announcement, "to showthe progress of the boys from thebeginning of their instruction. TheJunior Band, composed of begin-ners will open thii program. TheIntermediate Batid follows with se-lections to sjiow their progress and'the Senior Band will appear last,representing the finished work oftht^ Department."

Tickets may be obtained fromany member of the band or fromschool principals. Dancing willfollow the concert.

Music Group Of ClubPraised For Concert

soning.And in addition to all of that he

is, as they say, a swell guy.

REAL ESTATE BUREAUNEEDED BY_JOWNSH1PMunicipality Now A p-

proaches Necessity OfOrganizing Agency

Woodbridge Township will soont>e required to go into the realestate business on a large scale,and to set up a fully-equipped ad-ministrative agency.

Activity in the tremendous jobof liquidating tax title liens, whichwill undoubtedly cause reversionon a big scale of private proper-ties to the Township, is continuingat a brisk pace. Once a nucleus isobtained, it will be necessary forthe municipality to rent or sell theparcels it owns in order to convertthese assets into revenue.

The Township wlH attempt tohandle its newly acquired proper-ties through existing offices for thetime being, but as soon as theybegin to pile up it will be necessaryto create a new department so thatevery advantage^ can be assuredpromptly,

Woman's Unit Is LaudedFor Success Of Event;

May Be AnnualEnthused over the success of its

first Spring musicale, members ofle • Music Department of ' the

Woman's Club are considering aimilar event an annual cu.;tom.

Great praise was heaped uponIrs. L. R. Whiting, Mrs. George. Urban, Mrs. J. P. Cooper, Mrs.Jeorge H. Rhodes and M>s. Wil-iam B. Krug who are in ch:age ofrrangements. The concert wasonsidered a fine-success, equallyrom a financial and artistic view-loint.

Such outstanding personages inhe music world as Catharine Pyle"Joel, Lou Stuphin Lawshe, £d-yard R. Wojtowicjs, Ruth LouiseKrug, Gladys Krug,and Mrs. Ur-)an, were heard.

At a meeting of the departmentat the home of Mrs. Nathan Duff,

lare Avenue, the development ofthe sonata was traced. Mis. Duffplayed a Mozart sonata and phan-tasy and accompanied G.-rtrudeVarncslta, violinist. AJI earlyBeethoven sonata was played byMrs. L. C. Holden and also oy MissRuth Erb.

Housedenanted By BillWill Co On Block Monday

On Monday night, some-thing of a collector's item willbe auctioned off by the Town-ship Committee, the houseonce tenanted by Mac G. Bell.

In addition to being one ofthe most desirable propertiesin Woodbridge, the house andlot to go under the; hammeralso havo the distinction ofbeing the outstanding1 dead-heads, in point of service, ofany real estate on the Town-ship map. No taxes were paidupon them for a dozen yean.

Situated on the corner ofGrove and Linden Avenues,the property should bringsome spirited bidding. Anumber of offers have been re-ceived by CommitteemanFrederick A. Spencer, but he

tt, insisted upon th« publio e&k»afl that a fair opportunity toobtain the place would be of-fered to everyone. •

Marriage Is AnnouncedOt Florence Mae Hask'o

Announcement was mad* toda:bv Mrs. Alice «. Gordon of 168West Girard Avenue, Philadelphia,of the marriage in Blkton, Md., ofMists Florence Mae H**ko of Se-waran and Ceil J. Farrow of HW-

^oaghl'ms Have DaughterA daughter, Joan, was born at

he Perth Amboy General Hospial to Mr. and Mrsj James Coughin of Fords, Bufh mother andaughter are reported doing nicely.

SOLOIST AT CONCERTG«rtrud« Varacska off 112 Hig

Street will be violin soloist at theconcert of thd pupiU pf SamuelAppleb&um tomorrow night at thaX. M, and Y. W. H. A,,auditonumin Newark. She will be uccoinpanied by Miss Leonora Sindell oNewark.

10 Garagemen Still LackLicenses; To Be Prosecuted

Less than ten of the township'sgarage owners have failed to se-cure the safety licenses requiredby the Township Committee, FireInspector William J. Allgaier saidtoday. Reaction to the amend-ments requiring the permits at anannual fee of $5 his otherwisebeen splendid, he said.

Prosecution iji the Recorder'sCourt must soon'bte begun, Mr. All-gaier added, against garagemenwho continue to operate withouta license.. "I have no qhoice," hestatod, "aa the ordinance specifi-cally says I mUBt take them intocourt if they do not fill the legalrequirements."

Administration Officials PraiseWork Of Omenheiser On ReliefHigh praise was expressed

by administration officials to-day for the celerity with

ich John Omenheiser' andhis skeletonized townshiprelief staff have mastered avexing problem. They expressed

Unit VotesTo Give Profit To Stadiam

All proceed* from the gateentertainment at the StateTheatre on Friday, June 19,will be turned over to theStadium Commission, mem-ber* of the Township Busi-nessmen's Association, decidedthis week-

Five acts of professionalvaudeville will he a feature, aswill performances by out-standing- local amateur*. Them«tivnV«tur# wiU be "R#d

complete confidence that Mr.Omenheiser and his five assistantswould soon have complete controlof the job once handled by an ERApersonnel many times the size ofthe staff here.

That staff was completed hereyesterday with the appointment ofMrs. Alice Schmidt of Sewaren asstenographer. Mrs. Carrie Mundyhad already been named investiga-tor for the First Waul and ArthurR. FranU of jMiar Hill investiga-tor for the TmFd. Mrs. CliffordDunham is elerk and Alfred Job-lei' agent for the Third Ward.

A deluge of requests for reliefpoured in on the office this weekbut nevertheless a net reductionof nine families was effected In thecase load. Readjustment of bud-gets, abandonment of supplement-ary relief and the end. of the needfor heating fuel resulted in 18 fa-milies being droppwi. four new

Page 2: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

rWOODBRIDQE INDEI>K\ i

PAGE TWO FRIDAY, MAY

Pupils Of St. James'Repeat "Tulip Time"Matinee Given Yesterday

By Parochial Pupils Re-

peated Tonight

d a y . "he ; •.:•o c h i a l S»'r.i •

•riiim:1

rn'.anfS;. '.v

Time."

r7cio. k ;r,i.ir

yc«tcr-:t . ' Par-•-•.Tl l l l p ' -

',!; the:ri. Thr.to f tar tnun: "f

i.iir.p one .•;' I1-.;;!-'!

'••wer K'ri s . the ca.-an.lwill

a; •the

Inim ]oneof :clmlv

"Tlsns "Tinirii*!** 3 B"X?h 7tice. U'alrerGhri-tian'.-" yuai.fian. ElizabethQu:irj«y; ""Katrinka." a villnctinini'it!:. FJiii'iifi' AruBy; "Hi-n-flriik Van (Mrr . " hu'rironiuytor <>fO*nii)oif, Rorifrt Arway: "I'hris-tina," a channini; 1»utcW (fir). Star-1

ion Olbiiik; ."Teiipilus •McSpiri-dle.'-' an anihorjty on Vitnny. Petflr.Me<"!u«ki-y; " N H Biixtfr." anAmerican collect fttiile-nt, Ray-mond ?nnifi>; ,,"I>ick Warrenfeliow ttuiltitt nf Niil'*. K»Wer.tJan!"?.

The Real McCoy!There'i a »pl*ndid. bold, tqnarc-ihooter

Who'i net »o hard to find,ll"» the Brooklyn prt>««Htor,

Of kubtlp legal mind;For ri»'> the real MCCOT, we're told,

And «ct« brforr the fatti are cold.

Of courie he had the Dntckaut cat*.Which iomehovr drage'd »lo«f,

Bui who it there, in Gro([han'i place,Would iajr that hr v,»i wronf

In waiting till the proper timeFor other Vnen to lfl*e the crime?

'Two not b t c i t u lie lacked the nerveTo bring the gang to bowk.

He merely r»crcnfd rtitrvf 'And felt the Jeadinj crook „_•

Would not attempt to diiappear.But might confen within a jear.

Too bad how Lehman (ailed' to leeThe logic of hii oourte

And named a man inclined to beMore apt at using force;

6ut a n j w n the tnugt were caught,At Gtofhan alwart thought and thought.

At latt, abioNed of everr blame,He*i now inclined to ihout

Againtl tne little Wendel game, i

. The crobki have talked about,And ravei .and raTea in tuch a way .

He makei the firtl page e*ery day.—H. W. K.

Mrs. Devanny Elected 5 Brilliant Seniors Share RollsMothers' Club leader inTheHighSchool CommencementAnnual Luncheon Will BP

hrii"of(. MIIOIII'

cwan:

Held May 22 At Red

Bank Tea Room

A:

I, ,

M i

I i i -

•In-I.ir.Mrs.

Miss HuntGives TipsOn Eye Care

By JACQUELINE HUNTAii occasional checkinc up is

go.iii for your soul. HnhltK ofthiiikinjr. livinp ami rarinir foryour personal appearance get in-to a rut without out*i<le stimulusor unless you make a special effortto stay "on your toes."

Whenever you feel that you areslipping a little it is alwaysto BefTtrr rnr rhrtit+»#-U|» an.beauty habits. Beauty is the f

tenic there is. When you know that,you are confident and bopin to,take a new interest in everythingabout you. '

Perhaps yon nre not doing every-thing possible for your face. Per-haps you have been ncplectinpsome feature and need a gentle re-minder. If so, just clip this columnand the next one or two and keepit near your dressing table wherevou can reTerTd'tt ocenFTGnaHy. •

Eyes Most Importantwill start with your eyes

B Fords Democrats Keep Lid lT% . c

Oil Politics; Meetings Held JT a Y1S O e t S

ButterfliesIn Bonnets

The lid is never clamped onpolitic- in Kurds and the Sec-ond Ward,generally.

With no primary conteststo enliven Spring activities,the Second Ward organiza-tion conducts regular sessions.A M y xres-treW test ntjrrH «tthe iiopelawn headquarterswith-a" lone lin of speakers,i n c l u d i n g CnmmitteemanCharles Alexander and For-mer Committeeman AnthonyA. A^uila. . " .

The women * section, withtwenty members present, metwith Mrs. J. Li'vnndosky onTuesday with another sessionscheduled for June '2.

irMrs, Ford, I B . BlackCard Party WinnersMany Attend Affair Held

Under Auspices Of. St.

Elizabeth's Chorch

A hifrhly successful card party

- 1 n«vcr expected to live to seethe day when bonnets trimmedwith butterflies would be calledsmart, yet such a bonnet and such

butterfly was considered chiceno-ugh to be, photographed atLongchamps one Sunday recently.

And the cables buzzed aboutbonnets just as our press is shout-ing about bicycles. Bonjii'ts, bole-ro?, bicycles and all in one season—a season kind enough to throw-in herds for those who are accus-tomed to them and capelines andsuitor* fr«m all ports ef interest-Revivals are in order.

Amonp them is the transparenthat, not Of glass or cellophane inthe modern manner] but of lncy,-tratfs even of maline and chiffon.Tlit-so make their re-entrv aboutthe time that women are changingto sheers for street wear and dress-inn in chiffon and tulle for eve-ning. Before I forpet it, a word

! about elastic, which seems to bewas held uniier the auspice- of St. (i>ivf*t*e<l ta-lw.t.-pinsi..ltls. .necesrElizabeth's Unit of the Trinity

'•opular meeting- <•'..!-' i uh held Monday ;•.'. of Mi v Howard Jerm • :

p Avenue, Mra. Earl Ha:.1 'nr.y \va- elected preaider ' ''ensuinc year. Mrs. 1! 'ii wa.- .named Vice-Presi' ' •Howard .lernce, corrcjj '

ir.ir secretary; Mrs. William 1rc.-irdinp secretary, and '•'(it'oree Robinson, treasurer.

At the business meeting,sidcl over by Mrs. S. M. DemaM '.out-iroinp presiilont, it was dec: 'that the annual Spring lurch' "would be held this year on May --'.nt t h f rl«^*ev*H Tea Room in 1. iBank. The new officers *ill >•'installer! at this time. The arrant -nients are beinE made by a c•'• ••mittee headed liy Mr?. Leon Cav -bell.

Under the dirertian of the vay>and means committee, Mrs. E. il.

..Johnson, Jr., chairman, a "tric-ytr.ay" party fallowed the close ufthe meetinff. Mrs, Devanijy andMr.=. Demarest presided over t:ietea table, while Mi's. Jernee wasassisted a* hostess by Mrs, I«vi: gReinicrs.

acceptance of »

eward for outsandingointed out that an 'A'

ool here is ficowdinglydifficult to win. _

• vaminations beginning

five marking periods t)ll]be exempt from cxami.that subject. Seniors witia C averaRe who ma,,lu.,!tain a 'C class rncord ilsixth marking periodthere are three Weeks u •

ii, seniors who have aver- be exempted.

Robert Anderson

Continued from vti'ir " " 'fornlitv of exVelirnce thri'tipliouttheir careers in school here

The round of even:- f"_v the sen-

Donald Aaroc

Aaron fellA1 ; ,

i a lV. *? h ^ ' c a,n a n c h o r to. wind-ward for there s no depending on

Travellers Are GivenA Bon Voyage Party

And Frank Cenegy, Jr.,

Sail On Saturday

inrs open? tonight with the Senior 1 j n a majorProm in the higrh school gymnasi-um. Informal affairs will "fo'.low.climaxed by Class Night on Friday,

• June 12, in the auditorium ot the"chool, <i program to be staptd byMiss Van Slyke. The BaccalaureateSermon will be delivered^by theRev. Howard Klein, pastor of Trin-

~v " "TJ _ • -ity EpiMapaJ CHurcJi, pn June 11Mr*. KoVCZa, Mrs. CeneeV in the auditorium. Commencement

will follow on the lsth.Mill Melder To Play

V. C. Nicklas, Supervising Prin-cipal of Pchoo's-, w'ill present the

. . • • , . , . class to M. P. Duniira.il, presidentA bon voyosre party aboard the o f t h e B o a r , i 0-f Education. Mr.

Italian liner Rex was ffiven Satur- Punifjan will award the dip! mas |lay to Mrs. Julia Koyaza, Mrs. and Mr. Ferry will present prizesFrank Cenegi,- and Frank^CfneRy. 5}v e n °|U'>,ig'1(

(wi"',f>tjJttgia",]uatinsJr., who sailed for a three months' c ' ia s s will "have a special place onvisit to Czechoslovakia.

Among those attending the party •were:

f ( J i - v m a n •••:. \ '• •

.i-miitics and ,l:,i^

a 'B' rating -ii'.y ••

ubject—fresbtr,:!!-

had other U'..1111;

earnedsuch matter; as physicaland drawing. Anderson ha r

A's in everything except sopho-more English and junior Germanwhere he was riven B.

PraiiM WorkMr. Ferry was hitrh in his praise

fftf Uie accmplishments of thelive students am! iTfVlared th»-»«'tire school fi-el- a pride in theirachievements.

He also p-tdic-.cd it may be'nanv years Inf":1'' another (rradu-:.t :ni chiSs-i will produci so lariri' a

f st-identf wlv have nSlin-

c i a s s w j ] ; h a v e a , f e ; i p

the propram for a piano solo.

*Of

THE RECORDS-MW M«cia- Lifi

Mr. and Mrs. John Gpld, Mrs. J. ^Bopar, Mrs. Julia Balind, Mis? J. f^tt

Balind and Mrs. J. Nemeth of New only sixteen years oldBrunswick; Mr. and Mrs. Michael daughter of Isidnr Ljfshnz ofMosolypo and sons, Ronald and Grei1:: ~tteet.Richard, Mr. and Mrs, John Jacko, P ' a n ' t o ^nt* r,,Mr. and Mrs. Michael N'agy, Mrs. fie u i j s e >

J. Kovacs and John Lesky of Perth t h e h a l L

Amboy; Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel

TIRESONTIME

• ""££

"My Feet NeverHur t Because |Wear Junior ArchPreserver ShoesFrom The Boston"

SHOES ARE FITTED

BY X-RAY HERE

Mother! Why don't you hate four child fitted wltl, ,n

ARCH PRESERVERS? Why Uk« «h«ncet on ckm^, pn,„

ted ttioni? Arch Pr^serv«ri cost n.,

than ordinary »hoei — yet are ici*

conitructed of the bait

Buy your child a pair t

1 'WlU

She has earned a remarknh.erecord in the straight clas

since they are the must important ' Episcopal Church Monday nipht in j e r o w n s -

feature o f your entire face. F i r s t : the parish house. Arrangements; Manniih Type Trailiof all. make a special effort to keep , w c r - c i n charg-f of Miss Winnifrej ' Paris and the United States seethem alert, wide-awake and inter-ested. Suchappeal1.:!).'.

Massane the areas around the jr,-a., D. Harry Ford, while J . B. ; reasons. Judfrinp from the latesteyes with a rich cream each night j y a c k o f B o R o l a w o n t h e radio. j reports the dressmaker suit, so call-to keep them full. 1irm and young . , ,.i :- lp.dir,™ nvpr thp m-innisblookiiifV. Massage for the eye areas , Vvvie winners m the games were: , - '• '«(l.njr oser the mannish

consists of encirclinp the eyes with r Contract Bridge: Mrs. George H. I • '-

B..aud._c.bild.?;si.Nicholas; Mrs. Ix>uisand Mrs. William Siska and son

broken A", save for a B in

Tv,* '»re '^ouihKd : Brennan and Mrs. W. L. Selover. W * " *V* «>" the subject of tail-e\e? pie joutinui aim o r c c l sultji, \ s av Pans, instpad of )l T h i - door prize was won .by F 1 ; l , , a . , ^ivised'ly and for obvious :

Finest, Mrs. John Lazar, Mr. and • m a n I - a ' l n » m l anfho1: l n %™*"r

Mrs. Charles Kov*w» and daughter. C 0 1 j r s t ' : f /«hman drawing hh.- ha,Dolores; Mrs. Vera Sereda, Mary vfv {™r P™ o t L a ' " ' > A w

eye to eye on the subject of tail- Pzothi, Margaret Mosolvpo. Caro- o l , '•'"«»!•'"• 7lem!'-t.1> a n < l n , ' ' u l " ; "• • - - • • " ' ( l ine Koysza, Helen Buda, Michael fd. algebra in addition to the ro-

"Kond-as.. Michael Oomnnick a n ( ) 'l«ired Entrlii-h. history andas.,Frank C'enepry of town.

; of encirclinp the eyes with rthe ftnctr dipped in cream, moving!inward under the eyes ami out-

Rhodes, Mrs. C. H. Rothfuss, Mr.=.. A. 'E. Griffiths, Mrs. Garret Brod-

ward over the lids. Another jrood (jlL,a,)> ^[,. a m i >],.s, Edward Wil-massatre is with the palms of the , i i a m > o n , t

hands over your eyes, eyebrows : Auction Bridge: Mrs. M. B. Sul-an<l forehead. You know how the i ] ; v n n Mrs. Clarence R. Davis, Mrs.eyes of the older woman seem to • r jU ( r h u u i K ] e y i Mrs. C. Braun' Mrf.recede and become small and dim. ' - ' —You mustn't let it happen to you!

In checkinsr up on the blouse •and skirt situation I find that the ]lingerie blouse in frilly or fenii- |nine effects is. the leader. A srreat |deal of embroidered organdie isbeing worn, the sleeves beingshort. It 's the short sleeve that isthe season's bust so these blouses

TEACHER HONORED

try.

Missibirthday on last February IT. Sheis a niece of Montgomery Balfour

Arthur Pettit, William Thompson, conform to the short and sweet Avenue.

dessert bridge given by Mr*. K. M.elm at her home on Rnlgeda le 1 »

\ a ' ^ t « ^ > l / s A t ^ 4 f\ h^ n I * *\ w j « * ^ 1 I j i A , « i i . n «« B-i ; '

Don't squint. If you need glassespet them at once. They are notnearly as unattractive as tired, sickeyes'with crow's feet, puffy lids,bloodshot eyes and dark circles. If

" you do not need glasses, then takescientific eye exercis«s to relievestVaifi. Try not to expose your eyesto bright,' direct lights, wind anddust.

Reit FrequentlyRest your eyes frequently, oven

' thoufrh they do lint feel tired.

Fan-tan :_Mrs^ Ernest E. Ray-j formula, sweet in the sense thatthey are as often as not edged witha pleated ruffle or same suchtouch.

In analyzing the

njond and Miss Bertha Huber.

SORORITYTOEXHIBITSigma Alpha Phi To Com-

plete Handiwork Tuesday

A special meeting will be held \ them, it is paslels, with yellow firstTuesday nt the hume of Mr*. Grace \ (with navy or black costumes);V. Brown. Main Street, by the | "iirht blue next, always with black,

yg accessoriesworn by smartly dressed women,it should be mentioned that white

gloves are in the majority, andthat when contrast is adopted for

Alpha Phi Sorority of the• Th,Change their focus by elosinc t h e | F ' " 1 Congregational Chun-li

eyes and pressing your palms liK'ht- purpose of the meeting is t-ly over them for a minute or twoor by lettmtf them drift to somefar horizon whenl you have beenrending or doing nny work thatre(|uires close attention. .

When yoiir eyes feel tired orwhen they have been exposed todust, wind or brislu sijn for sev-eral* hours, wash thorn with asoothing eye lotion or solution ofboric acid. When you can spare afew minutes durinir the day, liedown and place moist compresses, j - ~" ' - - _ ^ .over ymiT eyes to r»fmh and eleai'.iformB} un 0 , c ^ i u l l o r iws- if ,them. This treatment is also_ splen- j e(, A v i o i i n e t j , o v v n t h a t h a s

plete the handiwork exhibit whichthe sorority will submit at a con-vention to be held May 23 at CampWawayanda.

The final meeting of the seasonwill be held by the unit on May

S ill b d d h

L'loves matching a hat or hat-tjrim-minjj, and a mauve-pink, extremelyattractive with a matching woolenfrock worn under a navy coat.

Beauty in Your Fingers

Xails as well as faces are theSup- w'ill b ^ e d Z ^ ; l-fter fC* re^lar „ . « ^ Don,

business transacted at the Home-stead, Echo Lake Park. A nomin- jating co'mmittte composed of Mis.'

Pender will report at that

>

oil-and-glycerine niassaije

Edward Klim I» Given ^;!'a' ^ ^ ^ ^Party At Lichti Home . Mj^Yifshitz's. save that Mis- Cro-

it r i , ,-,. , T ' j izier's only B in a' major courseMr... Edward Khmra of Linden l c a m e j n f , . e . = h m a n a l s , t . b l , , , S h e a]

Avenue was guest of honor a t _ a ; h a ( , a f m R o n e . p o i n t m i n o r

icourse. freshman de^it'iiingresting part of her rcc-

ord'^ha.- been her \Iboru'ling' of German clashes forwhich she received no credit sinceher schedule was already filledwith the required number ofcourses. As a result. Mis* Crozierhas a record of straight A's in fouryears of history, four of English,four of Latin, three of mathema-tics and two each in French and

No. One who attended, MatildaGanhwaite. Mr?. M. Munn, RoseSidson. Mr*, riinton Kennaday andMrs. John McDonnell made high

HORSEYMotors, Inc.

fW & Fayette Sts.I'citli Amboy, N, J,

"Always A Little More For Your Money

BOSTON SHOE Co.,182 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY I

QUICK LOANSOn 1/ouA OWN

fioiiKhold not e*ty balpiyou GET EVEN with yourbi l l , but holpl y°v KEfEVENLAik oboul MO^EYMANAGEMENT,' d buJjflplan that will rwlly !>•)[>row 'o fl*t whot you wontfrom your Incomt.

Single perfonf or xnarTied cn-.r '. •sre eligible. Loans mads vr.'.*. iwithout iurulture ot antomoi.i>».Repay in small initiUm»nt»,

REASONABLE RATESon a n loon t

Call, writa or phosa today—«•'/' ra private iaterriew. No obllg;;._-_!

H 0 U b L H U LLl CORPORATIONPerth Amboy National Bank Buildlnj, SUth .floor

J13 State St., Cor. New Brunswick Ave., Perth AmhyTelephone: Perth Amboy 4-JS6J

Llci-iinc No. 611Monthly charge J'j't on unpaid balance!

LOCALLY M A N A G E D OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL f i l l sHouukM Fi«jn« wnmr, EDGAR A. GUEST m - H , - ,vlttn" ami SHERLOCK HOLMES « ( * fefci'J '• i

JEAN WOODWARD SINGSWITH NORTHFIELD CHORUS

Next Sunday afternoon when the German,student.- of Northfield Seminary Mi»» Lillian Witov*ltyand Muuni Hermon School unite Mi.« \ \ itovsky. who i? 17. is thein the annual Sacred Convert of daughter of Morn- \\ ltowky of ithe Northtield Schools, broadcast Oak Tree Road. I.-ehr.. She has pre- ion the red network of the National P*r("l >n the Acadt-imc c.irncu.um :

Broadcasting Co. from 3:30 to 4, f°>' Bryn Mawr. !among the choristers will he Jeanne Her only, 'B' was in plane eco-;B. Woodward. Fairview Avenue, ' metry. In a min-r cour-e. hand-!Colonia. craft, -he rt-i-eive1! one ( . Other-;1 - — — — wi*e her record thrnUifh consists j

. , . , , of unbidken A 'J . Three yeai'f of1

made with it do not break down ^iL..-,,.c m : i ;hemat i , , aiui"Germanwith variations in climate or s t o r - ' a r c ;n c |U l ie,l in h-r cov.:-«i-. She is!

As to the massage, here 3 ho-w:After you have shaped the nails,

Anderton, AaroeAnderson and Aaroe, who hap-dip them into a warm nail-oil bath| t o b , per?unal friends,

for two or three minutes to soften... _ . - , ' , ..,-_,, . .

I ed comment is the one that has a

\\<i with your manicure is the : for two or three minutes to soften1 them. Then massage each one for

icant well

r answer.There are any number'of good

nail and cyticle preparations on

were recognized Failthe rilliant >t

ilS tWUthe

h! to work the soothing lubrdid for removing dark circles un-

der the eyes I Vari1 about the shoulders or can th.- market1 whicli you can use, ' i , ,Dark circles or puffy « « « » n - i k w i i r a i u r i , , | i s i f . 1 , i : i , ) ] 1 , ! l . i i v . practically all of which have sooth-' ing cuticle and stimulate the cir-

der the eyes that do not yield to l j n s h o u l t k . r e n t i l t i h . b a r e . H „,,_, a m i penetrating qualities, culation For extra-good results,intelligent care should be reterre.11._, ., h l . a u l i ! , l ] (lt.L.^ ,.\.,^ t l l e Thev do not evaporate ..r turn ran- repeat this massage at night before-

r nWo,-,*,, nr «'p • ' lutue-like qiJii'Y.' ci.l.'For that reason prepiiratii.ni retiring.

NEW JERSEY'S LARGEST FLOOR COVERING

C o v e r All F l o o r s Now!

SAVINGS UP TO 40%The values we're offering during this sale put first quality floor c<

in the reach of all. Don't wait-largest assortment in the city.

come in today—and make your selectn

to a competent physician or eyedoctor. In tho meantime you canmake them less noticeable b_v usinga powder foundation, a delicateblending of rouge and. a good com-plexion powder.

VALENTINE NINE EARNS

26 RUNS U M , FRAMES

General Ceramic; Collapses

Before Stellar Play

Oi Local Plant

That classy M. D. Valentine &iBros, baseball team is obviously alittle too hot fur any ordinary in-dustrial club tn handle. The pointindicated when -the lineup listedsuch glistening names as SwackDunham and ,Ioe Daniels, becamea certainty Saturday when theWoodhridge brick;makers rolled upa faintly impossible total of 20runs in four innings against Gen-eral Ceramics.

At that, the Valentines wereblanked in one inning! The finalscore was 26-2.

The lineups: fV a l r a l i u n I2III «.«jn-ral I rruuil . .

sih. r li.' ,il, i- I,G'Miana. d 4 2 fi.n..,v. 11, i 1 1TVbam. 3h SItarly. lb 4Hyb*rk, r.f 6Tlnekl, «» 5Daniels, 1( 4

HOW IT BEGANI enter

S Kit li: :4'Hdiiiil,

Sablne , p > '• " L'JoskC l n s k l . 2i> l 1 2 i

Tota l* •• 31 it 84|TotalB# c o r a by liiiilng"-

'' ft

Gton O t . t a m K a 1 » <> i » - -Home runs—Rjbeok, Dunham, J.i-

gagor. Thr^6-bav£ blt)i^vXJ.Uu)elh -.

SCARFS IN F O j U U L WEAR

Evening gowns that allow thewearer to crest* attractive pif-tares have appeal. Gowns, for «*•apiple that have scarf* «nd panels•list d«vetof < from the «h»uld*riand can be manipulated in variQiwway*. This make* it powtble to

:s wt-r. j ) t r e:

yepr.-T!uif in1

;i", er '•,Hfr.s-tl

• A h i ! - •'M i . l i : , !; !: .~ '.:e:.'.i:ir i

e lii-cu^si'd in this ;>r!y in the current i;iu-y are IT years.old. ;,t-rf.!ed in chtmi-try ! jw: Aaroe intends to 'latr Polytechnic Invi!.'!-r-'in has pn*:ar- :I'.i.'V ' " ' i l l e j r e . ' i

;-•*.!: i'.i^h honor.- in.i: r:LLi; vim. including

th* ipowtble

i oi a "to '

GYMNASIUM»H THE QPUDEN AGE OP^ W E N 9 ATHLETIC GAMESWERE HIGHLY REGARPEDAHD ALL ATHLETES WERENUDE. FROM GREEK"&YMN05(NUDE) CAME "6YMNAS10H(^LACE OF ATHLETIC E*ERC\S»N*f HE NUDE.) HENCE OOR V^ORP*©<MNA5tUMf*r0R A HMA. FOR WTHLET

J

EVERYBODYLIKES A WINNER!I lut's why imart women lilte to

ihup at Sun Cleer

kcyd.

36 Rug

SALE ON $1 00

SCAMPERS

\i-:\v nii.Hlc \ -.T) l.Htfnt 14<*Hl» . . . l.lkr a Sklr

lNCOMtTAXINCOME TAXES WERE INAUCO-RATED UNDER. TttE PHARAOHSOf ANCIENT eGVPT TO OFFSETEXTRAVAGANT GOVERNMENT

) EXPENDITURES.

SALE ON

BLOUSES

llrauil

Oritaudlrit - - -lullea - - Sltba

lie t-'tlinlKxpcrll) hi in"Even-Pul"Foundation

$3.50All MitilrU

SALE ON

HOSIERY

r i UK .tll.lvI nil KaahluurilV Hi. till IU (tllC

SUN-CLEER112 Smith St. ITl.

^,* Sensational

Bargain

Slightly

Imperfect

9.12

Felt Bate

Sit, Inch

Felt Base

Runnersfcyd.

Ax all otter

FullyGuaranteed

INLAID

Linoleum

EXTRA

SPECIAL

Ret. $1.79 Val YD.

ALL SUMMER RUGS REDUCED

'.95 Che«rful, Cat>| LookingFIBRE RUGS SharplyReduced For Tlui Sale.

4i4A

M.airei

LINOLEUM - CARPET FAQORY ODTI203 Smith St. EVKCS PERTH B

Page 3: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

\

PAGE THBEft

Church C. I GroupsIn Mothers^ Tribut^

| Presbyterian Units HoldServices; Jeanne Horfts-

by Is h^Charge^ H.itit Mother's Day tribute' . i,, were held Sunday in the

1'iTsliyterian Church under•in^ici-s of the Senior, Inter-

,1,. and Junior Christian Kn-! ,„• Societies. Mrs. Earl H. De-

. poured and Miss Jeannel,v president of the Junior,, 'conducted th« meeting.

;!.,". ,',iwning number on the pro-' u l i B ,. community singing of

I ,,rd Is In His Holy Temple,"' ,,'.,] liv the "Lord's Prayer"

;:u> hymns, "Blert Be The TieHinds." and "Jesus Savior

, \i(, " Next came a responsivev Entitled, "The Attitude of

HHIIIC" nfter which the serip-" ,r.mn ws» read. Mm Lillian

nnd "In Her Hood of Blue."' •:, Josaph L. Hewitt-delivered

.•tier's Day address, a duet en-•Fjiith of Our Mothers" was

.,v Karl Hannum Devanny, Jr.;|ii)rh Hnrgess, and "Stories of

Mothers were read by Miss

;•,. program concluded with thei',,),iy singing "Lord Thy Chil-

dni'le nnd Keep."

l ib Honors Mothersit A Tea On Sundayjorothy McElhenny Enter-tains C.V. Unit; Musical

Program OfferedMother's Day tea was held

,v l,y the C. V. Club at the, i,f Miss Dorothy McElhenny,, Avenue. Miss MeElhe'nny\I, s Klizttbcth Donnelly pour-

, ,| each guest of honor was•lii-d with arose.

.. interesting program was prc-.1, starting with a cherus•,L- "My Moon," accompaniedli < Norma Chase. Miss Ange-! ninliarili read the verse "The

..- Klch that Would Not Do As1 .< Hid" and a piano solo was

1 by Viola Krysko, followedrecitation of "Guardian Anv Miss Chase.

',..•'.,innanicd by Miss LombarMi lionnelly and Miss Grace

,: ,,,,,- a duet and Mi.ss Maryi,;,,;, roncluded the programth , axophonp solo, "Silverir,.;,'i. Among The Gold."

Bicycle Styles Miscellaneous ShowerTendered Bride-To-BeMiss Ruth Wester Is Guest

Of Honor At A PartyIn Hopelawn

In hon.ir of her approachingman-inKi- in Knoeh Chrrin of Free-hold, Mii; Uuth Wester was ten-dered a emprise shower at thehome of Jin, M. Stockel, Hope-lawn. One df the features of theparty was the program of pianomusic played by Miss NatalieKlinssen of Brooklyn.

Included on the guest list Were:Mis. ('. Jensen, Mrs. F. Larsen,Mrs. II. ThuHeson, Miss AmandaI.arsen, Mrs. U. Ilernanscii, Kath-erini1 and Helen Keitenhaek, Mrs.A, Webster. Mrs. C Christiansen,Mrs. S. Anderson. Mrs. Scott Ma-cm, Mrs. .1. Sorenson, Elsie andKleiuioi1 Sorenson, Katherine SkoV,Lillian Hwoyerv Mrs.... GcavaaoaMrs. ]). Wendell, Mrs! P. Fimiani,Mrs. W. Clark, Mrs. E. SorensonMr... C. Stockel, Elizabeth and•Icvmctte Stockel, Ruth Seaton ofIVrth Amhoy,

Mrs. T.' Eliaasen, Natalie Elias-•cn of Brooklyn,' Miss May Palko,Mrs. W. Thompson, Mrs. J. Friii.Kdith and Anna Friis, Mrs. S, Pe;

ion, Mrs. A. Stockel, Mrs. HolttAnna Holt; Mrs. A. Clausen andMrs. (\ Clausen of Fords, Gladys"laiisen of Elizabeth, Mrs. C. Lar-son, Mrs. A. Brejns and DaisyRroms of Metuchen, Mrs. V. Jen-sen and Sylvia. Jenjeji of Iselin,Mrs. M. Stockel, Anna Carla, So-phie Stnckel and Ruth Jensen.

Th.iy Mi

party.:ho»ini, .pi aceTree 1;

Then and now—'96 and '36. The tweed bloomer costume oft/iss Doris Terhune, left, weighs stx pounds, whili the Mi, Airycloth cuhtte oj Miss Barbara Crim, right, weighs fifteen ounces.These two New York society girls are ardent'bicycle fans.

COLONIA NEWS—Mr. and'Mrs. Carl Evans of

West Kill Road entertained iVcards on Saturday evening, Theirguests were Mr. and Mrs. BancroftLivingston of Vijlley Road, Mr,and Mrs. It. P. Wollf and Mr. andMrs. Halpti Daniel of I'lainneld.

—The Qilonia Citizen's Incor-porated sponsored a lecture at theCommunity Centre by RertrnmFowler, Thursday night. Mr. Fow-ler's subject \Yits_ "This Ration'sRecovery Through Simple Practi-cal Community Spirit" by which heattempted to show how even assmall a community as Colonia mayprofit personally us well us public-ly by this method of a distribution

Jersey Astro-physical o'f the market's recognized abutv-hold its regular month- j ,|am-e. Mr. Fowler is also the au-t'ltlight at the Perth , thor of "Co-Operation In Ameri-

>ECTROSCOPY' TOPIC^trophyaicits Meet Tonight

At Amboy Library

MRS. CLIFTON WINSDark Hor»e Priie AtHeld By Itelin ClubPari

meeting »f the Holy Nnmc Societyof Our Lndy nf Pear* Church,Fords.

j John Sutoh «•«•: rhsirmnn of nr-jrangementsiinit IMI:, itiuiiment was'provided by HII'IHIUTS of the llff

lark horse nriie Wai won rention Division.Warren Clifton at the card j•'bl iii conjunction with aHI luncheon, by the Wom-1> nf Isclin. The affair took

lihrnry rooms on Oak

Wii.neri m the card games wereMrs. ,Min Morris, Mrs. Leo-Chrls-tensoi\ Mi-. J. Schneider, Mrs.George Wonil. Mrs. Clifton andMrs. .1 .hnston.

--Mrs. Lyle B. Ueeb of DoverRoad left last week for a visit atthe winter home of her husband'sIWM-wits HI Suv-asoto, Florida,ccntly had as their guests Mr. andMrs. Arnold of Bogota, Mr. andMrs. Russet Davis of PalisadesPark ,and Miss Gladys Toekel ofRidgeBeM Park.

—Mrs. Aubrey Woodward anddaughter, Marjorie, of FairviewAvenue have returned from a weekend spent with relatives in Brook-lyn-

—Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis ofFairview Avenue had as their guestlast week Mrs. Lewis' sister, MissMaude Craven, who has returnedto her home.in Yineland.

—Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Peck ofNorth Hill Road were visitors atAsbury Park Sunday.

—The Fairview Stamp Clubmet at the home of Helen Hofga-

Fords Guild SponsorsPiiblkCard Party

St. John's Unit ConductsAffair In AuditoriumOi Keasbey School

i>hn V.anios wop the door prizooffered hy tbf St. John's Guild ofFords at a public caret .party con-ducted Friday in the auditorium ofthe Kcnsbey School.

Winners in the various ganjeswere: Pinochle, John D. Snbo, Jos-eph Vargo, William Gloff, A. Sch-midt, Helen Smalley, Frederich H,Deik, Lillian Fullerton, Mrs. E.MundjVW. J. 'Harvey, R. Fuller-ton, Mrs. Anna Dey, C. Schuster,John Vutnos, Mary Smalley nndW. Bertram; rummy, WilliamWargo, Esther Mundy, GeorgeWargo, Charles Wargo, AgnesFrick, Mary Jensen, J. Baumgar-ten, Sophie Fisher, Edith Wargo,Mrs. J. Kentos, Hazel Fullerton,William Nagengart, P, Andrew,

(.Mrs, Jebn Ywuov Marearet J^agyand Irene Toth.

Kan-tan, George Fullerton, SueLeimpeter, Agnes Schmidt, ViolaFullerton, Mrs. Stephen Faezak,Mrj. R. Fullcrton, Mrs. FrsrterlukDeik, Ida Fullerton, and KathrynDrennan; euchre, H. Fullerton nndMrs. Margaret Quish; non-players,Mrs, J. Ulbrick and Mrs. MaryBertram.

U WR! Of YOUR

BRflhESTRUST YOURs'TOUfiT"

RELINING • ADJUSTMENTS -DRUM RF.I ACING -

TROUBLES CORRECTED

flAHWAYBRAKE SERVICE

S. J. GASSAWAY, Prop.6 Yrt. with Blur Cooir, Newtrk57 M«,n SI. RAHWAY

Phonr 7-1511

I. MANN & SONOptometrists

HOURS

Daily10 to 12,2 to 5 and

7 to 8Wednesday

10 to 12only

89 SMITH ST. Tel. 4-2027PERTH AMBOY, NEW JERSEY

SATURDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Lawrence ofFairlawn Sunday and with "tftelfiaughter Betty motored to AsburyPark.

The Women's co-operattve com-mittee of the C. C. I. met Thurs- - - „ , .•lay afternoon with Mrs; Frank jsang of St. George Avenue Friday

night. Those present were MarjorieWoodward, Margaret Knauer, JanePatterson, Frances Ann Lewis andPatricia Long.

•—Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Beaujonand daughter, Laura Jean, andtheir guest, Miss Ruth Morris of

Pattison in charge at the Commun-ity Centre. A dime was distributedto each member of the committeeby Mrs. Pattison.

Mrs. Charles Knauer will behostess at 'a cant party to bfheld Thursday afternoon at theCommunity Centre for the benefit i Highland Park were New Yorkoi the building fund. Members City visitors on Saturday,present were Mrs. Margaret Snule, "•pesent gMrs, Arthur Nelson, Mrs. Aubery

k P i

| t i i - n

1'iiUic Library at 8:00 o'-Irvin Lader will discus*i-cnpy." Th« Perth Amboy

i iioul is lending one of itsin]ics for the demonstra-

: lihlie is cordially invited to'lu'se monthly meetings.

SEWARENG. 0. P.Ifoung Republicans Plan Se»-| sion At Community House

i- ' i xt regular meeting of thein1. Voung Republican Unit

' ' held nt the Community• ' 'i May 2 2 .'!.•• last session, held at the• •: Mrs. John Surick, the

• i- wi'i'u Ralph Clements andWilliam Kibbe, both promin-

: 'l.i- Young Republican mov«-: Middlesex County.

COLONIA NOTES

Woodward; Mrs. Frank Pattison,Mrsv Sidney Beaujon, Mrs. CarlFiVans, Mrs. Charles Knauer and

| Mrs. Christopher Christopherson.—Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fletch-1- —Mias Anne Irving of Old Lin-

er and son, Billy, were visitor!:Metuchen on Sunday.

St. George Road were New YorkCity yisitors on Sunday.

—Miss Caroline Cone of DoverRoad was hostess We.dne.sday eve-ning tii the Railway Colonia Neigh-bornoti Gardeners. A flower showwus held with entries by membersonly, of Spring flower arrange-ments. Those attending were Mr.and Mrs. Walton Smith, Mr. andMrs, John Anderegg, Mr. a-.d Mrs.W. H. Rollin.son, Mr. and Mrs. Ar-thur B. Hull, Mrs. Helen SavageCone, Mr. and Mrs, William Peter-son, and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wil-kvrson Si'.

—Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Saywellof Fairview Avenue entertained

' n ! coin Highway will be the guest ofMrs. May Drury for the month of

at Worcester, Mass., after

-Mr. and Mrs. John Maas anddaughter, Joan, were the guests ofMrs. Matts' parents, Mr. and Mrs.Otto G b f tf Y k Cit lweek.

pareof tfp ,

Otto Grube of tfew York City lastk "

which she will" go to her summerhome in Long Island, Maine.

—Mrs. William Godson and Mrs.Stanley Smith of Old.Lincoln High-way were Newark visitors on.Tues-day.

—Mr. and Mre. William Farr ofHoffman Boulevard had as theirguest on Sunday Mrs. Lillian Can-ning of New York City.

•—Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mades ofHighfield Road entertained guestsfrom New York City on Tuesdayevening.

—Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.Knauer of Fairview Avenue re-

•Mrs, Rudolpn Bartz of Fair-view Avenue attended the banquetof the Rahway branch of the Catholic Daughters of America.

—Miss Katherine Wood ofDover Road is visiting in Chicago,where she will also attend some arlclasses at the Chicago Art Institute.

DEEGAN IS SPEAKERPerth Amboy Lawyer Ad-dresses Fords' Holy Name

Joseph F. Deegan, prominent'erth Amboy lawyer, was the guest j

speaker Monday at the annual

Guard Your Eyesight!VISIT OUR OPTICAL DEPTI

Expart Optical SerriedEYEGLASSES ON CREDIT

Dr. M. Roochvarg, Optometriit96 Smith St., PeHh Amboy

DR. CHAS. SAM, Optometriit111 Broad St. ELIZABETH

Mi- Gertrude McAndrews of• • Hill Road entertained the• i i Stamp. Club Friday night,li a Treasure Hunt after whichM'-liments were served followed

: .lining. Her guests were:.:.i Jean Beaujon, Geraldine

••An, Dorothy Ryan, Eugenepi.( . Henry Ijivin, Warren Duy

Bancroft Livingston.

ReduceYOURAUTO.

• Are payments on your cartaking too much of yeur in-come ? Then see us .about re-financing the balance BO as togiva you smaller payments.We can probably arrange togive you some cash In addi-tion, in case you need it.Come in and let i» help youwith your money problem!.

ENN PERSONAL LOAN CO., J. Banktn* Dept. License #676SOU SMITH * BTAVB OTHBBTS\nr United (Whelan'a Drug Store)

Pfcon* P»rtli Amboy 4-OWTM O N T H L Y R A T E _ i H %

> Steam Wave, $3.50Frederic's Personality

Croquignole, $5.00Short Bob, $4.00

Combination Spiral andCroquignole, $2.50, $3.50

and $5.00

MARGIE 'S477 RAHWAY AVE.

W00DBRIDGE 8-1218

BITTING'blue coal'

[LOWEST PRICES FOR]THE FINEST QUALITY^

SUPERIOR SERVICEPHONE 8-0012

FOHCED-FEEDLUBRICATIONand OIL COOLINGand OIL COThe»e exclusive fcanuts ofthe G-E seiled-in-jtctlTHRIFT-UNIT o e i oquieter operation, loogtrlifeud lower opertiing cost.04 IHIin-UNtT requires DOitteption, not er«n oiling.Aviiltble ia all models.Now gi ve j "double the cold"lad uses even Itti currentthan ever. It Coit^Ua to Own a G-El

TEL. P. A. 4-2220

OPEN EVENINGS 282 HOBART ST.

PERTH AMBOY

Reynolds Dept. Store136 SMITH STREET

p^RTH AMBOYp . A. 4-2800

Service Hardware81 MAIN STREET

WOODBRIDGE

GENERAL $ EIECTRIC

LEON'S

3 1 S T ANNIVERSARY SALEFeaturing Quality Furnitureat Great Reductions

All Imt week ihoppert poured into Wil-liam's to see what the excitement WAS• bout. They came . . . They taw . . .They marvelled . . . They boughtOur sale positively endi tomor-row. Stocks have been replen-ished. Freih, new valueshave been added. Everydepartment is featuringmany saving specials.You owe it to yourself .to get your share of thebargains.

future DEiimy MountNO DEPOSIT REQUIRED

THIS HISTORY-MAKING RECORD BREAKING

CLOSINGOUT SALE

INVOLVING THE ENTIRE

'25,000 STOCKOF THE J. BAREN STORE, PHILADELPHIA, PA.

WINDS-UP AT 10 P.

FUEL AND FURNACE OH.HIGHEST QUALITY FOR EVERY

"• MAKE OF BURNER

PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE

PREMIER OIL & GASOLINE SUPPLYNew Brunswick Ave. COMPANY RAHWAY, N.J

Phone Rah. 7-1263 - Night Phone Hah. 7-0424-R

TOMORROW NIGHT-PLENTY OFBARGAINS LEFT THAT ARE GOING AT

AUCTION PRICES

SMITH AT MADISON-PERTH AMBOY

Page 4: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

PAGE FOUR FRIDAY. AY 15, 1936WOODBRIDGK

la-

Published Every Friday by

WOODBRIDGE PUBLISHING CO.Woodbridge, N. J.

T.Upttone, WoodbriJfe 81710

Subscription $1.50 Per Year

HUGH WILLIAMSON KELLY,

Editor and Publisher

CHARLES E. GREGORY ... Managing Editor

Entered as second-cla&s matter March 13,1919. at the Postoffict at Woodbridge, N. J.,under the Act of March 3, 1879.

'considerably hifrher than that accorded to

those who perform the back-breaking pick

and shovel work, simply because their po-

litical value is hipht-r.

The local Denvcratic organisation i«

charged with the responsibility of making

employment recommendations. It is suppos-

ed, theoretically, to know the habit and

background of prospective workers.

It has certainly made a farce and a dis-

graceful burlesque "f it? responsibility and

ff it think? for a minute that its degrading

demonstration won't i't1 a boomerang in,

November it is. going to h-ave an awful

awakening.

A Good hiceint •--A Splendid Start ' All hail, the Repubitean Club of Hill-

It is heartening, but'not .highly signifi- ^ e m neighboring Union County, a newcant, that the local relief load dropped by organization which h'a? set^a revolutionary

• 12 per cent during the first week of the ad- precedent. This body has decreed all can-minbtration of Director .John Omenheiser. didates for political office wishing to ad-

The clients represented in this per cent- dress.the club, must pay $1 for the privi-age would undoubtedly have been dis- ]ege!. * 'charged by the ERA, too, had it remained The Club intends to use the money thusin existence. Mostly, they are families in conected to help defray the cost of rent,which at least one member has obtained heat a n d other necessities. The decision toemployment in private industries and there- impose the charge was reached after a re-fore have become self-supporting. We are c e n t meeting when eighteen candidates ap-advi9ed that the duration of this effipIoT-"peared and"sp6Ve so lofig there was no timement is exceedingly questionable and that ieft for transacting club business.ere summer ends it may be over. Unless an- \f this precedent can be popularizedother opportunity is presented, they will be,and other organizations gotten to followback on the relief rolls. suit not only would there be less political

We can be gratified, however, that di- hot air put into circulation, but what poli-rector Omenheiser was sufficiently alert to tical phrases are broadcast would be ofsegregate and eliminate from public sup- higher calibre than customary under theport these no longer needing such aid, If,present freedom oJLth§.jiirwaye_B for politi-this*is an indication of the type of adminis- c a] gaD> People, and we include politicianstration we are to have in Woodbridge j n this, grouping for present purposes, al-Township, we can rest easily in the knowl- w a v s s e t a greater value upon somethingedge that we are providing only when, if for which they must pay. *

and as provision is necessary.The municipality is hard put to meet! ^ ^ D ; 8 f l p p o i n f m e n t

Governor Hoffman's address Friday

WE DON VCA2E WHAT )HlS\'.AUO SAVl-Trl^b \

HE STARTEDIN AT ELM

NE1?VE.' WHAT$AHECk. VTAINTT

THROU6H 8AYTVICOU6H )STREET PIPEAT PIPEALLTH

WAV.'ATFACTOCV

ip (TOON TRAIN1

*mmA

BACK TO VESTEgpftf- PUBUQjJEfiO NO1

SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy CHARLES L GREGORY

Wrong!I won't be lonj? now, as the politicians are won' «

t,,, -vi.t'n they are asked about a cut in taxes, before,,'.', ppople are going to know whether the monthly.-, ..-••' is going to get shoved skyward. <• ' •

The Board of Public Utility Commissioners, end,,-•;. the power-to have the final say in such, thinjr,ut to render a decision on the petition of the Perth .\>

., (las Light Company to revise its schedule so tha>• :-v;ller consumers'will pay more, and the larger bm,,>, -«. A number of pretty desultory hearings have been i.. •ii which the gas company swore to its sanctimony ;

,-liiiddered at the prospect of being questioned in thi-

legitimate requirements. It can go much

farther to perform this duty, however, ifit can continue to weed out promptly all•who cannot qualify in every respejct to ob-tain public help.' We are depending uponMr. Omenheiser entirely to thus protect theinterests not only of the Township but ofthe worthy indigent.

Interesting Bat DisappointingHighly interesting was the result of the

survey conducted by this newspaper of theplans, hopes and aspirations of the mem-bers of the senior class of the WoodbridgeTownship High School.

All of the professions have their parti-sans and nearly every one of the possibil-ities of the workaday business world havebeen explored by the outgoing class. Deci-Bions which have been reached are so defin-ite as to indicate that real achievement isin prospect for several of the boys and girlswho after next month begin the most diffi-cult phase of thejr lives—making a careerfor themselves.

We cannot help but fee} sorry that pub-lic life attracted not a single senior. Gov-ernment, we know, has become an unat-tractive field because of the influenceswhich control it and which will continue tocontrol it for some time to come. This willbe particularly tru* unless new and betterinfluences are injected. Tlje bnly source ofsuch betterment is the youth of the countryand we trust in time that the young menand women going out into the world willone day feel this responsibility and acceptit.

must have been a bitter disappointment tothe voters of New Jersey who elected himas their Chief Executive,

He had promised a frank and completediscussion of his participation in the Haupt-mann and Wendel cases but instead deliv-ered an abusive, political harangue. Onone point, however, he was clear, He strivesearnestly to be elected next Tuesday as aDelegate-at-Large to the Republican Na-tional Convention over his opponent, Frank-lin W. Fort. ;

Mr. Hoffman has been singularly silentover his activities to prove Hauptmann wasnot guilty of kidnaping and murdering theLindbergh baby and thousands of peoplewho voted for him, utterly dismayed overhis unprecedented conduct, must (haveeagerly awaited an explanation. He^musthave had none because certainly he offered

BOOKS A N D THINGS• » »

At The Barron Public Library

AND THEY SAID.Wli*t doe<

, Murder Case." "The Kf-nnel Mur-der Case," "The Scarab Murder

SOME MYSTERY THRILLS

ON LIBRARY SHELVESMurder! Mystery! Detectives!! Edgar "WaTla'cT^TrTe" CrrmsoTi-?

Police! Stop! Look! Your hair isstanding on end! Why? You'vebeen reading some of the bookslisted below, or some of the manyothers like them that are on theLibrary shelves.

Earl Derr Bijrgera — "CharlieChan Carries On', "Chinese Par-rot," "House Without A Key." •

Agatha Christie—"Man in theBrown Suit," "Murder of RogerAckroyd," "Seven Dials Mystery."

J. S. Fletcher — "Behind theMonocle," "The Investigators,""The Wrist Mark."

Harold MacGrath — "Blue Ra-jah Murder," "Green Complex,""Yellow Typhoon."

E. Phillips Oppenheim — "TheMan from Sing Sing," "Miss

! Brown of X Y 0," "Stolen Idols."Mary Roberts Rinehart — "The

Circular Staircase," "The Door,"'Sight Unseen and Tne Confes-lirin."

Sax Rohmer—"Day the WorldEnded," "She Who Sleeps," "Trailof Fu Manchu."

S. S. VanDine — "The Bishop

Circle," "Sanders of the River,""White Face."

Carolyn Wells — "The Clew ofthe Eyelash." "The Doomed Five,""Fuller's Earth."

THIS WEEKYEARS AGO

May

At the great risk, ,1 suppose, o£ being taken ovi,- .\ the interests I took luncheon the other day with » en-.;,of representatives of the #as works. They were disti!: -nice people but I surmise they bepame a little imp;,- ..-with my narrow point of view about the eleemosynar -.tributes of their employers. I just could.not unders'i ,:try as I might when they we're so kind as to stay so 1 , . jhave an extra cup of coffee, how there could possih"! •„.any charity in tacking a few cents on the gas bill ,--.,-.month of hundreds of people who could hardly pa, -..,current rate.

My objection to their proposal, as I pointed r,; .,i them as clearJy as I could, is three-fold and regard!. ..•what the Utility Commission says I am going to stick •

1 * *| • • In the-ftr«*t pla«M think #>is is the Frong time.tu:.,.,,' the price of anything, particularly when the victims .,- „increase can't shop around and see if they can't get :, .gain somewhere as they would in the mat of a can of to.matoes or a bunch of celery. In Woodbridge and Car1. •

'and Perth Amboy, they must take the Perth Amh(,:. : ;,Light Company's gas, pay the price that is fixed for ;• :

! what's more, like it.Secondly, I have never been unable to understa: ,'.

UntiUthey do there is little for which wecan hop! in the way of improved, inspiredconduct of public affairs.

none. .He made no effort to escape the grosa

imposition upon his office that is the Wen-del case, promoted as it was by his friendsand confidantes and reeking as it does withfraud, kidnaping and the procurement offalse testsimony. He refused to become ex-cited over the absence of the indicted Par-ker, Jr. and his strongest words were thathe and the others involved showed "per-haps an overenthusiastic desire to save thelife of Hauptmann."

It is pretty unimportant to New Jerseygenerally whether Harold Hoffman orFranklin Fort is one of its four delegates-at-large to the Republican convention. Onthis point, the World-Telegram declaredthat i'if that is th,e Governor's first interest,that measures the Governor." What should

A Farce And A Disgrc|c«If a|ny group is safe thia year for the

Democratic ticket 4-"local; State antl* Na>-tional—it ought to pe the WPA foremen.

1B is doubtful, even in the crazy days ofa few years back, that Woodbridge Town-ship ever (saw such ruthless and wantonwaste of public funds that it sees now in theemployment of this select gentry by thegovernmentally-subsidized Works ProgressAdminist|ation. Professional chisellers, in-citers of class hatred, political leeches—allare represented in,the choice list of prefer-red workers on loaal projects.

These so-called foremen are known tobe selected for their worth to the ticket orif not for that, for their nuisance value. Acasual inspection of practically any job^nowin progress will reveal those who fit neatlyinto one category or the other. They can

1 be detecjjOd easily as the ones dressed inbusiness'clothes, seated in the shade by thewater bucket. The only time they move isto escape the rays of the sun.

', i t The largest proportion of them have

•' never been foremen in their lhfea tfnd havej no more equipment to functipn in this re-

«< upect than the lowest unskilled laborer.They are hired as foremen and are paid assuch puj«ly for one of the two reasons men-

mi t_ i.x:t:7'\a,~x

and better paved streets.

JOSEPH

Ten Year*BUSINESSMEN NAMEDMURRAY AS HEAD

At a meeting of local business-men in Choper's Hall last nightfor the purpose of reviving the old:Board of Trade founded in 1918as a Township Businessmen's A?so-ciation, Thomas B. Murray, cashier j \ ;o w , we get mailof the Woodbridge National Bank, j o u t o f P e r t h A m . j "was elected president. John Con- •cannon was named vice-president,James P. Gerity was made secre-tary and Nathan Marcus waschoEuti treasurer.

HENRY DUNHAM, JR.APPOINTED POLICEMAN

Henry Dunham, Jr., wa3 ap-pointed as a patrolman on the

THE QUESTION:HopeUwn moit need?

THE ANSWERS:JOHN INGRASSIA,

''that importance of the continued existence of the Perth A<jsn§ ftrros t ight €ompanyr Pweibiy-ii 'I was a stockhoU.

place. We t-0U1 cl_1 alfC h v e | It is purelv an administrative and distributing ar

a nlnvprounu for! , ' . ,chii.lrJli across' It manufactures none of the gas, it buys every cub;,-from the fire-! of it from the Elizabethtown Consolidated Gas Cor.:;house on May \ jt has a separate set of officers, however, to which itSn-i-et. The land a s a ] a r y a n ( | | e v e r y o n c e j n a while I suppose, a divi.l.

and thJ'piotts centrally | two. I expect the increased revenue from the rat.'There aren't many, houses.- WJJJ r e m o v e the dividend declaration from a supposi\

uj> near the school and it s too far ,away for little children to go to. j an actuali ty.We have enough fire hydrants. I -phe charitv merchants insist that this corpora'.

i think, and enough police protec- _ . . * , . , rri. ., t i U , .] tion. Hopelawn i» a qukt place for i plication is immaterial. They say that the sa larythat matter but we do need more 0 <f i c e r s r e c e i v e are nominal'. That may be" true but .:

p ppolice force by the Township Com-mittee last night.

be important to Mr. Hoffman and what isimportant to New Jersey is restoration ofconfidence in the State government. Thiscan never come so long as the Chief Execu-tive continues to behave in > utter and com-plete contempt of the qigniiy of his office*

Still Looking AheadIt may be Dr. Eckener's superb patience

which makes him pre-eminent in the fieldof lighter-than-air craft.

Although every success has crownedthe, efforts of the great navigator, the tech-nicians who have aided him a id the coun-try which has financed him, he is unwillingeven at this ppint to announce the completepracticality of trans-Atlantic dirigible ser-vice. He wants further proof before "helends the weight of his name and positionto a positive assertion.

With true Teuton tenacity, Dr. Eckenerwill undoubtedly continue to strive for thattime when he can confidently state that theair has been conquered by ships like theHindenberg, Such advances as have beenmade must be credited largely to hto faithin the craft and his extraordinary abilityin handling the magnificent machines.

While we were giving up as a-bad jobthe development of dirigibles, Dr, Eckenertrudged steadily toward his goal. He frank-ly acknowledges that it has not been reach-

4 1 0 ^ ^ w J & siLx$kft»t MA^fc* *«**»:*»tw».

ProfilesFor Today

B r TALBOT LAKE

Once more Edward J. O'Brienhag issued his annual collection ofshort stories from American maga-tineg, under the title of "The BestShort Stories of 1936," and withcharacteristic Gaelic intensity heproceeds to forestall his critidsl

An assumption is, he says in huintroduction, ijhat "I am a tiresomeold gentlemart with a long beardand anuffx clothes who has Igrownhoary with age in tne service ofold-fashioned newspapers . . .Those who have taken pains tospread such a rumor bepn to real-ize that it is childish . . . It is fur-thermore (assumed that I am ex-tremely pompous that I strut likea turkey cock and, worst of all,that 1 totally lack a sense of hu-mor."

As a matter ofjfact Mr. O'Brienlacks a beard, rather than a senseof humoD. TThe (only hairy appen-dage to hia features is the shortmustache clipped evenly with therather full mouth. Calculating eyesgaze out of a--rugged free.indicate, despite the critics, agrand sense of hunuir. Anyway,Mr. O'Brien disposes of that byquestioning whether the Americanshort story generally holds a senseof humor. In that event, he re-marks, "What do you expect me todo about it?"

Recordt Chanf ciHe goes on to say, VI should like

you to consider the book as a wholein restrospect. American life hasmany facets of interest, ani I haveBought to make this book i repre-sentative ero8»-&ectio,n of Ameri-can life as it is being interpretedby our best short story writers . . .I like to think of these annual col-lections as records of the changingmoods and emotions of the Ameri-can people."

Edward Joseph Harrington O'-Brien was born in Boston. Edu-cated „ at Boston College and atHarvard, lie married Komer Wilsonof Sheffield, England, who died in1930. Mr. O'Brien bat been a wide-ly known editor, author and trans-lator.

He not only edit* the Americanbest short story book but he pro-duoes a companion book in Eng-land.

MEMORIAL DAY HERETO LACK PARADE

The Memorial Day parade to

do£b much work and get so damned little for it I ^the life of me understand why they are so anxious IH o p X ^ ^

postofike is the first thing we need, their jobs. And if they are as benevolent as they claintake so keenly to heart the interest of the dearshould think they would be willing to become absorb-1 .the Elizabethtown works, turn their salaries back int.. : •pot and thereby release the consumers from having to p..greater rates.

My objection in this respect is more«!rtensive. I my ,••that when the Elizabethtown company sells to Firth A-:•boy it sells at a profit. I argue further that when Pirt! A- •boy sells to you and me that it, too, figures a profit i'vsimple arithmetic, I arrive at the conclusion there ;iiprofits where there rightfully should be but one.

which Woodbridge for years hasbeen accustomed will be omittedthis year, the American Legion

o t has decided, because of thewindling public interest. The mo-

tor age is blamed by the Legion-aires. They recognize that manyfamilies now plan to use the dayfor a trip or a picnic.

Five Year* AgoPROSECUTOR ORDERSSPEEDWAY CLOSED

Prosecutor Douglas M. Hickssaid today the management of theWoodbridge Speedway is offeringno opposition to the order to stopraces until an investigation is madeof the circumstances surroundingthe death of Bernie Katz, a racedriver, at last Sunday's inauguralshow. .Strong Bentinient has devel-oped here to have t \e speedwaypermanently closed. It is regardedas a menace because of the inflam-mable oil-soaked board track.

• •• »

AQUILA DEMANDS REPLYON WATER QUESTION

1 Demanding a show-down in thewater company case, TownshipCommitteeman Anthony Aquila de-clared Monday that if necessary hewould make a house-tOrhouse can-vass to arouse the public over thealleged unfairness of the companyin enuring a fee of $2 to turn onwaterjdm homes where it has beenshut on for non-payment. Employ-es sent to turn off water, he said,did BO even if they were offered thefull amount o/f the bill owed.

i ] * * *

Thwje Years AgoBR. HIBBEN KILLEDIN AUTO CRASrTrTERE

The Rahway Memorial Hospitalannounced this morning a slightimprovement in the condition ofMrs. John Grier Hibben who wasbadly injured in the Superhighwayaceident Tuesday that caused thedeath of her husband. Dr. Hibbenwa» killed almost instantly whenthe cap presented him by thePrinceton University board of trus-tees onjhis retirement aj presidentran into a truck near TappenStreet in Avenel.

* • «

MAURICE P. DilNlGANELECTED PRESIDENT

Maurice P. Duniguu, long amember of the Board of Educa-tion, was chosen president of thetehool Commissioners on Mondayto fill the vacancy caused by thedeath o f Melvin Clum. Roy E. An-derson was elected vice-president.

REV. FLETCHER GARISSGETS NEW PASTORATE

The> Rev. Fletcher S. Garisn, pas-tor of the Methodist EPi8COpalChurch, has been transferred to

boy. There is de-livery on pavedstreets but people

S on other roadsI have to w a l k| d o w n to >'Brunswick' Ave-nue and get their mail from boxes.On letters we have to put 'PostOffice, Ptrth Amboy' and that isn'tright because really we're a partof Woodbridtfe Township. Thereought to be a central postofftce inWoodbridKf? handling all mail forthe town$hip. Both Sewaren andKeasbey, which are smaller thanHopelawn, have postoffices nowanyway. The playground idea is agood one, too.

JOHN CSIK, Juliette and Char-les Streets, Hopelawn, a saloonowner: What we most need i:

money — a placefor the people togo to work. When

there's m o n e y .W h e n there's

there's

inuuuiwi, uu uecu iransierredthe Dieklnson Memorial Church ...Travis, Staten Island, the NewarkAnnual Conference announcedSunday. The Rev. C. 0. E Mell-bew, wlg> has been at the Travin,SJoten Tsland, thurch for threeyew*, * M appointed to the D»S-waU tore.

m o n e ybusiness a n dwhen there's busi-

ness there's more money. Even ifit's only relief work, there ought tobe more of it. That's all the peopl*talk about—work and the chancesof getting It. Now I understand therelief is laying off all single menfrom their jobs. What are theysupposed to do—etarve? A post-office isn't especially needed here,I think, and we already have good-enough playgrounds and a base-ball diamond.

TERESA BARRETT, 315 Flori-da Grove Road, Hopelawn, varietystore: Improve Florida Grove Ruadso thlt it becomesa through roadbetwten N e wBrunswick Ave-nue and Convi-i yBoulevard. Andfix up Fresh PondRoad, too. Thatl i n k s K i n gGeorge's Road und Hupt-hiwii andis a regular washboard. Sometimes

practically impassable, Therereally is a Sot of traffic on FloridaGrove Road and it ought to be fix-ed. A church may he built heresoon, too. Now everyone has to goto Fords or Perth Amboy. And aswimming pool would be, nice forthe children.

MARK MCCABE, 201 FloridaGrove Road, Hopelawn, a schooljanitor; A library is needed*here.

We had one once' in the school and

C h a r l i eTurek's, but it be-came run downwhen the moneyfor it gave out.Streets and play-

. , , , , ground facilitiesboth, should be improved, too.There's only one playground intbe town, over beside the firehouwand they haven't got much thewin the way of equipment. Not evena slide—all they have is a swingand that belongs to the fire com-pany and not to the, township. Ithink & library is as important asanything that could be done to im-prove Hop«lawn, And I'va lived

Let's look at it from another angle. Imagine, .'can, that tomorrow I set up a corporation to sell ar.lbute gas and because the Perth Amboy Gas Light ••tives work so hard and get so little that they sell t)v•.:ness to me. They continue as a corporation, howtv.-;1

buy from Elizabethtown. I don't want to engage in tsaic business of manufacturing and so I buy, in tun.Perth Amboy. And I sell at a profit. Then three <i;;'agencies would be making money out of one prod ;if it is all right for two to do it, then it ia all right [-''And four. r

Thirdly, I am a little dubious about the capitaation on which it claims the right to a 'proper' nt .rluncheon companions wrung their hands a,nd aim 'to think that I should even raise a question like *.:.meant no offense, certainly, butVniw that an owi^r'his possessions'are far more valuable than & pi'"-;purchaser. I think that Captain Kean would want :•.lot more for the house connection and meter at 11'Avenue than I woiild want to pay him. And 11hi:- ••-price does not necessarily mean the one Captain K•es, nor the one I might offer. It would be soiw"between.

In view of these obviously elemental objectim -the Board should restrain the Perth Amboy ' ^Company from rai.sipg its prices to those1 least ;ib!

them. '

NEWSIDE

By DON O'MALLEY

CAUGHT— There's quitea r o m a n t i c story aboutthe way Charlie Correll, the"Andy" of Amos 'n Andyfame, met his charming wife,Marie. Under the name ofCondi $ Gosden, the boysw«r« doing a song and dance »etin Chicago movie theatres. Theircombined salary—and It wasn't somany years ago, either—was $175pexwwk.

While playing at MeVicker'sTheatre In Chicago's loop, Correll,was attracted to s pretty miss seat-ad in the front row. She kept smil-ing at him. He noticed her thendaily from that first smile rightthrough their run to the end of theweek.

The following week she wasdown front aglin at the TiyoliThwtM Snrew l l

g at the TiyoliThwtM. Snrewne aluwsl everypetiomuce. It was inevitable that

rail's eyes indicated that ! •to see her around at the *' •'*•''The pretty miss caught i *and understood. .,

Today, It is legend tha 1 ^rells are one of the h"'1}'1.,best loved couples in »H *""

• ' • ' » * « '

REVIVED—Another tromance 1B that »t 'Block and Eve Sully Abeginning of their ^tion, Block was gotatf ;!|heavy-hearted, nu I : i |

squelched flame tormer pirtmr. Eve Sully.placed her, w u perturb''this because Block had b>,»n automaton in the i",',no ftre-B-he was •

' I

I*.

who bid swttobed hi*

Page 5: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

• T i l l )DlHtlPGE INDEPENDENT FRIDAY, MAY 15,1936 PAGEFTVE

VFNEL HELD CLOBNEWARK FOE

fclolnar Twirls LattanrioTribe To Victory

Over Ramblers,,,;1|.| infiphl work and ju-

(U, pitching by George• .,,-hnving earned a aatia-,'(,,-v victory over the Car-1 Ramblers, that Wood-

',',l. Field Club which has

rl,eenl\y translated toi contemplated the ap-.v, invasion of the Newark

with some satisfaction to-IV Rovers will arrive at, |>.,rk in Avenel in time to

' h v ,,t 3 o'clock Sunday af-

Sealing 77i<? Clock In Stadium Contest

• , l o o l '

' "i

Close Ones On The DiamotidF.lnborale pre- I . • • *

' " ' I n BARRON McNULTY«w«r the) *

to b-"•^errors Have Decided Jtf«*f0 / The Big League Games Thasf ar

THE 1'KKSKNT STANDING IJWBIE CI.UBS HAS REEN DE-terminpil lurirely through the errors winch have been lommittfd. As

in a guesting con*lr*\ tpontored bythr Stadium Com*mission are oV• frvrd by, left toright, A. J. Sabo,mjtnjiger of tjl#S u i f Theatre!rhinf J«me« A.W a l . h , officialcustodian of tnrlorli; P o 1 U eC n r n m i i itonerJumps Schiffrick,

far as tin- (liniiii nre concerned they have kicked away inoufjh |f»meson easy cluinciK In put them snfelyin first place.

If Hn-y dnn't take a hold of themselves pretty Wlnnd in the •HTnn.l division. Their hittinfr has been jrni

d h

n. they mayalthough not

Frtt Track Meet TicketsSHU Am\aU*—By Mail

Olympic aapiranti are among theselected contestants who will com-pete in the third annual Princeton1

Invitation Trick Meet, to l>e heldin PalmcT Stadium on Saturday,June 13th.

Applications for tickets to themeet will close at the end of theweek. Plenty of teats are stillavailable.

Tickets nre fflee. Each individ-unl may npply for two. In making

l l divisio fso good v.licn it counted, and their pitching Kuod.

ThiMY isn't so far a real standout club in the National Leairue.The Pirat.s jro up there because of real Rood plnyirur, ami timely nit-tinif. Tin ir pitching »o far hnsn't been ?o, pood. And the most nur-prising thmit wi fur in the race is the showing of thi> Boston Bee*.

nrl Fr»H Bald'win, president of•In' Busineiimen'tAssociation,C, Jordan,motrr forCommission, I >;seated in front.

his application to the PrincetonUniversity Athletic Amodatton,Princton, N. J., he should endow30 cents for two tickets, or 1B cent*for one ta cover hnndJjng andmailing costa. They will be mailedabout June l»t.

The meet i» a reirional trial forthe Olympics. Athletes finishing infirst, w o n d or third places-will au-tomatically qualify fur the sub-•ioinifiit meet ih which the mem-ben nf the United States Olympictruck ami fli-lil tenm will be se-lected.

tf they cuntimu' to shirte, they are going to have considerable to sayabout thi' ultimate winner.

I lu't, it (fives Ca»ey Stengel bad dreams evfrytime ho thinks ofRay Bcnitf us the leading pitcher of the league; E. Moore with a .313

^-laveragi' which the Dodgers .could use very nicely anil l.npei with onlyP">- jfi percentage points in bfittirig lower thnn Phelps, and there is no eom-

* • pariRon in their ability as fielders or bnhillors of pitchers.' " The Yankees arc the surprise of the American l#ngue race. They

and tin' Kill Sox are certainly putting on a ding-dong show so far.

Molnnr scattered" tenthe Carteret lineup,

he Field Clubbers to''nut the score was never-

". i n Mr. Molnar/s favor,±U1 quartet at his buck

with a smoothness he.""Vlirfked and George him-; ; ' ; ^ n p y with base h i t sm

moments,Fnir R«ni Earned

f t h e WFC runs _ wereihe other two arnvini? in . M M C I T

in "he third frame when (Japt. McNamara SpeaKS To

i f f i S W ^ St. Cecelia Unit; Pro-.vh,, otherwise would havej

nple and Mackey of thejNamara, Exalted Ruler of•', llli,i iiionE with Frey, • we,the Benevolent and Protec-

<lmrtstop, were,,nr liitti-ra.

barrel itopt ticKMing will win ajfor

arge prize.

ANNUAL COMMUNION BREAKFAST IS HELDBY ISELIN CHURCH HOLY NAME SOCIETY

;

gram Is Given

ythe

W. I'.All.

1

. . : . , ; ..I..-!-!...

both WHH the principal spouk-er Sunday at the; annualbreakfast of the Holy Name Ko-

o ciety of St. (Cecelia's Church, Ise-(i liu.!!i The invocation was delivered by

Raymond Johnson, president ofthi! society iimt the toastmustcrWHS William O'N'i'il, Supervisor «fthe Sunday School. The scope•awl—(lurpusu uf the-.Wl'A.-^paiij

iisoii'd recreation activities were in-

I'O. A. 1

(ijsoivd recnatinn activities were in-Itorestin^'ly discussed by Wayne

v|T. Vox, df Woodbriilge, State Di-Mrector. Mayor August K. (Jreiner

l i l i l b i f dd d

i l

IMlO Hi l l:• "s

m ii.i--.- •• r , l / . i . l : l kf, l iv tMr . liLn.I Hunt

UvESBlLLCARJERETfT. BATTLE \»<\°

ilccteil,

(counter With NamesakesIs Postponed By

Lengyell'in;iry postponement o f t h e

:!i-i encounter with the\ 11I111• y Hraws was announ-ilay hv O z n 1'ocht'ck andl,i•nnyrl i>f the Wooilbriilne

In.-te;iil, they've arranged;inl,iv a tussle up at Grove

v, ;ih II

also ileliveii'il a brief address and":«n upprecsHtion for the work of" the society was expressed by the,,'I'huich pastor, lt«v. William J.ip Hrenililll.11 Father Hrennan also wrote an".original verse fur the occasion of^the observance of .Mother's Day.

A novel program of ctitertain-ymmrt was offered-ns fallows:

.'i "Star Spangled lianiie.r," audi-i.!enco; selection, Losiure Tinn' Or-1 chestra; "The Good Old Days,"

ITayUir and Taylor; Hill's Billies,Hill & Co.; popular airs, LeisureTime Orchestra; "Old Timo

•ngs." Hint's Brothers; military:lance, Dubay & Dubay; se-

s, Thomas Riley and Miss.1. Johnson; "Modern Steps," .JuleDubay.

"Today," Harry Painter; "JustFor Fun," William Brcen; Irishairs, Johnny Ilines; Teacher andI'upil, John Dulmy and, student;community sinjriiiK", audience.

Vincent p. (iropan was masterof ceremonies.

GARDNER, MAVRl ROSEATLANGHORNESVNDAYHankinson Opens Speedway

With Program OfSix Events

i«hitiK^ne of the Most impos-ing airnys of drivers in Easterndirt track history, Ralph A. Han-kinson will inaugurate lilSG speed-day autn racing at Iiaftghorne thisSunday afternoon. The first raceis billed at 3 p. m., daylight savingtime. • • , '

Such seasoned Indianapolis per-formers as George "Uoc^HackeT-zie, diet Gardner, Mauri Rose,Floyd Davis and Hob Kail, willride the six events sanctioned bythe AAA. Collaborating with thetopflight stars will be Vern Oren-dqif, foremost aspirant for thel!t:ti; Eastern AAA title; Ken Fow-ler, uncrowned champion of theSouth in I!i3ii; Frank Beeder, pos-sessor of the five-mile qualifyingrecord at Reading, Pa., and Tex.West, dirt track king of the south-west from Dallas, Texas.

I.noks like Hornsby's Browns are going to givj the Athletic* a rubthe cellar position. It is an everlasting pity that either taarh is

I'lans are progressing rap*'idly for the Miiy ball to beconducted by the parish of St.Cecelia's Church, Iselin, onMay 29. Three orchestraswill supply the music.

The proceeds of the affairwill be devoted to the fundfor purchasing a pipe organ.

HOPELAWN OWLS TREKTO BUDDIES' DIAMONDHagaman Heights Cohorts

Wrench Third StraightVictory For DaPrile

permitted to keep their franchise. ' Thoy are faying to crowds of twoand three hundred people, one'day aa a matter of fact the attendancein St liOUis being 127 persons, not all of them paying. And the own-teams have to pay gdod money to go there and never take in enoughto' pay expenses, •

And liy the same token attendance falls off in their own parkswhen these'two teams cittnp to play. Some day the, owners are going:to get together and put a sstop to it.

By M. E. BrotherhoodStrawberry Festival To Be

Held On June 10th OnLawn Of Church

The Excelsior lirotherhbod ofthe Methodist Episcopal Churchhere will sponsor a strawberry fes-tival nn .lune 10, from t! to 0,o'clock. The festival, which willbe held nil the lawn of the church,

• ' I I ' '-- 1 1 . I ! ~ ,,f „ , , n n . r o ; t

Andance'Texas

Texas Rangers AnnounceFor JVexf Saturday

'old-fashioned- hill-billieswill be sponsored by the IRangers Club of Fords

week from tomorrow., May 23, atthe Village Barn in HopelawJohn Pnlnti is general chairman ithe committee arranging the affair. He is being assisted by Anthony .Golgani and Wally NovakNovak's Texas Rangers will playfor dancing.

Hopelawn contributes the in-jwill he in the hands of a commit-vading half of another intra-town-'tee of four: Robert Neary, chairship match this Sunday when theOwls journey into the wilds ofForf TfeuTTngT tKefe'To' 36~T)aTllewith those cocky Hagaman HeightsRuddies who thus far have wonthree in three, played strictly er-rorless baseball and watched insomething approa'ching awe whileMike iJal'rile constructs a strike-out record of rather heroic pro-portions. This Sunday's match be-gins at 1:30 P. M.

DaPrile struck out an even dozenhatters last week while the Buddieswere hacking 13 hits and six runsfrom tp.e offerings of O'Hara, aceiif the Perth Amboy Braves. Mikealso allowed the enemy a crack at

man; James Ellis, Willard Nearyand John Essink,'T. TWHiTtJeft," vree-pYeStaSTTt Of

the Brotherhood; J. Boyd Johnson,Theodore Marsh and Russell Deppewere selected as a committee tomake arrangements for the special Father's Day service.service, which wi "

starts Sunday afternoon atNutley Velodrome when two qualifyjng races for the title will brun. Referee Frank L. Kramer,who is also the chairman of theNational Cycling Association, hasannounced the names of the twelve-nrntDTryclr/TtrtTTS who will ftght rt'|out in the elimination races for thechampionship.

ly seiill be helil

Thisin the

••I b

i- I

25th Anniversary ObservedBy Mr., Mrs. George Litka

The silver anniversary of theirnek to 2:30 or there- "''''''''"If w a s observed Sunday by

jMr. and Mrs. George Litku, Lib-• v.1 »v,>.t

;ertv Street, Fords. The features

; ) - ^ « k b r l i n t f i ^ o n g the guest, were:il have no complaint., M , „ , , „ „ _ j h E m J k

crabbed a pair of iUnh|A C a t h t r i l l c , ,lI1(1 M a r y E n d y k

umnKthj-re which out-jMr_ a m ) Mrs_ S u m u e l D o w z y c k i i

Shade by 10-H. • )«elM a r y i stolU- and Mildred Uowzy-

(iirter'et Clovers,clock but it may

l ll l"" l l . l'1 .w" i t h t h e b n M S!ckr'orBouWBrool t; Mi's. Mary'"' " l t k i I Shary, Frank, Anna, Mary and

e, there were flaws, in-!, ,o s ( .p n Shary, Mary and 'Frankve very glaring crrorst I)(,wzycki of Elizalieth; Mary, Pe-i-lil, but on me wnoie u , r R m l Matthew I'.itka of Fords;reined satisfied except; , |a m e s Housel, Round Brook.eiiin. tif course.

PARTY SERIES ENDSSt.. Cecelia's Parish, Iselin,

Holds Party Tonight

Tonight marks the last of a ser-ies of home socials and card par-ties, held by the members of St.'ecelia's Church, Iselin. The

proceeds of. th« party, which will beheld at the Green Street home of

Charles Oalbraith, will he do-nated to the rectory of the church.All games will.be in play and prizeswill be awarded for high scores.

ST. CECELIA'S A. A.Plans Are Made To Improve

Baseball Field Soon

Detailed plans for the improve-ment of St. Cecelia's ball fieldwere made at the regular meetingof thiit church's Athletic Associa-tion held in the Parish Hall onMiddlesex Avenue. Besides thegeneral repairs to be made on thefield, members intend to constructnew bleachers for the spectators.A special motion picture show tobe held fun the benefit of the as-sociation was offered by DavidKahn, manager of the local theatre.

Chow Mein Supper PlannedBy Ladies At New Dover

Under the auspices of the La-dies' Aid Society, a chow meinsupper will he held Friday, Mayiind, from (> to SI at the NewDovei: M. E. Church.

ythe scoring register, but only onceand only for one run. That was

Then he slammedin the third,shut the till.

Patrick,. Ciuffreda, Hadyk andHegedus of the Buddies all clicked MOTOR-PACED TITLE RACES

IT i f b k k O thg

IT n pair of base-knocks. On theither side of the roster, Bobal and

Delise were equally successful.Two of the hits wrenched from

DaPrile, incidentally, were triples—by Bobal and Slug.

The lineups:KmlilliK S. C. (•111!

church on the morning of Sunday,June 21st, is also being sponsoredby this organization. Rev. Carl C.E. Hellberg, pastor, plans to preacha special sermon on this day, andthe entire service is being plannedto carry particular interest for

;n. •During the Summer months of

July and August, the brotherhoodwill meet but twice a month, .onthe second and fourth Mondaynights. James R. McCoach andFred Strahl led the social hour.

BEGIN SUNDAY AT NUTLEYCompetition for the motor-paced

;hampionship of the United States

BUY AND SAVE AT

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Anything in Furniture. Bedding] and Floor Coveringi

286 HOBART ST.

| PHONE P. A. 4-4750 p||Art Young Petar Fimianijl

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jlielise. 2b 4'ipum-e, r( 1-I Duck, c 3

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liiiN--Hi»li;il, Slut,'. S t r u c k out—Hj 'Kii l ' r l le I i : l>y O ' H a m 6. Base vnlialls—Off n a l ' r t l c -; 'iff O ' H a r a 4.

195 SMITH ST.

PHONE P. A. 4-1346

THAT MEANS THEUTMOST IN FUR STORAGE

Noll-luff IM «vvrlooked A lnniile«luieNMeiiiEfr mllN fur jwur cmii iii yourIionie - - - It U ^x|icrlly urt'iHirnl for*lie niu4leru cold Niurntfv vntilU hy the(rrceu1i(MiH<' N Iii If IIIMI utuvid In vu\i\Htnrnue. Of cnume. cvcr> IIIITV of ntrr-t'lmndlHe U fully liiNiireri. The <ih«rK>'fLoner tllHii evrrl 'fivii IHT r^nl nf tlu*vuliitillou or a nilulinuin uf S-.lHt—n fullmix) \f«u (haii luMt yt'ixf.

\ puHicurd or n 'iiliouo inll t111 hrliiumir rr:>re«rntnilvr tu your dour. Don'tilelitj ! Do it todny!

A. GREENHOUSE, Inc.

OUR FAT BARGAINTOR LEAN VURS&!See this value unbeatable

that we give you because

Goodyear dealers sell the

most tires by millions.

A high-grade tire so supe-

rior that its' sales exceed

22,000,000. Buy today!

Terms that willsurt you

FRANK VAN SYCKLENew Brunswick Avenue at Jefferson Street

PERTH AMBOY, N. J. Tel. P. A. 4-0591

>ir

S r u l l i ,S l r n i - k

I- - l.y S j i r i l i i l lH " . I'ii.iK I M - H I ?,: ni l ' S i i r t l . - l l u

n n i M I l n i v . - H 111. u . i k Sl"i i I'ii.-i-s Ml-iU-i'.H |l,W i l l ! [ i l t i ' l l - - K n r n t .

H i l l , h ' U l l i I- |>liiv- -S . V.!r,k t ni H i t In- l i l l r l i i - r — I I V K i

". T u r k S l i r i i t | . i . - . - i - l > ' " l » ' U

MAPLE TREE FARMRahway Avenue, Avenel

SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1936KKKE LAMB STEW DINNER

DANCING from 8 P. M. to 2 A. M.SUNDAY, MAY 17,1936

ANNUAL PICNICAdmiilion Free

NATIONAL ORCHEStRAItaiR'ini? Outside in Fresh Air

From 1 P, M. to 12 P. M.Everybody Welcome

A. PICHALSKI, Prop.

Designed to

8 tK.y «r.ARCH REST «hoe». "Modified"women k d

becsuie too oftento b«y fuiijTi'ultra («»tidioui

ahoe« th-y do not admire. Tte riew,DREW ARCH

London Color Notecoroniitiitt) color card is to be

id toward* the end of this yearimdon. It is to be based onial" colors, meaning those

ar« used for the robes of stateby the Kingt the tQuct-n anduf the reaji .step can bd taken until the

al end of court mourning, inPall of thiB year, not to be- con-

with public mourning whichthis month.

urple and dark shades of rediprominent among the state

colors, but it is likely that| more springlike aspect of theation will be found to inspire

the special* colors. It isht in some quarters that ai of jewel colors, taken fromjecious stoneB in the crown'•-by King Edward VIII.wil•produced, but no official| en t has been made.Jngs over Europe and Amer-eenis to be the coming slo-

millinery. Summer collec-iintvoduce many pert winglenta, often lacquered, andBtural dove and gull wings

white tipped with beigeTiny lacquered pastefBIBO approved, «»langiroart KarnitUTM f

"moiified*" are made in many pattern! and mater•iili. Qmeve* • • • •»>• laart, u*V lillBl of .4h«y

fitting ihoei you, too, will admirt theirperfectmodified »race.

Make your selection (ram white,blue or black kid. We have yoursize at a!! time* «• we tpecialize

in fitting tfie hard to fit. is having a reunion

HOW long siiwi; you have hud

reunion with the scattered

JUNIOR VOGUE164 Smith St. JSH Perth Amboy

birthday or autiiversaiy? You can alt

talk together, aud hear and be heard

easily, bo matter how far apart you

are. It means so much satisfaction

for everyone.

inerubers of your family? Why not

have one over a Conferqfice Tele-

phoiie hook-up, perhaps on some\ | ' • '

j To mike • Conference Call Bimply'give the Humbert or names and

•ddreates lo the Long Dutanc« Operator. The cost it moderate,

capeciaUy after 7 P. M. and all day Sunday when reduced ratei apply,

A. South Orange man r«-

cunlly talked from hu own

horn* limufluneoiuJy with

a brother In t'Uhkill, New

York, another brother in

SopurnUioi Han., ami a

tUter in liotlon by Confer,

tntt Teltphoae caMmtian.

Ht wrote lo Htf UJ how fhor-

oughiy they all enjoy* th*

happy t-iiH with each otktr.

N E W J E R S E Y B E L L T E L E P H O N E C O M P A N Y

Page 6: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

WOODBRIDGEPAGE SIX •:vt

Mighty Film SpectacleUnites Colman, Colbert }In Deathless Romance

.- -.vh>. K- :.

i n " ! : H;-.pjj ' r - : ' ) • • S:^':;'." r..v.> ;s vrrn: '•••'• t r - . . ' . :

E t o n :'<'!• i r - r . , ' r r ' ; - r T ••'.,, F ! a | r - - " ' ' • ;• '-'""?' ;;•.'->;:"•

' w h i r r frrinjr* ' r n — * - ; w . i i - ^ n s o f ;r.(- stcrtt.-Li.j'jgt:;.:.';!:-..-.- T1'1'-'"

••', K . r : v . ' F 7...: - ' >.

f .:.;'.r-i - vJi • •• • • F • • • ; - , L o i n o * . A : •• • y

ill :::•• " : ^ S ^ ' I. . . ^ > . . . . - . - . . » f t . i , . .

KrNT A NEW FIND:DEBUT AT S T R A PS.nr.antic Lead Of Pictur

Opening Tonight T9BJ Starred

"Country Beyoid'

i n two-mi: •:

K'.-nt (indf h

•>• lead of "T

" Fox iiict;: V> th t S'-ra

,1. hand'onr..

- . '< • • -.- • f t h e

••• H :!y*ood to knocka - ' f d !; f;.r.

y•:' f:-.:;:e and w!:o a' •

- -in?ti!ar!y deaf"

...-.'••*'•.• I'-s-s her hear; tt. h:m.

• -:\y w:;h "he gppttrarc- .f&;;r. i Rus.-ei , fragile• Er.cioh

• v- if-i-r*. :o help =>!r. &n ArH'.• re-''.. ' '!n«ir. hat declared h!? . ve

::• "• :T,'-'1 ir. by hostile f'TC.-s.•'• !.;-./.*rr. v(;r.^eful:y a tu- r r ; : - to

• .'. ;- r.e.weer, himself ar.d M:s».'••::. By: f'olman - iv - - his• < :. y Ei 'iar.r.;: ruse. &:.r. & rr,&t'-

'••'.". charze i>f the L*ir.'>r.. >.c.'>'.-• ' ''.bert. rtsuitf ir. ;r,t •".'-

.-. . i •.:.<• Ara- forces.'I'." rr.htrrnfictr,: supportine c&s;

:' .••'.;.' char;ict'-T ?tars ir.'.-ij<ie«

RONALD COLMAN, •mar-tare outc«it in thp uniformof death. «n*ct» the greatf it of hitmany romantic roiei in tonight'sMajeitic feature.

A• V Mt

COLOR, TUNES, COMEDYIN'KING OF BURLESQUE'Warntr Baxter, Alice Faye

And Mona BaVrie StarIn Crescent Show

j I'.-r.eath the ulitter.ng co',-\ 'hehv-\<".n£ turn--, comedy hr.-: trayi C " routir.t" which ajorr. Kir:ir

, ' ' • ' i 1 " '

a..',

Mhy

•••• itr ••.•jve!;:urou= career ir,"i- "v "• :"kc! on S'iu:h Amer-

•-.•;:r,'-r-. [rjnehed hi,- :,vay_•' N'i-« York anin'eur \*'w. k'

• • ar.,i acted a' a ridi' g in-•• :. Kent alien.; ted acthr

<- r.v f -k a role in an Easterr.k company.:t«-r two years of that, he fV."!.e i s " ripe for Hoilywo'Kl Bn

t »-f-t. But ail his ingenui':perse' erar.ee succeeded in gt-

him •••r.;y fo'-jr'tif role1 :'JU-S in a- many month?. Fi:;;'. the end of his resource-

t sought and won a fart in t'rAnpelt? presenlati' h of t'r

'Kind Lady,'1 in support :'

NFW MURDER FILKPACKS A WALLOPVVT.;S Gleason Is Detective

Again In LatestOf Seriei

•• ; •', a mu'rdf-!

*r'er.(iine thti'jl|li ''•r haviivc :

• i y the nooFe••• : r , r , . : c e n t .

•'•.• 'en** romm.:.- Louise

• |RST INDIANn ! ' n.. went to Hi.Iij-w i •

That,r :r.

.;,- fief.O«car

in- ,.:vir.r :•..->v (iniM-nier , ' . . . . ; ,:. :.•;..)•• and "M-..••or." 'But ('.'• rrak n thi? r.

Bri-il* P»'.hS'uart Pa'.;/- •- i t - j th pa:v. ' ' •

• tt and H:. • -

C,'i.,~ ti a? tht . r.:ir,-.: - ,- • : P;per a: . i:

=. scorn T :!;nfr bu-v .vrfect crir.t-• Pengu-.r 1

on tije BWiie: or, a H :.<j i r e ' ? a ••! •'

i ( j ' t , a r . • :

r.e. a.' W

Ttnglmance aEryondtftt1l|fntert Kenttic leadf.

ing exc Ifrtftit, glonou* ro-,tf thr:ri in "Thf Country

opening at the StrandRochrli* HucUn<n»n<i Rob-art ilarrrd in the rom»n-

r.arce proves a: excr.'.ng matt'-1

Mis? U t i m e r Ar.i K v i s »re •: - i r j from th« _««>:frr. sa i ;e ;*" . t :-,-y have est»>-;>h("i :'rerr.ff v t- .

avtrs i.f skill tr..i ;:ii}" i : '- i ' r-Ct '-t d

. . _ . . . . < " . Henn- G •.VICTOR McLAGLEN, 1935'» r..;t. sr.d J. E.iward Brombtrt-

Academy Award winner, again Frank Lloyd dirfcC.fi this UnUi-Usiplafi a mafmhcent warrior in .'ptctacle with its thousands of ex-'Under Two Fia^i " a picture of > li a> ariu jt,- Wtri'iji^ and Magnifl-flaming conflict and lote. 1 .t-M r.atural backgrounds.

barren William Tops Cast CrescentHas'WomanTrap'Of 'Times Square Playboy , Set For Screen Wednesday

• fs'j'Jfcr* Playboy,'' a rcl- J How iron:-^aea reporters, spe-? y

with '•-r,.-<- 'irarr.a and heart in-terest .a? we]; u? ".a'jjrhs, based onthe famous Broadviay hit, "HomeTown*:-," by fleorjj* M. Cohan,come- \<> the .Strand Theatre on

ay.Warn-n William hea(fs a tal-

ented Citst in the role of a smalltowne? -who has made ^ood in thebig city. Bubbling over with goodspirit.1 and happinc-is because hehas w-.n the love of a beautifuland t't'.enti.d nitrht club singerfrom a younger rival, he calls ona boyhood chum in xht old hometown of Big Bernl to act as hisbest man.

The friend is auspicious of wo-men entertainers, and unaccus-tomed to their fay life and i-ffu-sivene's, believes them all graft-ers .

cure their tips from undenvoi-ldsources, is illustrated in the oj>en-inK sequence1 of -I'aramountVdrama, "Woman Trap." the attrac-tion at the Crescent Theatre onWednesday.

Georpe Murphy portrays the re-porter who gets a tip on a jewelrobbery.' Not only does he knowwho stole the retristered diamonds,but, when a double-crossine mem-ber of the band is "wiped out" hehas the "dope" lotip before theauthorities get wind of the affair."

There is, in the picture, an ex-pose of the conflicting motives ofpride and outrat'e which dominatethe proprietor of a powerful daily.The owner is proud that one of hi-staff is so unerringly "in theknow."

of B-jr'.ff'jJt." the Ff>x p'-"-1''-'•A-hicTi'<.r*r,- :•.: the Tretrenr Thea-tre Weiint-sday is a fascinatinpi'.vt drania which will t ! ic - the• ,.r:,e enthusiastic response from)••••} iha; it e'ot from the optnitip'iay iiudiences throuehout the

I're-eiitintr Warner Baxt(-r.: Alice P'iiy and Mona Barrie in thek'adinK dramatic roles, this hap-piest of the new musical 'howsIM'R^-S an ail-star ca-st of talentedperformers.

I Tht- story of "King of Buries-I'fiuV"1 "(TeTves"'r)8clt-iilaP5 into theI life and loves of the people of the| theatre. Warner Baxter is theieadintr personality, an impre.sariowho has brought the technique ofthe 14th Street burlesque to- anenraptured' Broadway.'

At the height of his success, he<!eserts his two old friends, .lackOakie and Alice Faye, to marrythe aristocratic but impoverishedMona Barrie.

MARIENE DIETRICH AND GARY COOPER, STARSOF 'DESIRE1, SEEN GREATEST FILM LOVE TEAM

Marl^r.f- Dietrich and t.ii-.ry Cooper fciive 'ft-n •.':. '.-vr.' v F!•;;:-.:< K'irzagH i.« tht- yivatrst screen i-ve triiir, ni ;-.]!

time.B"i7.,uv ha? u-tn ca!'.-'l "an expert at love" through

:hiF

MINA GOMBELL and PAULCAVANAGH fn "ChampagneCharlie" at the Creicent on Mon-day.

i'.r.fl 'itlie!- meniorab le films.• ::.;.• a^aifi for '.'jrectorial distiiK-

H,- ;i-t = . !:i 'inJcr of m t n ; .I lie", rich and I 'oni 'cr; Jars-t UA\-•••••: ai.d f.'har!e-i Fam-T:; J . a ni rav.-f'ird and Clark Gab'.e; W:!-• Jim 1'oweli and Myftia Loy; C'au-.!••"•.'.• Cr-Ibvri and" Fred Mac-Mur-ray.

l>ri'7.a?e believes the leadingi.-.vk- tn he " top? ." Originaliy•i-.-.rii-L-ii iri*"MiifV>c'co."They "are"co-••ar!>.-l in "Desire ," Paramount 'f.•;c''V romantic d rama comirij: to-MtrJ:' • ' ' the Ditmas Theatre.

"Tn:- couple has every'.hinj:,Hnr7.:.ire explains. "Miff Dietrich,'iiy.tt-ry wornrni. creature of ice-.'i'! rirt. Mr.'!? her attribute^ >et'•:f by the easy-coinir charr. of' i a i y i'",,i,[itr. Ench rtimpien-.er.t?",'ne other in a !i.ar.ner ur.f-.iriil-

He has won the coveTecT Acad-"

:e':ed :•:•. :ht n-rter.."Th-",;t-H 'en*.iir.er:tal over the

r.a--'.. Btrist-e who directed "De-• •.re," tr.::.ki that modern screeniovers arc more corivincinjr.

Other -.earn-, which he considersa? cJtffimrirrTf- in wrter. historywere Frar.cis X. Bushman an 1

• Beverly Bayne: Rudolph Valentinoand A?nes Ayres; John Gilbert andGreta GftfW: CUaria Svanfon andWallace Reid; Buddy Rogers andMary Brian.

! "Desire" describe? the unex-' pected romance that follows a !>en-sationai jewel robbery. "Miss Diet-r.ch portrays the siren who racesto Spain with her bonty. Cooperplay- an American engineer benton making the most of hi; vacationabroad.

PREVUE TONITE!Continuous

to 11 P. M. ["

Telephone

P. A. 4-3388

ON STATE STREET at the FIVE CORNERS. PERTH AMBOY

IPREVUE TIME TABLE0:1)1 " M I - > S V( iK T i l *i l l l l ' I A "Ti-.'ll "1)I' ' .SIIIK"

•tl:li:i " M l t S S K i l ; 111 ( i A H C I V10:;il " I I K S I K I - ; "

ENTIRE WEEK Starting with Prevues Tonite

MARLENE DIETRICHand GARY COOPER

PREVUE TONIGHT!PREVUE TIME TABLE

8:13 NEWS and SHORTS8.49 "CAPTAIN JANUARY"

10:06 "UNDER TWO FLAGS" MAJESTIC PERTHAMBOYCONTINUOUS DAILY

2 TO 11 P.M.

ENTIRE WEEK STARTING WITH PREVUE T O N l J t . t N O T l C E ^ ' - ' - ^ H H r H H r - -

FOUR GREAT * * * *CLAHDEITE

COLBERT

"A MESSAGE TO GARCIA"

VICTORNFLAGLEN

1 I

RONALD COLMAN

ROSALIND RUSSELL

... IN -

UNDERTWO FLAGS

. WITH A CAST OF 10,000Stewart Warner Electr|* Refrigerator

be given away FREE by The 1-epperFurniture Co., at (be MAJESTIC on Thun

day m-hl, May 21, at 9 P. M

1UUAT

LAST

TIMES

SHIRLEY TEMPLE"CAPT. JANUARY"

c . , n i ! r . " h r , hf l ' l

: tri- t r , r | ; i v . IIthe c,,..,. . '

Sh-.'.ii T>".;." play import- ' . <"<>m<-(i;,- ^ to ' . i f fs ' " ' hero, iJick Koran.

TWOFEATURES

ALWAYSCRESCENT CONTlNUry

SHOWSDAILY

FRIDAY • SATURDAY • SUNDAY

ickfORAMREACUERY

RIDES tkEXTRA f

w FKATlirfr.

M U B D I RBMDU MTHL

withHelen Broderick James Gleason

fAUL CAVAHAGHMini GsmbttlHiltnWtod

-!•• l )

—AND—

WALLACE FORD in"THE ROGUE'S

TAVERN"

^ A L I C E FAYE'~-^s U . C K OAKIE

—ALil)—GERTRUDE MICHAEL

GEORGE M l ! iIn

"WOMAN TRAP'

SAT. -SUN. -MON.-TUES. -

PREVUE FRIDAY N1TELIFE IN THE RAW!

T H E MOUNTIES RIDE . . . . H A T E

S E E T H E S - - - - LOVE FLAMES . . . .

DEATH STRIKES - • - .

Tingle to n«w ex-

citement as "Buck"

the dog-hero, joint

the Mounties on a

spectacular man huntl

PRICES

15Mon. t h r u

i l l . i

FREE CHINA WEDN1TE TO THE LADIES

WED. - THUR. - FR1. (PREVUE TUE. NlTfcWARREN

WILLIAM

Page 7: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

)Oi)RRIDGE INDEPENDENI FRIDAY, MAY is , PAGE SEVEM

JER THIRD BIRTHDAYrI1 ,Bry Ridyard Tendered

Surprise By Claw

,.;.,, ,mrty in commemor-' |un- third birthday was,,l in little Uosttiinry Uid-

' "^nieJitcr of M>. and Mrs.• ' i!i"ilynrd, Trinity Lane, by

til* Sunday School dans of which•'he is a member at, the TrinityEpiscopal Church. Miss Ella De-Worth, class teacher, made the. ar-

tnircniititH,Among the guests were:Dorothy Lewis, Peggy Williams,

Jcsin Daub, (icorge Wnshburn,Robert Dimnck, Dnnnlil Hhephcrd,Fred Dinmck, Miss Kiln DeWnrthand Mrs. Riilynnl.

Italian Food Store•. 14 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

Phone P. A. 4-1361

.ITALIA gal.-25

Grand' ItaliaPure

OLIVE OIL

k-RNETBRANCA 99 bot.

MPORTED

otrato PASTE " «, Perla Rrand feiQ

Re Umberto T i cTONNO .. * z

can

iVluTzareFRESCHE

l g

SELOX

.95

Italian Peeled

TOMATOES•arge 1 £ c Med. 1 A cCan 1 D can 1 U ,

Mar* dinoi»ur I r o c k ihave been un-c o T e r e d byworkmen at theHampton Cut-ter clay mineioff Amboy A»e-nut. Here *workmen • now*the huRf tmcltinfter he hadc a r e f u l l ybruihfd out ofthe impreitionthe fcnnrl whichhad preservedthem for what•cientliti eiti-mate to he SOmillion yean.The t r n c k lyrtre found 30feet below the•urface in abed ofclaythe

A Souwnir Of 80 Million Years Ago f O P S ' RRAINS S P I N c l o v e T Trocp<Girl Sc0Bf1'IN VAIN HAN-HUNTuA^"'''-'^'^•:;i;>"Mn;-wi..

held ln«t ntirht in th.' r i ' « IV.-stt}.

, . , , / Y i , " " , , , i t e r ian Church by the <"l-wi Tn>op.

16-Year-Old Young Udy-Giri smitsuf Amvng Her Mind

ni-.i n -

jSCORE IS ONE ERROR

Mane Baldwin. Rlln NicUon,nor Ijngati. Ethel ! 'unit' ami Janet

! Shttinj Thi' hnU'ckcppT'-i hmlir? wMearned by Eleuii'ir l.mran. Mari«Hnldwin ami .Innci Sham: the ar-tist b'iirlifi' »'a« won by K

icn. Arr:inire--L<Wl"- Thr 1"» per e n ' „inen!s were under thr .lir.MTi.m of »<">• fof perfect attendance onMiss Lillinn KdwnnU. tivoii ,-»|i. 'whole year wa» rcfplvH by Kli».t-tain ami a capacity crowd was be'.h Vtirgo. Junet Shain. Maty Me-

and

niftkinK.IVliiv wri in .•inino (lllll- Kiir Prevention, Kjr<l Aiil to the

^•i- of :il.f>pl.'\v t.ulav »s thev Injured. Health. Knots, National• i ' , i ' i Anlhi'in and nluiut the American

l';ill liiUllll :ill(l \%UM\ Itl K1|1E U|)(| h i n v (1 Wlls ,„.„!,,, ,,(,„.,,-iti'Milily widiMlillK circles vatian, itrawi:i|r of a i>ui;i nm'-.insir-

II 1 (vYcar-iilil t ownsh ip t l ' r l m '> ' '" diameter, ci'mpn«s renduntied licr mind with

,"Eil» Nu-Ui'ti, F.thvran«r l.<i|rnn.•ly-t'up per cent iivcmg*

- turned liy Marii' tlitT<twin. •lnn#llnr.«t'ii. Emm*

i \ v h i lj irirl

- t in i l i n t r n i p i i l i t y a n d t h eIM»

iliL'. M'wine ft iispful uarmtMil, nil-l i no , f h iwr r i . tree*, in-n'c1^ I ' in l ' ,n i im-mls; siijnnllini;, M"r- i ' i"ndi'

Si-iiinamk. Emily

GUESTS AT RESORTSM r - ( I . Ci1. R n h i n ^ n i i of l « l

R o w l m d I ' l i r i ' a m i M r - . T J .- l i v u h y "C I . ' M : n r i ' ! l A ' . i - n u c w r r tnic>>t»t K:ir>sts : i t t h e i ' h a l f . m i l ' - H « i t -d . i n l l a i ! H . i t t l in . U ' . U M R C i t y

LA PERLA

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9 02.can 10

Diamond O boxes

CANDLES'5 25'Octagon SoapOct.-Powder g forOct. Cleanser" 23C

Small can of pure Olive Oil FREE with EveryPurcha«e of $1 or Over

MEAT DEPARTMENT

COLONIA NEWS

MONEY toL/OVA

OLD CAR

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FRANK-FURTERS

CHUCKROAST>R1ME BEEF

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Many Other Meat Specials

Repiinbecome mart

r foully, ItloMslntrade-in value.

TRADE IT IN FORA ttettrt USED CARWe have late model Ford V-&'«and other popular makes atprices that will eurprise you2 -Day money-back guarantee.Easy terms through UC&

DORSEY MOTORS, INC.Maple & Fnyette St«.,

Perth Amboy, N. J.Phone P. A. 4-3500

AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER

ihl ' chnrter memliere nf the Cn-Innin Girl Scout Purple PansyTroop held a reunion and party incuk'bration of the tenth anniver-sary of the founding of the troopat the home of their leader Mrs.Calvin Johnson on Montrose Ave-nue Monday night." Mrs. Johnsonwas the founder and hi\s beenscoul leader since the troop start-ed.

In recognition ni nor work Mrs.Johnnon wna presented with ahon<lc«m« gift by Urn, I'vetl Alb«e.An outdoor picnic supper was serv-ed around a camp fire. The troopjoined in singing mid dancing.None of the younger members ofthe troop were present but a party-will be held for them fh June.

Those attending were Marianand Kleanor Hgneuck, Marion <lor-

DOLLAR DAYAT SCHINDEL'S

. Some of the greatest values ofthe Spring: season are beitig offeredat Sehindel's tomorrow duringtheir great May Dollar Day. Thispopusir store is loaded with brandnew, seasonable merchandise thathas been sharply reduced for thissale.

An unusually busy day is anti-cipated by Manager Harry Levyand extra salesgirls have been hiredto handle the crowds.

(Inn, Vivian Hiiiu'ock Daw, Flor-eiin; r'lnknsim, Kita i'oW, Mai'Knr-et. Ayns,'Arli'tu1 I'orbetl, Hiiyce(indson Tuttk1, Afrnus Christopher-son. Muijoric McCormick,- MiltlrvilRiliinjriv M.urii'1 Waterhury, MayCoif S:ote»bury, Lillian Weimer.Bvity Ho7!aft Henderson, HelenAyns Chaclback, MildTcd dreenAnn-lidriK and Unrothy Mmlsen.Tlv miiiTK'd members camo fromXtu York City, Elizabeth, N'nv-a:k and Avvnel.

—Ur. and Mrs, Bancroft ]4ying-stnn of Valley Uoail entertained atan i'Venint» curd party and picnicupper on the Krounds of theirhome Saturday evening. Theirirni'sts were Mr. and Mrs. W. HMi-Clure, Mr. and. Mrs. Car

us Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bodin, Mr, and Mm. Donald lavingstun (if Cranford, Mr. and Mrs•Ralph Wolff and Mr. und MrsRalph Daniels of Plaihfield, nniMr, and Mrs. Ernest Bard andaughter of East Orange.

—The Colonia Women's Ne

p in thi;.' puint, the score re-ni'il1 no riniv, no hits nnd fttI (Die uncomfortable error, but

Ilif failure of the local constatni-l:n y tn ta(c the man they'r* twjk-injr for was not halt as. discun-I'ertinit iv? the remarkable lack «('information . with,., which they'reequipped. ^

The Kill's tale has ulrpady runthrough innuinerabli: editions butthe mithnritntive version sBeinsronchly lo be this;-

The StoryHer sister, oWer by two years,

lad Iwen, 'keeping: company' withfrUjnd • from Eliznbeth for the

laM 18 montJiB. He WHS IX. freinifiit visitor nl the girl's home,uno evening, the elder sister wasnot home when he culled. So the'ellmv asked the ift-yAr-old girl:o no for a ride, She knew himery. well, and airieed but later <le-ided to tile a cmnplnint anyway.

Police asked fur the name of theaccused. She didn't know!

What she did furnish was a li-cense number. Detectives prompt-ly t r awl 'it, wcttrwl-fi' warrantagainst the owner of the car —andturned up an extremely respect-able middle-aped Elizabeth citizenwho answered their prey's descrip-tion in no detail!

If you were i\ cop, what wouldyou do? Wronir—it's still a com-plaint eharping a crimmul eff»nseand the police must find the de-fendant. Merely to ignore thewhole business wouldn't, it seemsbe cricket.

CARE FREEELECTRIC REFRIGERATION

PRICED TO SAVE YOU AT LEAST $60.00

The Colnnia Womens NevDe«14)um«crfttic.club...hcUl its an-nual luncheon at the Roosevelt TeaRoom in Little Silver on Wednes-day. During luncheon Mrs. C. C.Mitchell of Dover Road invited allDemocratic women or those inter-ested in the study of governmentto meet with her at her home toFtudy the government and NewDeal. After luncheon a social hourwas enjoyed and bridge played.

The BIG f for Woodbridgeon Friday Nights!

:

illWmm

. • "

And that BIG MOMENT, of course, is when the INDEPENDENT

arrives In the SPORTS section of the paper fans will find complete,

accurate coverage of! every event of note in the town.hip.. And they

find it written in . bright, aparkUng style enjoyable to read.

Then there are many SPORTS feature., $uCb w "<> S o l l

See,ns - by Maurice F. X. Donohue; "Close One. On The Diamond/' byL . ; Me N u l t y . ^ h and Game N e W by R a l p h , Kelly; "The

Sport, CloclJTumed Back" ( * « » « ^ •« « « » - r year.) and many

others.

,f you're a lover of -port*, keep abrea.t of what', doing in this

field locally by reading the INDEPENDENT'S page every Friday.

Delivered to Your Door by Carrier for 3/ per Week

"Middlesex County's Greatest Suburban Newspaper^

Golden JubileeNEW 1936 SUPER-DDUIX

SIX CUBIC FOOTCOLDSPOT

The next meeting will be a gardenparty ntJhe home Q.f .M.rs. Mitchellin her garden with a projo'iirn plan-ned for entertainment. This will beon Wednesday, .lune 10,

Those present were: Mr. andMrs. Charles 0. Mitchell, Mrs.Stanley Smith, Mrs, Edward MeU-Ker, Mrs. Herman Jeroff, Mrs.Charles Scott, Mi>. Joseph McAn-drews, Mrs. Henry Lavin, Mrs.Charles Davis, Mrs. Andrew Khe-herd, Mrs.James Steel. Mrs. Au-brey Woodward and Mrs. ArthurXi'lson.

—Mrs. Aubrey Woodward of(•Fairview Avenue has find Us hertruest the past few days MissEmma Pitcairw of Bropklyn whohas returned to her home.

— Howard Fletcher of West HillRoad attended a meeting of theSecond Ward Democratic Associa-tion ut Hopelawn Thursday nijtht.,

—The Colonia Parent TeachersAssociation met in the school au-ditorium Tuesday afternoon withthe president, Mrs. Joseph McAn-

i drews conducting the meeTing.| The guest speaker of the day was

Mrs. E. II. Goodman, who spokeon Boy and Gill Scouting. Planswere made for the annual party(riven the pupils of the school onthe lust day of the term. 'It,was.also decided that the teaching statTand the Parent Teachers' Associ-ation would \:\\'v the boys of theColonia School Junior Safety Pa-trol an nutinK the time and placetn be decided by the teachers. Theannual election nf oll'ieers washeld with the following results:Presidenl, M i >. l'hilip Den Bley-l;er; first vice-|iresid<'nt, Mrs. M.

I M. l'iittison; .•ecniid vice-president,I Mrs. ('. W. Knaiicr; secretary,

Mrs. Arthur Nel.-on, and treasurer,for the day vveretoilayhshtfl.ETAMrs. (iecir^e Keller. The hostessesfor the day were Mrs, BancroftLivingston, Mi1--. Joseph Taylorand Mrs. Geori;,1 Keller.

NEW JEWELRY STORETO OPEN IN RAHWAY

A liirjre credit jewelry store willlie opened in Itiiliway on CherryStreet, near Main, possibly nextweek. A. I!. Gnldblatt & Co.,

I jewelry chain store operators,with stores in Klizabeth and Plain-lield will lie the proprietors.

At present the store that willhouse the new enterprise; is beingcompletely renovated and redecor-ated. Jewell y Aw fixtures of thevery latest type .ire being installed

The store will carry a completeMine iif quality jewelry, silverware

ami radios which will be offered: shoppers from Woiidbrid^e and; Cartelet on liberal, friendly terms.The new shop will be under thepersonal dirceiiim of Mr. A. R.Coldlilatt who has, devoted over 22year- of his life to the newelrylni.siness. Many of the4 iyearB Iwere spent in Elizabeth stores dur- IiiiK whieb lime Mr. Goldblatt madehundreds of friends in Wnodbridge,mil I'arteret who now will we,l-

me his new, nearby, 'friendly*'

by Sear* 5-year

Protection Plan

Good Housekeepingo lnttttutc >

CHECKTHESE

FEATURES

% Striking N e wStreamlined Cabi-net Beauty

0 New Touch-ft-barDoor Opener GivesEasy Accesi

% Long-life Rotor-ite Motor NeverNeeds Oiling.

0 Newly DesignedFull-Vision Inter-ior Light

• 105 Ice Cubes —Five Full Trays—Fast Freezing

% 10-Point Cold Control-Semi- U PAutomatic DeFrost J

t Dr,

New Aluminum RustlessShelve. That Stay Bright •

Dulux Exterior — Porcelain ^lnterior

TO

TOO ILrtlXO p^i inflation $5 Down Delivers It

Small Carrying Charge

ig 6.3 Cubic Feet Storage

Famous Foodex Ccimp.irt-

Sears, Roebuck and Co,275HOBARTST. PERTH AtyBOY,N.J,

t

In iiimmimtin^ on the new storei. (iuldblatt said, "Our enormous

nisinesN has been built on (riving'full value "for money received to-

ller with friendly, courteouscredit. We expect to continue thiswlicy in Kalnvay where we knowt.s continuance, will carry us to,'

success as it has elsewhere. To |my many old friends in W-ood-lnidK*.' and Carturet I extend a per-sonal invitation to visit this newstore and renew old acquaintance."

113-189IN CHANCEHY OK NftW JERSETTO: MAHOAHET C SHERIDAN:

Uy virtue of un order of the Courtof Chancery made on the 16th ijay OlApril, 1936, In a eiuise wherein fidel-ity Vlnli.ii Title anil Mortgage JGU&T-unty Cumpiiny, a New Jiriey cbrpor-aii'Hi, and othera, are ifompUlnmits,a ml yuu and othera, uri defendants,you are required to appear and an-swer the till) of complaint flled by theecimulaliiariH, on or before the ITthday of June, W«, or uakl bill will betaken an am fused against you,

Hui.l kill wan filed to for«cloee amortgage made by Lester L. Drum-inunii and Marie Jane Drummond, hluwife, to Fidelity Union Title andMuriguge Guaranty Company, a cor.liurallon of New Jeriey, dated Janu-ury 10. 1028. on land* In the Town-ship (if Woodbridge, County of Mid-dlc.Hei, ajid Htate of New Janey. Andyou, MAHUARET C. SHKHIDAN, areinaile a purty defenda>t bacaute It latlici'etn iUlisuii that you hold a morV-guise uiiun the premises lougtit toIm furi>clu»ed and described In Skidbill.

Duted: April 16, 19»«. ffHt,:'«DIt'l' J. HANNOCH,Holkltor for Complatnaata.

Si:8 Uroiul Street,Newark, N. J.

W I i-lt. 6-1, 9, 15, ti

ENTRY BLANK_FOR—

WOODBRIDGE ^IGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TRACKAND FIELD EVENTS-

TO BE HELD ON STADIUM GROUNDS IN CONJUNCTIONWJTH STADIUM SHOWS WEEK, JUNE 27-JUl.Y 5

PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED TO WINNERS

OPEN EVENTS

( )( )( )( )

MAIiHI.IJ SiinuTlNl! I'ONTWh'T. (Open til .!>oyn »V <°

(l l 'tVwKli 1'IC KVKNT. (Open to liutli s exes adults!SI'X'TIONAI. 'l't'U (n-WAl!.! (Opi'U to'lO-miin t«'iims "'••

inK at'i'U'iris of towiisliili)lidl.l . lNii l'lN.CfiNTr.ST. (Oi>6irto|marrli'il v.nm-WOOH-CilOI'I'iNO I'UNTEHT. (Open to men mil)JIA.SK hrWlAI.I. TIlllOW. (Oiwn tci girl* H|> tu !\ >'••|,'(KI'J'|tAU. K1CK1NU KUH WHtANCIO nlp*n to IMIlilll/\Sl-:i> I'OI.IO HVKNT. (Open tu

I.eF'iii a riMOgulii'il ulliletle club)

nfml l.uyn)

rin-

WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP STADIUM COMMISSIONATHLETIC EVENTS

) GO VAItl.) DASH VOW .IUN1OUK.) 100 YAltU JJAS1I KOI! HKNIOHS.). li! l'OUND SHOT PUT) 1U'NN1N(! HHUT JUMP , .) RUNNING BHOA1) J t lMl '

440 YA1U> RELAY) 1 Mll.K INVITATION HlUir SCHOOL KB LAVCouteKtttiita Dirty cuter any muulior ut evmts .M u k tin! ent ry bjitnli with " S " fill «>ut the fnugon twluw

mall to MATUtlOK I'. X. IK1NOHUH, Bpurt» Edllut, WflodljililKtiDWKNDRNT p • ' - • • • •

( )

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Name

Alldll'DH

TIIWJI,

Name of t'luli

Page 8: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, MAY 15,1936WOODBRIDGE

A LtTture

Christian ScienceEntitlrri

Christian Science:Humanity? Liberator

dam from ulrknres. limitation. po»-erty; freedom to express Uie Infinitequalities of Ood.

Freedom from Material Bod7

One Of the most hampering nndUmlttaf beliefs with which mortal'share to contend Is the theory thatthey have material bodies in whichthej live, and to which they are con-fined, 10 that they can only be whoretheir bodies are Paul on« asked,"Who shall deliver me from the bodyof this death?"—or as we might ask

Margaret Murnry (ilrnn, C. S.Bof Boston. Mas*achuwtt«

M»uk*t *f Ibt BoiH »f l.wtiirtihlp «f TtiiMMWI Hank. IK- Flnl (.Wrk of (Juki,

fttkf^tltl, IB ifnilAt. Mllllfhuiflti

the Fit-1

tist, Sew;

The lecturer 'follows

the a',r-pi

. l.,vMich

query In substance by stating thatthe Christ, Truth, would deliver him.Mrs. Eddy gives a succinct definition

j of Truth In the Christian ScienoeI textbook when she etaU* (Science

and Health, p. 2821. 'Truth Is t^e In-telligence of immortal Mind." Intel-ligence, of course, knouf facts, thatwhich Is; In other wards, all that in-

feel, or see lack, accidents, sorrow,or disease. Neither can you, the Idea,or reflection of Mind. Mind expreme*perfection, so do you, iu reflection.man It is not robbery but restora-tion to claim thU equality or like-ness to, thl* Oneness with Ood.

You will be delivered from thebody of this death," from the belief

that you are nubject to discordant,painful, limiting conditions ex-prr-wd by matter, when you under-stand and claim aa yours the beauty,lovclirjrss. harmony, strength, andintelligence of the ideas or forms ofMind which constitute man's being.

Man Fnlfllb the U iObedience to the law of Ood Is

freedom, but without an under-standing of till* law, an expressedby men, and of Its seuroe, th« di-vine Principle, we are unable tobe obedient. The •Psalmist prayed,"Givr me understanding, and I shallkeep thy law." Understanding must

BecauseendurtnR more beautiful,not frttered by mattw, aft, mddecay The most Important thingyou know about a friend It htithoughts. These cannot be discernedIn matter nor by the material eyes,but with the light of low, under-gtai.dlnK. and Intelligence.

tt.K J increase to riches, [ ^ m her human experience asU ! rn 1 thought to know this, It was th« Founder and Lender of Christian,/v painful for me; until I went into fclence which made every step Inil..- -ancillary of Ood; then under- j j e founding of this church a suc-fw'i I their end." Envy of the earful one. The world looks on andj,r..;th, wealth, or happiness tx- » « what to Its sense s«ms to be aprf.sfd by others nwver solve* the mlendld organization, R good busl-pr"blMn far anyone, but going Into ness a remarkable, centralized formthe anctuary, or the mental place >f government, but to the Christianw hirr we can know Ood, man as His ^dentist who uses Christian Sciencelikeness, and the "spiritual fact of » "discern the spiritual fact ofaluiU'ver the material sentea behold" irhstevpr the material senses behold"enables us to see the end or nothing- Jiese things are expressions of ther,r»s of materiality In all Its forms, jovernment of divine Principle, of

„.. ...... -. . „ . . . This docs not mean that you will be the unity of the ideas or children ofThe amount of spiritual light or en- a-:thout money, but that you will 3od. of the leadership of divine Lovellghtenment which we claim and lave supply of every kind expressed )f the fruits of Spirit, as revealed b>utilize in beholding man and the 1:1 the way that win meet yoin >ne who understood and practiceduniverse determines the keenness, human need. This supply, however Christian Science and who has give:

be demonstration, erklenee or » all mankind Its gospel of freedom

The Christ Ufht

The primal condition of sight Islight, for without it the materialeyes cannot see. This Is true ofspiritual sight also, which requiresthe light of intelligence and love

«n.ui.v,, «~- scopt of our vision.An artist must have the tight light rirnof that wealth Is • state of Mindon his model to be »ble to see It cor- " • " " • "rectly and form the right concept ofit. That which enables us to

The message of Christian Selene*li essentially oncof freedom, for itnot only frees from' sin, fear, lackand disease, but it also reveals man';freedom to express his God-bestowee'harmony, joy, intelligence, healthand love; freedom to express his In-dividual ability and talents, as thelikeness, image, or idea of God.

In human history wars have beenfoQght to attain and to maintainfreedom, and In Christian Sciencethis Is also true; however, in Chris-tian Science the baUJes are notagainst our fellow man but againstthe common enemy of men. namely,the carnal or mortal mind, which In- \dudes all the limitations that wouldenslave and fetter man. !

The Discoverer and Pounder of,

c substantially ai telligence knows must be truth, for precede obedience; so, as Solomonit would net be mumeent to be advised, "With all thy getting getconscious of a mistake. an error, a understanding "superstition, a theory, an illusion, de- when I was learning to drive anluslon. falsity. 0; dream, as though automobile I had an experience

were realities or had actual ffnicri iiiustriteci that ^undersiand-lng must

yThat which enables us to see

God, man, and the universe u theyare Is the light or intelligence ofTruth. Mind, Life, and Love. Thlalight which gives us the true con-cept or true idea of all things Is theChrist. John said of this light, orCfcrtet. that it i* "to* true Light,'that llghttth every man that eomrthInto the world." Then this light ofTruth, OP the Christ, which llghteth

of matter, and that It Is notcuverned by fear, limitation, dls-

exlstence. .To know things as they in ? tnust precede obedience. Myare Is the Intelligence of. Immortal teacher told me to do a very simpleMind, and this is truth. This intelll- uilng. but 1 had a false mental con- „., „„, , „ , „ _ fw t j ^ , .gence, or truth, sets us free from the c e p t . o t ^ mechanism of the car, ^ ' ^ •<Hi5f t iS£J? to, ! J 2delusions and errors of the material a nd 1 cc.ulcl not understand how to " ^ ' ^ ' J ' Jaw * " ,* !? • . t o , * "senses, that would claim to fetter us d o M h c told me, so I could not obey " ? " ' ^ f l * P f ^ L ^ ^ . P j Sta the material body, him. The,minute I understood, I h."J^.^"JSZSJ^Xfc^Sr^f

The material senses are not truth- obeyed. My desire to obey was Tiot d a r k n e s » oi Ignorance, fear, hatred.ful witnesses to, nor do they receive sufficient It was necessary that Icorrect impressions of, things as they 'understand before' obedience wasare, 50 th«se senses cannot be said to possible Until I did obey, however,perceive or be conscious i>t lnte-111- T w a j n o t free to ttrlve the car, andgence. The material eye Is often de- my position In the street prevented

many other motorists from pursuinga free course. Mrs. Eddy says (Sci-ence and Health,,Pref., p. vll), "Theonly guarantee of obedience Is

ceived, the material ear do« nothear perfectly, . but Intelligenceboth discerns and upderstandsthings as they are. That which Is

Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy,' inf h intelligent, and that which is right apprehension Of Him whom tostates (Science and Health with Key - • -•-- -•-to the Scriptures. p,.K5/.;."Qppre$:don neither went down In blood, nordid the breath of freedom come fromthe cannon's raouth. Love is theliberator" One ot the reasons why o f m a t t c r M m intelligent reality,

whereas It Is a logical deduction thatmatter ot itself Is wholly unintelli-gent, and requires the belief of ma-terial thought or a mortal mind tomot« i& to malu) It talk, act, eat,

Love liberates is that It sees allthings as lovely, pure, lovable, spirit-ual, good; and It sees each Individ-ual as expressing these Ood-glvenqualities individually. When we be-hold man as the Image of Love andtherefore as spiritual, our thought isfreed from anything that wouldharm, limit, or enslave ourselves oranother; and If we realize that thislove-view of man Is actually thetruth, maintained by Ood as ari'eveY-present fact, this realization will de-stroy any limited beliefs or thoughtswe may be entertaining about man.Love Is the liberator, and it liberatesus from all fatse. enslaving, unkind,sinful beliefs

Infinitude the Compass of Freedom

All that Ood is, man expresses, formac was created to Image forth, re-flect, or express God, to be His like-ness; in other words, to be exactlyUke JHim. .Certainly God Is free toexpress His infinite nature, awt man,being His likeness, is free to expressSpirit's Infinitude. Nothing less thaninfinitude could expressr perfectfreedom, for Infinitude alone isunlimited.

The Bible states, "Where the Spiritof the Lord is, there is liberty." Toknow where the Spirit of the Lord Is,In other words, to find the where-abouts of liberty, we must be ableto recognize Spirit when we meet ItMrs. Eddy defines It In the following

Intelligent is true; and Wee versa, know aright Is Life eternal." Chrisnamely, that wJUdi if. untrue is un- tian Science unfolds to us thatIntelligent, and that which Is unln- understanding b? Ood anS mantelllgent is untrue. The material which enables us to be obedient. Itsenses Judge things from the basis unfolds the fact that man, being the

creation of God, Spirit, not the crea-tion of mattcr. Is obedient to Ood,and actually has no other Mind, noother Life, no other Principle, noother good than God. Therefore, the"Thou shalt nots" pi the command-.

sleep, or seem to be awake. Being cnents to mortals are seen to be thethus unintelligent, matter must also "Thou canst nots" for man in God'sbe untrue, and therefore unreal. In- Image. In other words, man as God'stelllgence, not the material senses, image cannot have any other thandiscerns man's unfettered, free, the one Infinite God. or Mind; hespiritual being as the infinite Idea of cannot steal, murder, commit adul-inflnlie Mind, intelligence "TSefiolds fery, coveT."'Because" nTE t7I5 nKeness •man's lovely, pure nature as the gf divine Truth, Love, Principle; he-likeness of divine Love, even when cannot make a graven image of him-the material senses may be claim- self or another in matter by believ-ing to see him as sensual and be- ing man to be corporeal, for he seessotted, This Intelligence or truth, men as the spiritual idea of Spirit;through what it knows, delivers us he cannot dishonor his Father-from "the body of this death." Mother, God, by believing in a ma-

j You may have heard the remark, teria! creator and creation because"Oh, if I could only get rid of this he knows man to be the belovedbody, I would be all right." In a way child of the one Parent, divine

| such a statement Is correct; that is, Mind; he cannot make unholy thei If It Is understood that to rid one- Babbath rest of Mind's unlabored, jself of the material body means to harmonious action by believing inrid oneself, by constant spirituallza.-.- the restlessness of material action, jtion of thought, of the material for he expresses or reflects.'through !thinking which is embodied in, or; restful activity, all that God lm- j

parts. Christian. Science goes evenfarther and lifts this negative rightof the "Thou shalt nots" and the"Thou canst nots" into the positivetruth that man's spiritual, perfectbeing, or nature, Is the fulfillmentof the commandments, and thus

expressed by, the material body. Inthis sense, riddance of the materialbody does not imply self-destruction,which is the culmlnatton of ma-terialistic thinking, of loveless, life-less, mindless suggestions, but Itmeans loving man's true, har-monious, Godlike selfhood until thesense of a selflood in matter hasbeen transformed or has disappeared.

manner in the Christian Science | -Such splrltualizatlon of thought istextbook, "Science and Health withKey to the Scriptures," on page .594;"Spirit. Divine substance; Mind; di-vine Principle; all that is good; God;that only which Is perfect, everlast-ing, omnipresent, omnipotent, infi-nite;" and in the same book (p. 93)she also states: "In Christian Sci-ence, Spirit, as a proper noun, Isthe name of the Supreme Being. Itmeans quantity and quality, and ap-plies exclusively to God." From thesestatements It Is clear that Infinitudeis the quantity of Spirit, that good isthe quality of Spirit, and that im-mutability is the substance of Spirit.It Is also clear that because Spirit isMind it b expressed by spiritualthoughts or ideas only. Then If youfound yourself thinking thoughtswhich were good, loving, unlimitedIn their scope, harmonious, and In-destructible, you would know thatyou were conscious of the thoughtswhich express Spirit, that you wereactually conscious of Spirit's pres-ence. We'become aware of thesethoughts many limes, but we are soaccustomed to attributing these in-telligently go*) thoughts to thewrong origin, namely, to ourselves orothers as mortals, that we have alimited sense of their universal char-acter, of their quantity as infinite,and of their Immutable, ever-present, substantial nature. Jf youwill admit the nature of suchthoughts to be spiritual, In otherwords, if you will admit that God istheir author, you will find that theirpossession is nut lirr'*^ to certainpersons but that they belong to everyIndividual as the reflection of Spirit.

Christian Science shows that onlyIntelligently good thoughts belong totaan, and these are the only thoughtswe should claim as ours, but it in-

. slats on the fact that the origin ofthese thoughts Is God, the divineMind. The origin of mortal thoughts

, 1B not in mortal! but in the carnalor mortal mind. The mortal who be-Utves In the power and reality oftuch thoughts and qbeys them Iseither the innocent victim or thewilling tool of a limited, carnal, so-called mortal mind, which, becauseOf its very mortal, material nature, isopposed to or is the supposititious,opposite of the divine Mind, whos^tvery thought is infinite, therefortboundless in its freedom,- Mortals are responsible for theirthinking, or for the choice of theirthoughts, and this choice alone de-termines the freedom or bondage,the Joy or sorrow, the health or dis-oord, the supply or lack in their hu-man lives. Isaiah, in foretelling thecoming of the Messiah, said that heVOVlld l4know to refuse the evil, andibooie Vie good." Christian ScienceShows us that each one has thtsWneability, this same intelligence, where-With to refuse the evil and to choosethe good, and It enables us to dis-cern the good as the glorious reality

' ol being, and evil, Its so-called oppoBite, as necessarily unreal. From thisstandpoint Christian Science rejectsor refuses evil by denying Its reality.BvU, rejected from the standpoint oIts reality, la not really rejected bu

' merely suppressed, repressed, lgnored, or forgotten, and none othese states of thoughto actually de

: etroy ^vll.Bomeone may. s]aj, I have neve

chosen to ba tick, poor, or limited,but I tun that way. Perhaps you navnot chosen to be thus, but have youactively rejected or refused to entertain the discouragement, fear, envy,resentment, hatred, and morbiditywhich have claimed tu produce theseconditions in your experience, andhate you chosen the thoughts of love,Joy, gratitude, hope, as your own andonly real thoughts, thus acknowledgeIng that good alone IK your Qod, yourMlttdt if you have done thU, UMI

- you know die result la freedom; free

shows us that whatever does not ful-fill these commandments Is not man,but a limited, false material conceptof man, which Is In bondage to fear, |

constructive, not destructive, and matter, sin, disease, etc. Christianrequires absolute consecration to Science makes plain to us why God Is;God, a full understanding and a Jealous God by revealing to us that Idemonstration of the facts of divine' omnipotent Spirit could not andLife. Our great need at present is; would not share its good governmentnot to rid ourselves of the material of man with any belief of an. evilbody, but to rid ourselves of the ma- ] power, or of a material creator, withterial thoughts that would claim to the opposer of Life, called death, or,deform, deface, defile, and enslave; with the opposite of Love, called>the body. As thought Is dematerlal- J hate. As you understand this fact'ized by a realization of man's spirit- you will obey it, and you will thereby

and death could not extinguish thislight of Truth, the Christ.

The' material senses have nevercognized the light of Intelligence, BOthey cannot perceive this Christ,Truth. Th«y are the darkness, thatcomprehends hot the light whichreveals God's aUnees, presence, andpower. If we look at man through thelens of the material senses we shallsee him limited to a short span ofyean, In captivity to disease anddeath, groping in tin darknm offear, ignorance. Imperfection. Thismaterial view of man, however, doesnot actually influence him, or changethe fact that he Is the son of God,any more than looking at a majesticmountain through the wrong end ofa telescope can change Its majestyand greatness. If one believes suchft itWlt^tl Vie RPof inaTVof ft mountainto be true, and adjusts his life andthinking to this false viewpoint, heis in bondage to It, and only the trueviewpoint, the right lens, and theright use of this lens can show himthings a& tlipy arc Christian. Sdeiiceserves as a lens through which wecan see God, man, and the universeas they are, and thus be freed fromthe belittling, limiting lens of thematerial senses. Mrs. Eddy says, "Thelens of Science magnifies the divinepower to human sight; and we thensee the allness of Spirit, thereforethe nothingness of matter." (Messagefor J9ul, p. 12.) "And how Is man,seen through the lens of Spirit, en-larged, and how counterpoised hisorigin from dust, and how he pressesto his original, never severed fromSpirit!" <The First Church 01 Christ,Scientist, and Miscellany, p. 129.)

The Well-Being of Man

It is the true Idea of, or the factabout, an individual, a situation, ora condition th»t frees us fromfalsity of every sort. Christian Sci-ence brings us this true idea. Mrs.Eddy states that with Christian Sci-ence "can be discerned the spiritualfact of whatever the material sensesbehold" (Science and Health, p.585). Let us use this lens of Chris-tian Science for a moment to lookon the things of the universe fromthe viewpoint of Spirit, God, whosees all things as they are, as Becreated them.

inesty. or greed This true idea ofwealth brings freedom front fear,lirk, poverty. Mrs, Bddy says to

:• vel wealth with honesty" (Sciencenr.d Health, p. 238>. When this Istrue, each individual will be ex-pressing the wealth of well-being

. t-stowed on him by God or good.1, r 'this is honestly'his, and no onev.'.l be trying to deprive another Inorder to enrich himself, for no onecan want or have more than the aB.-

!ni.is ot God's love, presence, andptwtr. . * •

Position s State of Mind

~, With Christian Science you can1 also discern the true Idea of yourposition, namely, that man alreadyhits his position in Mind. Whenever

1 we know the facts of any situation1 we must utilize them and act on the

basis of their truth. Of ft^urse, if .\ position is In Mind, It Irnust bel.n.ental. Is It not ir! faci a mental, attitude? For example, we all have

a mental attitude or position withregard to 1, government, supply,hettUfa k>v% trieadsnip. The mentalattitude or position God bestows jsone of love, Intelligence, harmony,good. There is nothing changeableor transitory about this mental atti-tude or position, and man alwayshas it with him. The very fact thatyou exist means that you have aposition, Even physically, no one

Mse^ can occupy "rut position youoccupy. It will always be -jaiurs.Your position could no more beoccupied by another thnn your Indi-viduality could be assumed by an-

i other.

t GhrteWan Science enables JQU. tfldiscern that you already have aposition and'that It is good. Utilizethis fact. It Is already true and youcan prove its truth by mentRlly hold-ing to it until the untrue beliefs withregard ti> a lack of position disaprpear. David said. "Thou broughtest .us put Into a wealthy place." Theposition provided for each one of usexpresses.the weajth of Love's Ideas,and reveals, to you that you. man,dwell in the beauty, bounty, light,purity, Intelligence of God's presence.Man does not get out of or into aposition", "for the fact thai fits' eH5tS"means that he has place or position.This position is free <rom friction,chance politics, personal Influence,or dissatisfaction. It Is your holyplace in Mind and it la forever estab-lished.

Health a Spiritual Fact

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can be discerned as a spiritual fact,a reality. It Is but natural that eachone should desire health and evenmore natural that each one shouldhave It. Health is a mental andspiritual state of harmony, not anevanescent physical state whichcomes and goes. Cling to the spirit-

Perhaps you have been looking | ual fact of health as you would ollng" L " ' - ' senses at supply, 1 to your innocence if you were !

ual nature, this splrituallzatlon re- be liberated from bondage to the (def-ms the body first from bondage to Illusion that power and reality be-the grosser material beliefs of sin, long to hatred, with its destructive-disease, hatred, fear, lust, and finally ness; to malice, with its unhappy •from the limitations of matter, ness; or to malignant disease, withChrist Jesus, the Way-shower, saved its deadllness. jand redeemed his body. He proved Recently I met a man who had ithat It was as free as his thought, been set free by Christian Science, iMrs. Eddy states (Science and For eight and a half years he had 'Health, p. 90), "Divest yourself of been in bondage to Intense sufferingthe thought that there can be sub- and fear of death. He seemed to be';stance In matter, and the move- afflicted with cancer. His professionments and transitions now possible brought him in contact with many •for mortal mind will be found to be people, and their well-meant sym- 'equally possible (or Uje body."

Think of the freedom of yourthought. It can be at the NorthPole, the South Pole, and encirclethe globe in ,a few seconds, but thebelief that you have a matter bodycannot keep up such a pace; so itprobably sits comfortably at home Ina chair. Your thought Is not fa-tigued by this trip; it is under nostrain, unless it hns been thinkingthoughts of fear, of hatred, of self-ishness, of separation or grief.

I am sure you can see that yourthought is much greater than thematerial body, for your thinking caninclude mountains, hemispheres,skyscrapers—in fact, everythingthat is cognizable; whereas the ma-terial body Includes only its organsand whatever food you may put intoit. As It Is impossible for the greaterto be In the lesser, w, to be governedby the lesser, how could your thoughtdr consciousness possibly be In yourbody? Why, of course It cannot, andit is pure delusion .which would

pathy and concern filled him withself-pity and hopelessness. Finally.'two of his clients, who were notChristian Scientists, told him of this,Science and recommended that he jgive it a trial. He attended a Wed-nesday evening testimony meetingand was much Impressed with thehealings which were related there.He then decided to go to a ChristianScience practitioner. He was withthe practitioner about a half hour,ana Was given a Christian Sciencet by seeing unjust distribution,'or

and ypu havewhich fluctuates, Is elusive, delusive,limited, unjustly distributed, andyou have seen it as having power togive or deprive you of happiness,education, enlightenment, home,and all the other good things. Ifthis is the case, give Christian Sci-ence a trial, and behold with it thespiritual fact of supply. You will seethat supply is Mind Instead of mat-ter, and that it is Infinite in quan j

ttty, so that there is enough for all;that supply expresses the fact thatGod sustains and maintains man Inharmony and happiness, and thatHe enlightens man with the trueIdea of all things. This fact of whatthe material senses have beheld asmoney, when understood, deter-mines and governs the outward ex-pression of supply. A person whohas been limited by the materialsenses' view of money as supply willfind through Christian Science that

unjustly or dishonestly accused.Ttae material senses are constantly iaccusing us of being sick, sinful, ordying, and the way to prove man's freedom from these accusations isto hold fast to that which we knowto be true, to be a spiritual fact. I

Health, when recognized as aspiritual fact, is seen to be as im-mune from discord and disease aatruth is free from error. Health is a'God-bestowed state of consciousness. >.It is maintained eternally by Godand expressed eternally by man.Health is no more dependent on ma-terial food, environment, or exercisethan is truth, for health Is main-tained by divine Principle. Themedicine which maintains health Ineternal harmony it the divine Mind—not mind over matter—but thatinfinite Mind which excludes thepossibility of matter. Because healthis a state of divine Mind It is amental state of purity, joy, gratitude

he is beholding supply as sufficient, love. Intelligence, and good. Thisunchanging, at hand, and within his health Is yours now, and Christianown consciousness and experience. Science will enable you to discern

If you have been made unhappy the spiritual fact of health as a re-

treatment. When he left the prac-titioner's office this malignantmaladj had disappeared. As noprocesl of convalescence took place,may we not aiume that the condi-tion which seemed to enslave himwas a mental state? It was a heabout God and man which had de-ceived and held him in bondage.When a He Is refuted and proveduntrue, nothing actually happens tothe lie, for it has never existed as afact. Through beholding the Truthwhich has always existed, the men-

ur believe thought or con- tylity which Is held in bondage by asciou-sntaa tp be in the body. All true belief in the lie is set free. Thatthought or consciousness is n. reflee- which Is hateful, malicious, or ma-lion ol infinite Mind; It Is not In a ljgnant cannot be ascribed W God,material body. Mrs. Eddy"says <Scl- who;ls Love; and the only w»y toencc and Health, p. 2081: "A material be loyally obedient to divine Lovebody only expresses B matarl il and Is to deny power,, presence, place,; o J J J J ^ n o t uute^jj conditions,mortal mind. A mortal- ma 1 poe- end'substance to that which. aaM.,.yf9.im^i.tlertt think that because

made envious by looking at your ownlack and another's affluence, youwill find this lack, unhappiness,envy, and belief in injustice, disap-pearing from your vision, your con-sciousness, or experience, as yousee that supply is from God, who IsInfinite, Impartial Principle. Youwill then know that this view ofsupply is free to all who will look atit through the lens of Science. Infact, your view of this supply andyour proof of It will enrich all others,as they, too, will behold that whichis theirs; for this supply comes fromthe one source, their God, or Mind,and yours. ,

Wealth, or well-being, like health,belongs to every man, for this wealthand this health are spiritual states

sessts this body, and he mikes it oppose Lov» and letter V°, v£\ c r ' a"harmonious or discordant according tion, man. This man beheld mmsellto the-Images ol thought Impressed as he was,[the perfect creation1 ofupon it. You embrace your body In God, and his thought was thusyour thought, and you should de!-, changed from a state of fear and sul- jlineate upon It thoughts of health, ferlng to the consciousness of man'snot of sickness." These statements harmonious,' spiritual nature,, as a

one person is healthy he baa talttnhealth away from others and that

must therefore be penalized andto give up some of his health

order to distribute It to those withhealth. Rather do we rejoice in

icKness." rnese statements narmonious, spinnim uamn;, M »: t h w i t h pv-nressed hv others fnrreverse what Is generally believed present fact. The^rfectlon of man's I * ? %** t h T ^ v ^ " J ™about the material body, namely, being as Gods Image appeared Intjiat it possesses us, that it tells UB his thctaght and experience. The phy-whether we are sick or well, whether aiclani who had lovingly cared forw» are fit to walk, or talk, or attend him rejoiced with him in his free-a lecture, or to do anything. These dom, and he later sent this testi-material theories Inform, us that the mony of healing to the Christian

we realize that they are expressingthat which Is normal to each Indi-vidual.

Wealth Is a state of well-being be-longing to all, because God-be-stowed. Such wealth cannot be ob-

material body embraced our think- Science periodicals, which every week talned by dishonesty, greed, mo-ing, our being, or ego; that it is in and every month publish au,thenti- nopolles, or by accumulation forfact uur tgo, whereas it is clear that cated testimonies of God's liberating, these qualities cling to the limitation

l b d li d h l i l d by Chris of matter or the opposite of truefact uur tgo, whereas it is clear that cated testimonies of Gods l r g , q _Mind, not tlw material body, supplies «nd healing love, approved by Chris- of matter, or the opposite of true lion of God s motherhood, aid this

• • -—.«. m_. ,.u 11 i..i__ motherhood of God w

from .which man can ikivsr beseparated.

Mary Baker Eddy

Mrs. Eddy not only discovered thisScience, with its gospel of freedombut she experienced in her owncareer this freedom. Alter discover-ing Christian Science she had toprove that true womanhood Is freefrom the pettiness, the physicalweakness, the lack of logic, and thelack of business ability, as well asother hampering limitations thatparticularly at that time besetwomankind. This Mrs, Eddy didmost wonderfully and exemplified inher life that true, womanhood Is asmuch the llkenefs of God as truemanhood. She proved in her indi-vidual experience that iwomatihopdIs free to express strength, couragejnitolte . love, and . wisdom,. WithChristian Science she discerned andwith Christian science she provedthat which she wrote in a poem

lan/s Rights," namely,that woman Is free to "point toheaven and lead the way" (Poemsp. 21).

In no way has her proo! of thenature of true womanhood detractedfrom true manhood; rather has itheightened, complemented, andsompleted the manhood of theChrist, as revealed and demonstratedby Jesus, and carried on in varyingdegrees by noble men and womensince Jesus' time. Of coursd truejpiritual womanhood is the Xpree-

man with the thoughts and ideas tian Science,that constitute his individuality or

wealth. True wealth, or well-being,d h

an Science, . w , g,The denial of the reality of a ma-1 which expresses good, health, Joy,

being. terlal mentality and Its expression, | substonce lnteiiigerice, tove, beauty,Paul la writing to the rhUippian* matter, Id a scientific necessity to' opportunity, is obtataedty overcom.id " L t thi i d b i h i h d It Ing the false qualities of greed dis

g pp matter, Id a scientific necessity to p p y , ysaid, "Let this mind be in you, which proving Christian. Science and Its Ing the false qualities of greed, dis-was also in Christ Jesus: who, beingIn the form of God, thought It notrobbtyy to be equal with God," Thedivine Mind, or Spirit, Is not ex-pressed by forms of matter, but-byforms of Mind, which are spiritualideas, so to be "In the form' of Gud"must mean to be the Idea of Mind,and this is what Christian Sciencedeclares man to be. The form or

revelation of the allneas of Spirit.This denial of matter separate*Christian Science from any otherform of mental or religious healingand 'teaching. But, you may aak,how can we deny the reality andsubstantiality of matter, when wesee with material eyes, and thebeauty we see is material, f&V wewould not be able to recognize our

honesty, miserliness. Wealth canonly be measured In terms of thatwhich it brings of good to the indi-vidual, and thereby to the com-munity. If we seem to be sufferingfrom' poverty, lack of opportunity,lack of friendB, lack of health, letus claim our God-bestowed wealthof love, Joy, strength, harmony,These are things mpney dan neverbuy, but which the wealth of God'BIdea of Mind, God, is equal with friends, relatives', our home, were

Mind In the sense that it Is exactly these not outlined in and by matter?like Mind, or is the reflection of Christian Science does not requireMind. The reflection of God is, in that you deny your sense of sight,' Psalmist was once very disturbed by

love brings to each ona of us,You will remember that the

Its degree, as perfect, lovely, pure, of beauty, of harmony, of home, of • what the lens of. the material sensesIntelligent, and free as the Mind It friendship and relationship, but it conveyed to him, and he wrote: "I

flU ' ' d i t h t d y the ma i t th f l i h h Ind r e as t e nd friendship and l a p , y , I

flU '•'» dues require that you deny the ma- was envious at the foolish, when IMind llv* ftrevw, ao do ygu, IM twlaUC? of these thinpi. and that »w tfc* pr^pnto <tI4bt Mcked

UUctlOD mm. Mtod cannot know, you me them a* perfect, spiritual,' Thev tin ^ than heart

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motherhood of God was part fjf therevelation of Christian Science

Love was the' motivating Impulsef Mrs. Eddy's career, it enabled

tier not only tu discern, prove, andpatiently wait for others to proveOMrlatlari Science to be the liberatorjf mankrhd fife'in all evil, but It also;nahled her to found her discoveryin such a way that it would be avail-able to all mankind through the ac-Jvitles of The Mother Church, TheFirst Church of Christ, Scientist, InBoston.

While depending wholly on „.„love of God, our Father, which sus-tains, supplies, supports, and pro-rides all good, Mrs. Eddy demon-itratid the love of God. our MothernAilch embraces nil humanity in onefamily, and thu& holds them together11 the united activities of a church

indeed » Mother Churc

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fesband Who Pays, Should Decide What Rent Should Be:NT RISK BUDGET

h GOOD ADDRESS'VS MRS^MARTOi

jltc Home As Charmings Possible, Await RiseIn Income^She Urges

L \ N S GREATER COSTSMARIAN MAYS

, i,upland whoMARTINpays the

-nines,1 hn.

be the one whowhat tl»at rentThe wife may

1,1 live on Swank Ave... iih a Poverty Flat in-

Thiflunless

,, (,, find something within,,,nly means on Swank Ave»i c had better make the best

Flat.

is unfortunateshe is cleVer

,,,-ty„ Mrs. Martin: 1 frequently1

niitp and the importance,,,.rl address with my hus-i,ut we never Beem to get:, He says that rent shouldi ,!iiwn to the lowest posai-.,HT; that nobody is inter-n where you live, and thatwho 'UlSKe * front,' M ha, ; it, merely get intoI feel ashamed of my home

, la-cause it is in a poqr part

You andYour ChildGIVE CHILD TOYS HE

CAN TAKE APARTBy JANE HERBtRT COWARD

Arthur found an egg beater andproceeded to ace what he could dowith it, He tested the handle. Itrevolved perfectly, Then he triedpushing ti in and out and discov-ered to his satisfaction that ityielded little, His object now wasto see if he c,ould. loosen it. Dili-gently he pulled and twisted untilhe succeeded.

Hia mother came into the kitch-en at this point. She snatched upthe egif beater. "You naughtyboy," she scolded as she examinedit, "Do"you want to break mother's.efflj beater?" -Arthur's underlipquivered. "You would have brokenit, too. I arrived jurt in time,"

Arthur's mother had Ruessecright. If it had been possible tobreak that tgg beater, this b6y cer-tainly would have done it. Heseems to haVe a knack for takingthinifs apart. Even his own toys arenot safe unless he is Vieing watch-ed. Recently he took a brand newtoy to pieces within ten minutesafter it was presented, For thisdeed he was scolded and punished.Dad put the toy together. But thenext time Arthur got a chance at<t, he jroHed- ifr •part *«ftm,

Needi Mor« ToyiIf you have such a child, don't

assume that he has a destructive•..„. (.specially when some^of: tendency. Look over the toy situ-

i fnendfl corne to call. l n ey i a t i o n and you doubtless will findUTnhlywlf-conscious and that none of his toys sntisfies an

,.-r My husband MJ-8 I mi- ^niportant play need _ that for•hK superior attitude Kid t a£;n ( r tninRS apart and putting

• ,lwsn t really exist. He 0 e - ! t n e m together aitnin. '• l,,,i the sort of friendn who | When he runs out of play mate-„• interested in where we i rj8l,-he wjH ( | r a w o n egg beaters,

.,. not worth knowing. He . c | o c | , s o r anything he can get hisrobbery and says that our • hanfln on. Such a child needs "do

,,1,1,. residential thorough- with" toys like large wooden beads,.,re lined with• peo|»l» who n n , o r ted M«eW lai^* hollow

: bo living elsewhere. _ blocks, a dump truck, a peg board,Wife Mutt FaceGoiiip 'simple puzzles, plasticine He ia

|A ,'his may be sound loioc, but hored by toys designed to "do":o live in the town and face things for him.

while my husband only

INJURY TO COCCYXFREQUENTLY ROOTOF MUCH ILLNESS1Dr. Chrisman Warns 3

Small Bones Are EasilyDisplaced

ANY FALJTWILL DO ITBy CLAUD N. CHRISMAN, M. D^

At the lower end of thespine are three little seg-ments of bone that representthe root of the tail in animals.They form a slight curvedownwnrrl nn<( fofw»r<t fromthe spinal .qoliimn nnd serveas an anchor for many smallmuscles controlling the lower partof thr pelvis. Many small nervespdss over and around the coccyxand any nccident, injury, or diseasemay he the cause of much painand general nervous irritation. Forsome reason injuries to this rwion«re considered by many physiciansand the ge.ner.al public to be of

niinoi iniportjiiirc. My own uii t ivHtion and rxfiericnci1 have led meto consider these condition* veryimportnnt and the cause of muchdiscomfort and incapacity.

Many so-called rectal troubles,pvlvir nriiral|riaK, hipnchi' andliarknrhr arc due to diseased con-ditions in this area. These threesegments of bone are frequentlydislocated and injured by fnlli. Akick or jevcre bump while ridingiv bicycle or on horseback maycause a fracture. The practicaloker who pulls a chair from un-let- a person who is about to mtilown hns been the cause of untold

Beauty Tips

LAMB STEW, PARlSIENNE—% lbs. shoulder or breast of lamb cut In 1-inch squares, 6 oz$.lard, I cup puree tomato, 2 tablespoons flour, 3 cups of good stock, little chopped garlic. 1 bouquetcomposed of bay leaf, thyme, parsley, celery, 12 »mal! onions, 10 small potatoes, 10 small carrot*, 10small turnips, % Ib. string beans, % lb. green peat. Place lard in a flat saucepan and fry lamb, al-ready seasoned, slowly. Add small onions. Take off the grease, add garlic and flour. Leave to cookfor uSS BltntttesYFirt in ttotkimi VWH tomato and add w r o t i and turnips, already blanched., andthe bouquet. Leave to cook for forty minutes. Aid potatoes, also blanched. Finish the cooking andtake oj7 the bouquet. Dress in special deep dish with string beaiu and peat, cooked separately, ar-ranged on top. By Oscar of the Waldorf. — :ombine with 2 or 3 finely chopped

irDon't NegUtt Back Palm

The honfs are broken frequently during childbirth and thetrouble ma^not be discovered un-til they har? ^rown fast in atom*abnormal position. If the trouhle isrecoimized when it first happens,the bones can usually bo moldedrrrto position «n4 h*M Ivy a pad «nadhrxivi- Btrajin with fairly (food resulU.

tf the condition ismeglectcd, thetorn muscles and ligaments are aptto heal and enclose some of thesmall nerve filaments in their scartissue. This is a constant source oirritation. The nymptomg are, afirst, pain at the paint of injurywhich is increased by any move-ment of the hijfti or" legs. Sittingon a hard surface increases thpain, and efforts to rise after'sit-ting down for a short time cauwextrene discomfort,

As the irritation continues it haa deep effect on the general nervous system.

carrots 2 chopped unions, 1 finelyminced clove of garlic, salt andpepper, 1 poilnd chopped beef, tyteaspoon chopped pnrsley andcups water. Cook slowly 20 min-utes, then add 2 medium sized po-1

V T h i a T a y T ! THE INDEPENDENT Is theput into n wtrir-mmithw! *h«rmo« most thoroughly read,.newspaperjug while very hot and carried to circulating in Woodbndg Tyour picnic ground. ship.

wspT<ge Town-

QUESTIONt "How can I hattpretty tjrtbrnwi and lailiM? Th»hain item very brittle and the?break off or fall oat all the time.My laihei are ciMcially icantyand I have to me lots o( tnatcarato make them at all noticeable.

—Jane."Perhaps the ordinary maarnra it

too drying for your lashes and itcausing them to break nnd fall out.

orhaps yottr body tone isn't up Wpar. Try bathing your eyes everynight with a soothing boric aci*solution to cleanse and rest them.As soon as the eves have ouitwatering and the lashes are dryapply warm oil or eyvlash creamwith a soft brush. Apply it to th»brown too. When you apply ey* ,juKc.-.Up use a soft, creamy kirJt

You, know there""is a mascara WaTcomes in a little tube with a brush.This can, be had in light or darkhrfiwn, btack1, blue or ^lark gre«mfor evening. '

" QUESTION: *"A* thick tboHn«k ipolU my appearance. Ihav* a fairly well-(>rofiortion«Jfi|ur« but thii dtfect makti ma-look ttoot and cluroty. Can Ireduce it or makt i\ look moregraceful ?—-Edna.."

" If your nedt \i naturally shoA •'and tfeick there is little you can do.Of course, you can take exercioMand learn to carry your head prop-erly. If you are a few pounds over-weight you can lose tnem by dieVing. You should wenr clothes thataccentuate your height, Av»i*frills around your neck or anywidth or suggentien of fulness alyour shoulders.

e l ,

K<>es and Rets most of fruit, milk or cocoa and, to top itliility elsewhere. Every off, ice cream and cake.liiinir the subject up he • • ••radically about 'keeping The. seasoned homemaker pre-.|n- Joneses,1 and calls at- fers (crated orange and lemon rindto !lu' poor credit risks to certain commercially prepared| i|-,. -m-iul parade in our extracts for flavoring cakes, pies,«!',. 1 i-spect he picks up frostinffs and desserts. She uratesof isilk ^i the office, where*.only the.yellow portion pf the rindtnfi'lni.' iwhere the flavorful oil cells are"

IIW th;i' a low rent and a found. • • »in- 'iir l"'st rule for people Any combination of the follow-rait incomes, but small ing vegetables chopped and servedmir;i.j!? are exasperating raw—lettuce, watercress, carrot,iiini Kit iiway from them., celery, cabbage — miiy'be mixed

[hiM tune we talked it over, my with creamed butter and used asand said that if I would dis- a sandwich filling to be served

•ltd the car and buy only,most young children with at leasti apparel as'I actually required, one meal a day.

Id arrange matters. In thei • « «: lu-t'uth he said that if we mov-1 To keep the flesh of fish white,

swanky street, I would add the juice of half a lemon andthe (iir and more clothes than half a teaspoon of salt to each

now. 'That is what I fear,' quart of water for boiling,he. 'The hifjher you climb the -—— r n ~

| r t you need and the harder you Alway* Rinse Woolens

Hostess Can Serve TastyPicnic Suppers At Home

By JUDITH WILSON | salt. Spread in a pan lined withMay opens the season for pic- heavy waxed paper. Bake in a mod-

nies. Once more hardy souls who erate oven for 30 minutes. Removefrom the pan immediately and cut

•:.:-::-- TKese cSokles keeplike to rat their lunch from a bas-ket or cook it over a campfire areignoring the brambles and insectsto take themselves into the woodsand hills or to the seashore. Oncemore stores are displaying foodhampers, thermos jugs and hikingoutfits.

Little cakes and cookies thatpack so well for the picnic mealare delicious and convenient at alltimes—with an iced beverage onthe porch when friends drop in orwith fruit for the family dinner.The rice combination and th«campfire bananas are just as deli-ciuus for a supper at home.

PIGNIG LUNCHESChilled Whole Stuffed TomatoeiBread and Butter Sandwichei

Or Buttered Finger RolliRice Uruguayan

Jack Homer CakesCoffee Milk Shake

"1 think I could manage, but IluM ^ret no support from my hus-

Woolen mufflers, sweaters andgloves will need to be washed be-fore they are stored away for the

cun

Modes andManners

QUESTION i ''May a manar jewelry and keep withini bound, of good taite?—LD.'

ANSWER: A well-dressed manwear a ring of plain gold or

• with a dark stone. If ho has aniund ring, it should be worn onsmall linger. It Is better taste,ever, when he does not wear anond ring at all. He could have

et for fys wife or sweetheart,studs may be of pearl, but

r for full dress. With the dinnerthe well-dressed man chooses

nothing more subdued than, white enamel or bone. If dia-ls are used on studs, theyd be tiny chips and incon-

CUOU8.

? QUESTION. "My daughter[111 ba »v«u loon and I iHould

i to gi»« a party for har little•ndi between t i i and sight»r. of af«. What do you thinkught to »rve lh«m?

Mn. P. P-"3WBR:Whynotaakthechll-

i for lunch? This will g-ive them'afternoon for play. The chil-li then can go home to the next[1 with good appetites, having111 effects from eating between

Serve them simple foods,(er chicken and lettuce sand-

i or an omelet o«MUy«g«ti

FLASH!

Do you think I should move Summer. Woven woolens Bhouldike it chance on getting away'be thoroughly rinsed. To insure

h it' -Ambitious." this, the soBp used should be one1 do not think you should that ia mild and easily dissolved. Awithout having your hus-lwater softener is suggested toconsent to the change. If he counteract any possible hardnew inunsible for the rent he has ajthe water. i vl

|rf'(t nifht to say what rent h e ; ^ ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^.ilfonl anil to expect you to ^*^»^a^»^a^a^ga^gga^ga^a^gfr liy his decision. i "Don't Starva in a1 Palace !

am afraid I agree that a high-,vim,' standard will mean a rise

:ex|n'iisi-s. You are certainly nothi: t» i-njoy scrimping and sav-ii( filler to have, an you caU it,•ttcr address.have in mind a couple who livei iMdiitiful house in the beat'lenlial section of the town.y I'unnot afford a maid. What\<>ii think annoys this woman

1st' She can't sweep off her ownpiirch and sidewalk withoutlering her social position.m'ittl position that rests onill a thing isn't very securet A situation such as she"•a may he awkward, but ithardly be described as fatal.well understand, however,

H cue would feel less conspicu-iinl more comfortable if one

'I in » community in whiche|uii(! off the front porch and1

I: was u general practice among |

think you hud better makei' iwiiH! as charming as posai-

i until suth time as you can af-,nl tn have everything in keeping

your surroundings.iieie is nothing more uncom-julile than to fe^l outclassed, iI until vou can live up to yuurj

ghlnirhood before you attempt: in it.

Broiled Steak or HamburgPattiet on Buttered Rolli

CampBre BananatFrotted Devil'i Food Cookiei

Iced Tea Fruit

Buttericotch Square!Cook together Vi cup butter and

1 cup brown sugar until smoothand blended. Cool slightly, add 2eggs unbeaten and beat well. Add% package pitted dates, sliced, '4cup nutmeats, and V4 teaspoon

ill S i i ' i fl t h tp ,

vanilla. Stir inhas been sifted withbaking powder and

pcup flour thath t1 teaspoon

teaspoon

in squares.well—if the family does not knowwhere you hide them.

Picnic TeaPour 2 quarts boiling water into

earthenware teapot. Add 4tablespoons tea and steep from 5to 7 minutes. Add % cup whitecom syrup, stirring until blended.Let cool and add cracked ice. Putinto a thermos, and when ready toserve aild a thin slice of lemon toeach glass or paper cup.

Campfire BananatA picnic is not a real picnic

without fruit—preferably the non-crushable variety like bananas.Cut bananas in halves and roll eachhalf in a strip of lean bacon; spearivith a pointed stick and broil overan open lire until the bacon is crispand the banana thoroughly cook-ed. You can also bake bananas irthe eoaWof your campfire. Be sureto cover well with hot ashes andleave about 10 minutes.

SteakSirloin steak cut into individual

portions for serving are most con-venient to handle. Have steaktongs for each person or use awire rack. Before broiling, rubboth sides with cooking oil or but-ter so it will brown evenly on bothsides. Cook to the right degree toplease the individual taste, salt andpepper and place sizzling hot be-tween the halves of huge butteredbuns.

Rice UruguayanWash 1 cup rice thoroughly and

STOREHOURS

Daily 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.Fridny & Saturday

8 A. M. to 10 P. M.

FREE PARKINGI Next to Market

Thii Food Market i> • Branchof Thr TIGER FOOD

MARKET of Nrw.rk, N .1.

PRICESEFFECTIVE

Up to and IncludingSaturday, May 16th

FRUITS AND

FRIDAY-SATURDAYSWEET OXHE* :T

CHERR1E(

FLASH! FLASH!SALE STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 15

SUNNYDALECar. Madwon Ave. and Smith St. PURE FOOD MARKET TaA A m b o »

a TO OURGIGANTIC SALE

Best Creamery

BUTTER31cib.

Cut from the Tub

> • • • » • > • • • •Wilson's Brand

OLEO2

MARGARINEmmmmmmmGRANULATED

SUGAR5 lbs. 23c

EGGS Brownand

White

CARTONSDOZ.23'

PICKLES qt. jar 10cPEACHES largest can 10cPHILLIPSPORK & BEANS** °* CA«6CTOMATOES tall can 4cLaundry SOAP large bar 3cTOILET TISSUE roll 2c

M U S T A R D qljarJOc

CLEANSER can 2cDICED BEETS large can 6cCARROTS & PEAS, large can 6cLoose RICE U> 5cPEAS large can 5cS L PANCAKE FLOUR 8cSALAD DRESSING qt. jar 25c

SHEF FIELDS

LIBBY'S EVAP.

MILKc can

LARGE CAN

FRESH SANTOS

COFFEE2 lbs. 2 5 c

GROUND or BEAN

RINSO

17'LARGE BOX

RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES IS RESERVED

JAKE THE GIANT KILLERWF. UNDERSELL 'EM ALL

FreshMUSHROOMS

Sunki&tORANGES

And

SunkistLEMONS

Jersey NEW

POTATOES

FANCY TAB]

GRAPESCRISP ICEBERG

Ib.l5clb.8c

LETTUCE large head 5 cNEW TEXAS

ONIONS lb.JUICY CALIFORNIA

ORANGES ea.FANCY GREEN

PEPPERS aMEATS

SPECIALSTRIDAY and SATURDAY

v—

FRIDAY-SATURDAY

2525clb-

SIRLOIN STEAK

Porterhouse STEAK

lb'

BEECH-NUT COFFEEDEL-MONTE PEACHESDEL-MONTE BARTLETT PEARSDel-MonteCOLDEN BANTAM CORNDEL-MONTE PRUNESFAMILY

FLOURSHEFFIELD EVAPORATED MILKGRANULATED SUGARJACK O'DANDY JELLIES A — F I —

LargestCm

1 lb. can 2 4 °

2 fw2SLargest Can \ Q

No 2 Can 2 ** 1 9 °Calif. New Pack

3i/j lb. Bag 13'

Large Size2 lb. box

7 lb. Bag

Large Can

5 Lb. Sack

All White MeatDelicious For Salads

i Finest Quality Pint Btle

Reg.

Bottom ROUND ROAST

Cross Rib ROASTi

Top Sirloin ROAST

CHUCK ROAST

Lean PLATE or NAVEL

2515'

:1b.

ib.

lb.

irA Whole Wheat Cereal

Fresh ChoppedHAMBURGER

9clb.

2 I b 829 c

Fricassee CHICKENS 2 1 c l b *

PORK LOINS, Rib End 2 1 C ^ -

PORK CHOPS, Shoulder 23c»J»'PORK CHOPS, OQclb.Center Cuts ^v

FISHGloucester COD

Fresh Cut FILLET

GRAPE JUICEF O R C EDD1PICKLES « —BEECH-NUT TOMATO JUICEEARLY JUNE PEASPURE V I N E G A R ^ or w^teSTALEY'S GLOSS STARCH •*BIRD'S EYE MATCHES » - . * • * .DOG FOOD "A Do«'*R"' F t i C T i"TOILET TISSUE

1 lb. JarVz Siie

CanQuart Btle.

Reg. Size Pkge.

Full Quart Jar

Reg. Size Can ^National Park" Finest Quality Q

Brand ' No. 2 Can O

'"

Fu11 o Biu

1 2 C

24e

6'2310°10c

21'9C

1 3 '25 C

22C

9C

5 'for

Cotton Soft

3Reg. Size Cam

4for1000 Sheets

4*15'

BAKERY DAIRY

Fresh BostonMACKERELOyster BayFLOUNDERS

1 0 c l b

12Jclb-1 0 c l b

8clb-

20c POUND CAKE

12c JUMBO BREAD

25c Cream STREISEL

15c COFFEE RINGS

35c LAYER CAKE

24c LARGE ROLLS

10c

9c

Selected Candled

EGGSor TulipMeadow Fafi

Country Roll

i5c BUTTER12c

25c

doz. 15c

2kLion BrandCHEESEAmerican, Limburgerand Pimento % LB. PKG.NUCOAOLEOMARGARINE

doz.23c

30c

lb. 19c

MONDAY-TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY

19cGROCERIES

MONDAY-

BUSS COFFEEVacuum Packed 1-lbcanJ

Packed by the Makeri ofMaxwell Home Coffaa

TUESDAY—

Runkel's Liberty Cocoa. 2 lb. can 9c

WEDNESDAY—

Royal ScarletTomato Juice

Re». S IM Can

lh.3cTUES. - WED., MAY 19 A 20—

Gem Bacon Squares17c lb.

Sirloin Steak23c lb.

WEDNESDAYHOME GROWN

RHUBARB

TSMONDAY/MAY 18th—

Beit Frankfurters17c lb.

VEGETABLESMONDAY —FRESH GARDEN

SPINACHTUESDAY-GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS

DAIRYIMPORTED

SWISS

CHEESEBAKERY

CRULLERSAND

DOUGHNUTS1 5 c doz.

Page 10: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

E TtiN

Crossword Puzzle.By LARS MORRIS

10 Lump of C!RTH-Narr.f !n Grr,f«UlS-BrI»ett;

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Today's Short, Short StoryDESTINY'S FLOWER

By J. FITZGERALD MORRIS

FRIDAY, MAY 15.

FINNEY OF THE FORCE WAL- Oi'LL MAFTAWEZ IM

AN1 *Mi S ISM«A*J

UDlCEMSt-TWILL BE TAKEMAWAV-NO DOUBT

ttti LICENSE 2

M. PAYNES'MATTER P O P - The ShoV Didn't Cliek!

THE FEATHERHEADS'S A VACUUM

CLEAiJER MAKl HERE— &to

Von AE-ouT A L LHE 6OT

"POOP

-THERE'S S"CMETHIM(S AMISS NEXTpoOrV AT THE HO fry S

OR FOUR.MEM

CALLED TODAYSHADES.

BeEM . _ . . . . _PAY— ^ ^ ^

ME SHOV\J T H I S TO

MESCAL IKE B, S. L HUNTLEY The Mail Must Go OnTHIS MERE

15ADDRESSED TO

TH'

(Conrrlilit, hv 8. L. Huntley, Trad* Mirk R«r. L'. S. |M'

REG'LAR FELLERS"

s-he picked up the note and opened it.

Paul sauntered down the avenuetoward the theatre. He could notunderstand himself. He was on hisway to' kec-p a date with a girl whohad turned him dowtli and his rival!was not even human. Shelia. hadtold him calmly that she loved thetheatre too much to give it up forfcim, and that tlje theatre reallyneeded her"

01 course, she was a star, Paulreasoned. She was beautiful, andtalented, but it would not last.Some one else would come alongand catch the eye of the theatre-

iing public. Paul had tried to tell«r that, time and time again. It

Went in one ear and came out theether.

Sheliii'.s answer had been veryJenite, yet Paul was on his wayto meet her. He wondered why—

he

There were plenty of other girls.Down in his heart ha.lcnew the an-twer. He loved Sheila—he wouldtlways love her. ,J

- - T h e crowd had not sUrUd toleave the theatre yet, so Paul stop-

8ed and looked into the window ofte little florist shop next door. He

Mid not want to arrive before theahow was over. He hated to listento the applause afterwards, thevery thing that defeated his ^W-pose. In the window of the BhopWas a aign. He read it because he

| -had nothing else to do, and beforeKe was through, a plan was formu-lating in his^brain. Without a mo-menrs hesitation he turned andwent in, !

* * *Shelia wondered where Ifaul

could be. It was not like him to belate. Not that she waa ready, butthe did like to know that he waswaiting. It was comforting to thinkabout Mm. Next to the theatre sheplaced Paul in her affections.

Then she looked up and sawPaul standing in the doorway. Shiturned. "Pajil, come in. What haveyou there?''

Paul carried the newspaperwrapped package over and set idown on the dressing table.

"A present from one of your adBlirers."

"Oh, thank you.""No, don't thank me. It isn't

from me.""Then who?" 4

"I don't know. Open it. Maybethere's a message inside. An oldlady handed it to me at the stagedoor and ask^d me to deliver it.

Sheila tore off the wrappingsa«d found u tall iiiwrow plant i t

liad long pointed leaves, -and there,were no flowers but just one bud. j

Wonderingly, Shelia picked up Ithe note and opened it. It read:

'.'near Shelia, . "j"This plant is a rare and beau-:

tiful lily. Watch it carefully and'profit by the knowledge gained.

"You are a flower, my darling,:

"An Old Trouper,'"Shelia read the message twice

and then handed it to Paul. Hepretended to read the words thathe had written. Finally he put it!down on the table and said casual-1ly: !

"Peculiar, isn't it?" He turnedto her and smiled. "I like thatjphrase, 'You are a flower, myjdarling'."

"It is lovely." Shelia said, and;he thought of the thbuaands ofjebple who had thrilledito her'per-lotwanceg. I t was nkje to knowhut one was famous.

Paul looked lit her, knew what$he wns "thinking. He wonderedwhether this conceit was deeperthan he had thought.

A few minutes later, Shelia wasready to go. "The same &ld place?"Paul asked.

"Y^es, dear," Shelia replied."taw know it's late, and I mustget my beauty sleep."

A wonderful thing, this beautysleep." Paul laughed. Unless hemissed his guess, things would bedifferent tomorrow.

• • •Next morning, about eleven, af-

ter a conference with her theatremanager, Sheila Wgnt into herlU'c&jing room. As she entered, fch»nutiml that the plant had hlootfi-ed., Slowly she went to the table.. hi» had an odd feeling about thatflowi'f. It was such a lovely thing.The petals were a velvety orangewith deep red spots scatteredaround the inside of the bowl for-mation.

stood for a moment with'out moving She had seen many ex-quisite blooms in her life, but neverhad oiie'atfected her this way. Sud-denly dlie remembered the note.Five words rang through her mind."You are a flower, my darling."

Later, when Shelia returned toher dressing room after the mutiflee performance, she disepveredthat the flower was drooping. Thetoil in the pot was moist, The roomwas at {Medium temperature. Un-

Long, Long Thoughts

^ O1DJA 6ETTHAT LIL* TINY BOOK,PINHE.AD? THATS THE

LI LEST BOOK I EVE.R SAW!

THATS MY . \J I iMIGHT BEFORE

? 6 O TO BED I SITOOWN AN' WRITE MYTHOUGHTS IKJ THIS BOOKJIVE BEEN DOIN' IT FOR ,

OVE.R A YEAR NOW'.

AN1 i GOT PRETTYNEAR A WHOLePAGEFUL DOUE1

0 Th* AiMoUUd New ••;

"KEEPING UP WITH THE JONES,ES"- Career va. Chicken—That's Al'i Problem By POP MGMANI?

_ BEEMAU. O

WflMTHOSE TICKETS

O M ' TTHfttA AWA>V.'

HOLY CATS"ALL VOU "THif-JKOt" 14 "THISDURNED PLAYFROMTILL KJI6HT " 1HAVEN'T HAD A

MEALTWiE£ WEEKS-

"IHlh4l< A LITTLE

iuCH A RjSSX HAVl A,,

KITTLE AS/ .'POSS1BLH.I WHEN t<OU\ TALK. LIKE

V TVIAT'

QET.iliOUt ANY

T\CKETSME LATELY.'

*TB_l_ ME THBTRUTH!

F^feOH^cem-ALL Of THEM'OUT A

FOR.MYS6LP'

TRIEDHARD .-IT'S

MOT MY,FAULT IPPEOPLE ^ o 4Y

WAMT TOCOME TO /

f MY WIFE

TIME ^XT FOR Mb! /

eaaily she wondered what could bewrong. " •

By evening, the flower was dead.Shelia was stunned, a» »he realizedits message, at last. She Bank downin a chair. This flower lasted onlyone.day. She, Shelia, the actress,was having her day, an soon itwould be gone. The revelationmade her weak.

The curtain went up fifteen min-utes late that night, put the waitwas worth it, for Sheila's perform-ance was inspired. She roue tu new

heights in acting, and when it wasover the audience applauded th.elrapproval in the biggest ovationShelm had ever received.

Later, as they were leaving thetheatre, Paul remarked, "The samsold place, I,suppose."

Slitlia looked at him with fttwinkle in her eye. "Yes, unlessyou know a better place, for diningand dancing." .

Paul looked at her carefully.Was his plan working? They got

into a cab. Paul spoke to the driv-

For a moment there was silenceas the. cab sped along. Then Sheliaturned to Paul.

"Do you think you could locatethe old lady who handed you thatplant yesterday?"

Paul guinea. The question wasunexpected.

"Well, I don't know. I reallywouldn't have anything to go on.What on earth do you want her

for anyway?""I'd like to invite her to the wed-

ding.""Darling!" Paul took her in hb

arms.Shelia thought about the crump-

led flower in/her dressing room.What she did not know, and whatPaul did not think it waa his placeto tell her was'that there would bea new bloom tomorrow. Besides,Paul surmized, tomorrow's bloommight,sejve as significant a pur-

pose as today's.

(Copyright, 1936, by United F«*.tire Syndicat*. Inc.)

(Th* characters In this story w efictitious) *

Now* of All Woodbridg*Township In DM Indepotv

dent, th» mott widelyread paper in

Woodbridg*

Vitamin A aids s^*strenfthtns resistance t» •similar infactiom. Sunnfood sources for thi? vlt-apricoU, aipmi?}18' c a r i "ries, torn, fresh p™11'Peaches, ploeapp'^i' "''pumpklo, iplnach, str»'string beam, sweet potan

toes, tomato juice. « cu"and Vegetables are u«"throw away the juice.

',-ilniO'11

•bfrri** I

'<•':>:*•

'•J~2fi'

Page 11: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

\\"OODBRIDGE INDEPENDENT

11

VANSYCKLE,GIANTSTAKE EXTRA TESTS10 ANNEXJONORSpinl Waysides Unchallenged

For First Ranking OnTownship Alleys

MIRITANSFADE BADLY

FRIDAY, MAY 15,193«

1 M ~*PAGE ELEVEN

i c v t ' Maccdloski's sensn-,i:1l '216 under roll-off pres-,v camt1 as a fitting climax

league bowling at the,,iftsmaTi'H Club this week.i|(. sc/tson formally elofwd

;! joint baiuiuet of the In-,,.11-iiil and Civic Lengues

hl(.^|ay»i(fht nt the Club. Thellin,ary six weeks of organizedi- pinning' now alone remain

• h,' lone'schedule announced by,'l Krohne last Fall.\ , [or tlie champions, there.was

doubt at all about thethe Wayside Social Club

,,.,.. itself• the outstandinginn; team in the township this

Winners in both halves ofI'ivic U'SRue, the team cap-, ,| by Ernie Hansen and man

• n o

ill (if

gjgatignal 276 Climaxes Bowling Roll-Off sWin Points For Woodbridge In Track

MAURICE F* X. DONOHUE

Americans Respect A GunMAYBE IT'S ONLY BECAUSE OF OUR LONG, LAW-

less background but there are few things, I think, that anAmerican respects as much as he dbes a gun. You couldtalk quite a bit, I suppose, about the gun being the founda-tion of democracy—an idea preserved in the fake slang ofthe old equalizer" an applied to revolvers—but I think

it s simpler than that. This country was won with guns,held with guns and divided with guns. More than that, thiscountry developed both the science of precision rifles andthe art of shooting 'em. Sniping is strictly an Americantdea; Even the word 'sharpshooter1 has embedded in it thename of a particular rifle, the Sharps buffalo gun.

Add all this together, fling in two mor'e factors—theincredible mechanical skill with which modern guns andammunition are built and the genuine artistry with whichthey are embellished—and you have a good backgroundfor the simple awe with which almost any American ex-amines a gun, instinctively tests its hold and balance andgazes lovingly into the breech. * .-

At this point, remember, I'm talking about any Amer-ican. Progress to the rifle nuts and you have somethingdifferent. The rifle nuts? Sure, they're batty, all right, Butit's a kind of glorious battiness. And sweller people I'venever met. They're as 'tetched' as the vspeed-bugs butthey're a very different kind of animal. The boys whodream of speed, revel over speed, gloat at speed are alwaysriding a wave—sometimes down but usually up into highpressure territory. They've tense, taut nerves that are

c ? T & ? W Mpwtnj off. Behnrwith >m teas nme-wratrkij* asI'm-itiin Dairy, combination!It 13 exciting.

,„!,,! a brilliant record in the The riflemen aren't like that at all. In the first place,h:,lf matches but Jnrieil bail- they ifrm't drink liquor like thespued boys, Liquor wrecks

• I1., " ih mtt of ?h« s S i t h e i r co-ordination, destroys the line knife-edge of concen-i ami won decisively in twojtration and control which can flick a trigger 30 or, 50 con-

tinents at point-blank rangeisecutivc times at exactly the right instant. And, though the;,w,,undaiP the schedule. The;rifiemen i1!im]ie instruments specifically made for killingTi"'t si". (."uiies,"ill of them — killing specified things at specified distances, too—,, 'automobile crow. _ ;they're« free from the atmosphere of imminent disaster

nii?ht, that wide-marsinwhich always hangs like a cloud of opium smoke over thei ^ ^ ' ^ ^ S ^ . ^ ^ » U « men playing with monstrously dangerous

There .automobiles and motorcycles and' airplanes,

,1 !,y

i- but

ErK<1 Skny repeatedly was

b d f titlby a bad case of titlemanaged to throw off

I, ,, I'im-f-makera' curse every timemic ton mcnacinK.

Van Syclcle. Winresult tfl the imlnstrmr-oir-

•:is not as clean cut. There,

Legion Replays 3-3 Tie With North AmboyAtStadiumSunday;DelaneyRejoinsMesick

Linden And Saints Should FattenDrooping Percentage For Barrons

•hi' full-season honors.:ID need »f three games. Ther,»iiit went against the Milk-• 1'JO pins and although they

j. the Puritans lost the see-.;,,,:,., MiatvU mid champion-

'.' '.r,'v.''tS|'.'cJiontsand the Old 'respect onlycil in aniiiL' \vh.Mivrs-uh

Blind Courage — Honest AccuracyTHE STANDARDS ARE SO DIFFERENT, TOO. THE

speed maniacs is blind courage. The riflemenhonest accuracy. It's a thing they've got to

thri'i'-i?ame,Krow up to achieve—the best shots are almost always moreshould he than 40-vears old—and if their opinions are to be taken

o the "—

iffr and oldill ami thei

they must know a great deal about a great manyvery involved sciences.

You see—the fundamental idea originally may havek l i i bt iavailably. lioll-niT | , e o n proficiency iii killing, which is pretty nasty, but it

iwnd'Vu'iiii!' ' ' . ' i i s n > t l n a t i l t a11 ' an-v more.'The search is for an impossible; did v.'iv well inV>«li a gon\ that never will he reached by anyone, which

oiicnf'the threeiKh they lust ihe

pat ITS.

guntil the

' " 1

la-i g»m«

A!t.\

pwith him immediate-

into a staBut

Street. Rain broke up the, pro-ceedings that day in the eighth in-ning without a result.

John Lishak was the enemy'shurler and a very good one, too.Nevertheless, a lurking suspicionexists "that Sonny Walsh may belominated instead of Lishak, whichmight complicate the Legionnaires'problems to no small decree.'

Dunham With FoeEqually unpleasant will he the

presence on the North Amboy ros-ter of Francis Dunham, otherwiseknown as 'Swackie' and deeply re-spected by the township Soldiersan ft hustling ball-player who canproduce crisis base-heats with rareconsistency. The local teum ou^htto know about him—he's playedwith them for years.

But Ed Ddancy, the fastest cen-tre-fielder the township has everhad, will rejoin the Legion for theOil' game Sunday as the HolbrookHatters will be idle so that bal-ances the score a. little. Eddieplayed with North Amboy in thefirst match—and Dunham and hegave the Legion's foes all threeof their runs!

As for the comforting skill withwKich Woodbridge's very finestball-club bopped the Kruegcrs lastweek here, it glance at the boxscore is all that's needed by wnjof explanation. Rusznak filinghis persona! variation of the highhard one past the dazed heads often Brewers, all of whom acceptedstrikeouts, and scattered eight hitsshrewdly.

Only in the eighth, when he hadNowadays," it's mostly mall-b«re prone shooting, using | a six-nm lead, did the. University

• ' - - . J ' D ' ., inf Ponimylvama freshman relent.secured all three runs

nukes the search all the more fascinuting. Absolute accur-acy in a rifle is impossible to achieve. So the boys, realizing

A? Pin Decidci : a t , I't'Vfi'thclo?rt spend their lives searching for it. And it'spin decided the fir>t « gripping way to have fun.

•ui: HafTniT, who had Shoot from a machine rest, which eliminates the huthe Puritans tin-night m a n , . , |U i i(io n from holding the gun. Use a hand-\vrous?hi'hKoyonTmniibiiiHTi barrel, made with a precision which machines cannor.o, Macedloski poured equal. Use -hand-loaded ammunition, into which,you've

:!7ii ami Hu."> practically counted the grains of powder, let alone weighT1 ' : ' i ' 'k 'tho' 'n | i t '1L 'm 0I1 d*-'"0^ male's. Start the bullet down the mui

• "7 compile,I iiV thi'iz 'c to achieve a wedding of that particular projectile andSteve Xugy's lead-off the barrel which could not otherwise be attained. Choosei>vt single score there. a ) 1 absolutely calm day or go indoors—and still you can

not put five shots on top of each other from any respectablerange. They'll make one hole, perhaps, but there will beit maddening variation of fractions of an inch —• which ithe whole explanation of the lure of precision shooting.

climb up to 2:1'2jMine ;iinl iivi'iage pcrform-

liv In- mates resulted in arun- (if 1)41.I,.- tin' Iniiiistriidisls, there

MM- M'OI-CK in tin1 chiimpiim-1 !..y ..If that rated special. '.. Kiiznia U|IIMUMI nt 2Hil, a'i;i!clird in the sccnnil |»nim> .

;,.,•„, sailer finished with ti<>n, ami team-matches with other countries.'I WairniT bad 20'J.

6-Weclj C.rd t | ,e mi|jtai-v trick of gluing gun, ground and body together:;i.c t;id:iy tirgi'd all bowler*

ill the duck-pin season t

IF YOU LIKE COMPETITION, YOU'LL FIND Till'world literally soaked in it, Beautifully organized by tinNational Rifle Association, there are club matches, districmatches, State matches, national matches of every descrip

Barron Levi Dan Ogden Anthony Wagenhoffer Joseph Boka

But Dunham Will PerformWith The Amboyans;

Rusznak ChoiceAfter negotiations so pro-

tracted asalhiostto establishnew all-time records, MonkMesick finally succeeded this.veek in arranging for a re-play of the Amer ican . Le-gion's 3-3 tie with the North Am-boy Sporting Club. The game willbe staged Sunday afternoon at 3o'clock in the Perth Amboy Citytadium.Lefty Rusznak, who confused

Krueger Brewery batsmen in themost complete 10-3 fashion herelast Sunday, jell,.be selected by•«* - • 1 e j.L _ • _T1 _P" I'tu-rirtm-jw

UNTRAINED YOUTHSWIN 3 1ST PLACESHigh School Trackmen Lose i

To Perth Amboy,South River

WAGENHOFFERISSTARGreat Slump h Hitting Weighs Down Scholastic Club

Which Still fan Field Well And Which Has A FinePitcher In Young Joe Allgaiet

Games next week shoulddo much to fatten the drop-ping percentage record of aWoodbridge High Schoolbaseball team sadly bedevil-led with a lack of weight onthe club and a great slump in the

Mesick for the job o f thro WlHf hit ling aBilitlel 1ST ymmESters irtrothem past the North Amboyans.Toby Bartos had the assignment inthe first game played here at Grove

still we many miles from their1935 gait

Linden is host to Nick Prisco'syoung Barrons on Tuesday at 3o'clock. Friday, it's St. Mary's ofPerth Amboy, also away. Thetownship lada have given both clubs

sound drubbing already and-olwious renaon why they

shouldn't repeat. After that bracenf clay pigeons, the going getstough again. New Brunswickcomes to Grove Street Field for atwilight encounter on the 27th,that being a Wednesday, and onthe 2!)th, it's Cnrteret away.

South River playB here Juneand the season ends with Irvlngtonaway on the ninth.

Prove 3 PointsAs for the three tratnos earlyi? week, they did nothing bevom

niling up further proof for threfacts already well appreciated. Tb

le bold,vou want a run for your

ague will b• -iI tu four

e \ i s i . i | t i u t

small, (•teams

it will almostIn- fnl.lcd in half by clubsii-.i (tames :i week. Twcn-

•1 rent of tlu1 proceeds willni'd to the players in the

print's at the end uf the

t IN ic i.i-:*m nNuiMt i ' i«»« u u i i . o n

CIA NTS .-'II 'I.I ITS i:,i(

. r.v i::s IMI M !•>: -'•<•-

money with whatever"" ' ' j 1- gun you have—be it a delicate S2 pistol, a ponderous Armyluli2," automatic, a cheap rifle with iron sights or even the enor-

mous old muzzle-loading Schutzen weapons with the curl-ing brass shoulder pieces on the butt and the special hip-Vi^ tcchnic—whiituvur you've got, you'll lind someone gladl ( j ^ ^ [{()l|| w i t h y o u 'f()r a | i y ^ a C e you- ( l c a r e t o name.

i I

there. The Woodbridge billies ar-rived in three bursts—five in thesecond, one in the fourth and fourmore in the eighth.

h m h l i n , 21), r f .

I ' l ' .

TI Ml-:US 11. . . . : . ' - l

r.«11 (']r:.'.1:11

A Search For Absolute Truth• . WELL TUATJiECOMKS A PROBLEM OF HEALTHYanimal reflexes, keen swift judgment and phlegm, underpressure. There's a bigger thrill than any of that, I think.

The rifle-maker* and the rifle-worshippers whom I'vemet all have been very extra-fine human beings. They don'tlie about anything. They have no cant, no poses, no lusts.Except, of course, thej fundamental, enveloping lust fortruth—scientific truth, truth about substances that burnvery quickly and with great pressure, about tubes of steelthat' make bits of lead spin toward a fixed goal, battling

• • • * • m i

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l l : l l h l i e s , If .Ml l l -UlKl l . . ' ( . .U u y / . n a k , \t .l i i u l i i a r , c . . .

11. I'D.il I

1 I

Track Meet TomorrowDraws Good Entry List

The track and field meet to-morrow afternoon at the Par-ish House field sponsored bythe Recreation Department ofthe W. P. A. has attractedmany entrants, Samuel Gioeannounced today.

The first event will start ut10 A. M. for the junior divi-sion. The senior competitionbegins at 2 P. M. In each divi-sion will be 50, 100 and 220-yard dashes, the 440, 8H0 andmile runs, shot put, rui)ninjcbroad junrp, standing bnmdjump and running hip;h jumpas well as the 220 yard ami440 yard relays.

Many athletic organizationshave entered full teams in themeet with the hope of captur-ing enough points to win themeet.

PT. READING'S LOOPLEADS ALL OTHERSIN FAST GET-AWAY5 Leagues Open Schedules

In System SponsoredBy Gioe's Staff

CROSSWORDS IN FRONTl*(irt Reading's four-club

league in the system of base-ball circuits organized by theWl'A Kccrention Depart-ment marched in front of thefield this wi'ck as five leaguesiTut uiidcr way. [11 notion are pir-fu is in Ki-i^hcy, Hupplawn, S«"

•wmi'ii, 1'i.Vt Ucadinif and Wood*h i i i l i V .

The Cnnswonls, who won alltin re of their start?, lead the paokin rni-rHpAdinif, and, if the heavy'iiuirnlns rolli'd up in, the sallyKiinus is reliable evidence, shouldnut have too much trouble stayingthere. Tlwy ticket! the A & 8crew twice., by 0-G and '13-fi. Theirtii'tiron. however, raiqe buck to^jut-point the Field Club, last year'« •winners, in a tight 2-1 match, •

The Nut Club did nothing to im--'prove its ptisition. That outfit hasbeen beaten both times it has goneto the post.

The White Owls knocked over

the other, results reported by thethe •thre«il)e*»rtment .

he lineups:Port Urmllnu Srnliir

W.

lost important is still that JOBillgaier has improved tremen-ously and despite his size (or lackf size, rather) is as Rood a

us most schools can boast. And.he infield still is spotty but cap-ble^of air-Mmht baseball when theackra'bbits fix their mifuTifoVTlT.

And the battine still ig uniformlyrank, if not vile.

Thomas Jefferson of Elizabethwas flailed into submission snouph and by 12-0, but the failureo K've A%aier the victory over

New Brunswick deserved by his sixnnings of faultless relief pitching,

during which he allowed no hitsand only one pass, was hard toforgive. The final score was 4-3,Woodbridife Ki'ltiiig two in the sev-enth and one in the ninth.

As for the l!-0 loss to SmithRiver, that too was a matter of theallowed hJK.Kuns failiiiK again todeliver. Soroku alloweil only threer>f our younRKtors to poke out Rsafe blow and one of them was All-Kaier himself, the others beinp; EarlSmith and John Karnas. Aliftnier,meanwhile, was having his truubleslmt he fought his way out of dif-ficulties so successfully and the in-field played so precisely behind himthat only two runs scored despitethe ten hits Jon distributed.

The lineups:WOlMllliillKI'

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PC.1.000.SOU

PC.1.001)1.000

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•ittrpmimi F I T ; r n r -ah.

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899

Yvenel Grammar Schoolteats Sewtren, 19-10' Mistakinu the announcement of

Kecreativn Department.JrimiiKsters frijm the AvenelichiKil staged a minor track meetis week at the official opening of

Grammar School Baseball.. Je. Arid the party of the

«cimd part, as impersonated byfrom Suwaren School, didn't1 badly at the aame business,

lither. Anyway, the score was|9-1(), in favor of Avenel.

Some idea of the calibrg of thepatch may be gained from thefi't that thu two clQba scoredhone 21) runs with only ei(?ht hits

But avaryone had funfine season for the new

' circuit was predicted.(10) I Avvurl <1U)

h.| ul), r . ' h

piecu.a

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fi. 4

?HII, Ulinn,

I'liluk,n, r i

fwma, lb 3(liber, o o•nioth, of ll l a U , as 4

IIIC'lli),4 T'llllixull, If 4. . . . . . i i f 0

043

8

4

Burylu, K<U liulug, .;•0 Klorlo. at)0 Dllfii. 2lillJIIiui', rfoiSiirink, tu

T'paon, tbHunda, p

SITotttU .. . it 1» S

gmvity*i There are other enemies—the winds of the world, the

• ••• illusion of mirages created by our defective eyes, the su-••' prerie fact that no thing can ever be duplicated, no mix-; • • i ture of powder, no blend of metal—but gravity is the great

-'-'•-'foe It pulls a bullet down no matter how fast that bullet-•imayibe nor what force is driving it, So one attempts to••'force gravity to putt the bttlret where one wants^it. AXj

:.'.:! tempts »nd almost succeeds. But never quite. " t••••i •'• Accept the premises of.these men'and. you can under-

-'-- stand the dream that grips them.» * * • *

The By Products Are NiceTHERE ARE FOR ME MORE IMPORTANT THINGS

than that dream. They happen to be by-products. Qh, Ithrill too, to watch through a 12-power telescope rfghtwhile a precision instrument does for me almost exactlywhat I waited it to do. ,

But I like the physical beauty ot the guns—the mar-velous sheen of lovingly-handled wood, the supremeheiKhh to which the tooling of steel and iron can,climb,the stalwart firmness of line in the design of any good wea-pon, a firmness which produces an essential grace of com-

P°S 1 Hike the frankness of the men,-ami their single-mind-ed absorption. I like their ability to repair the cheaper armsin their arsenal, their ubility to make gadgets to help themload their own ammunition. And I like the completenesswith which they admit and admire superiority. If anotherman is better than they, why there-are tugets to prove itand they say ao. There are no boasts.

And the rifles themselves, pf. course, are miracles ofsupreme mechanical simplicity

If you are bored with sta,|»p& or autographs or oldirlass vou might look into thift bUBinesg of playing withSuns There is something there that will always be vivid forvou—no matter what your age or sex, or your ideas aboutkillinir anything or your respect for the mechanical tools

have permitted man to eBtabJishTiis ^-"+i*"

Tutala • 'ilI'IKBII1 Brewery.

l.i'fe'iun

111 li -y.OIKI 1)111)

• 1)511 101)inn— 'il l lx—10

T l i i Y f l i i l s t ' l i l t s — U i i n d l c H :'. T \liuMtj l i i l s f + i i L - r e k , l V i c l i n u i n - . l l i ll i l tc l l i i l1—fcil i l i , T U t l l , l l i i i l t fho lstulcn buses—Totli :i, lluilmir, l>a-LiK'lu. liuublfl play—UIIBSU tu Tuiliiu,(,)BiliMi. Siputk inn—HySI; by Uoyle 6. Busd unKDsznak '1; pft Muylo 5.

I), KreugtM'

Hyun Ijulis—ott

J-ul'l »irh, I'm-

Sports QuizI. II 'a fiiu-liei1 dr«|is lliu liull "li tl

thlril sti-lko, what can lie 1K1 to ru-Uro tlie bailer?

Who io ilie nmuug«r tlio roro»Field Olub?

;l. What la the length 0( an Ainer-li-un rootbull tlelir;

i. W|iu ia president o( the Niitlun-nl liuKuball LeaBiie*;

ti. In rheoi, wlmt piocea citu takeIhu kiiiK')

ti. Who WHB tlic laot football l)lny-ifi- lo we«ir No. 77 ut, the Unh-cmliyof llllnulaV

7. Wlial iluu.s a climkuii'i! MUKim-an to automobile race lirlvc-mv

8. Whut In thu penalty tii Li-ulK*I'm1 rei'ualiiK I" follow mill wiu'ii J'""Imvt iimls to do so?

8. Wlmt (In truii-uliuolvrs HH-'Hiiby 'Lltllu Joe'V

10. TuchniLully, what is the ahupeo( liumu piujt) In .bitsubiill'!

II. Wlmt la tlio iittmo "f 11* m o a t

lanioiia busobftU teura lliilllinoru u w12. How muny half-b.icka lire

lltt'ie on 11 soever Uiiin.'ia, What Is slitlom racing/ -.11, In t'oir, wliat Is I'lisiwl iviilfi1-'li. Neiir what My if Ihu liuvru

lie Gi'di-'u ttti-'U' track?10. What iliitermlnt'it wlieUiui- u

btiaUetbull silnyer who h;>s bnonfouled'ffi'ta unu or twu shuUT

,17. What KUBUTH colleBo iloinln-ateu iioh'-vaulilric

18. What event did I-»ltsl Itociulluf Italy win at the 1033 Olynipk-s !»l,os Ang'ulesT

18. ExuL'tly whut duos tho base

HATTER HIRELINGSTHUMPED BY FORpSHolbrooks Accept Defeat

From Another LocalClub—By 8-6

Well, those hand-pickedHolbrook Hat hirelings stillmust win their first gamethis year from a townshipteam. The manufacturedPerth Amboy, aggregationtried again this week, ut Fords,and succeeded oijly in Retting asound 8-(> thumpW. Two run?n the eighth decided the issue.

As hnsebiill, it wasn't very (?nodbut as a solid bumps for thu indus."trial crew which has been raidingregional crews it was very heart-ening, indeed. ' -Teehnieulliy, «i«Jiterrors evenly divided, si)< stolenbases also cut in hsJf Hn<l nineteenhits (Mdn't produce a very classicspectacle. All of which took noneof the zing out of the win forFords.

Melblom and Mesko pitched forthe winners. They gave up u to-tal of nine bingles,

H.ilbrouk | Vortl*r. h i lib. r. hi3

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I 0 0

li. l b . .iiWskl

Henrt«rve<l hyfirst places they hnve wonthus far rather than dis-couraged hy the decisivescores piled against them hyPerth Amboy and South.Rivor, the untruino.l boys perfurm- w ! h r l l l B r •""""' l^*'lr ,stnal1fing in triiok imi) licld nt Wood- cviiun,^bridRi1 I|i(;li Sohool were convin- wiiUi. nvci'd this morninR that the sport *;'•',*.''. J,"(.],'launched hero this Spring by Steve liu'i,, ,1.,'yWerlnck is 11 thonHithly good idon.

' Of coursi", it wnstn't quitu threefirst ))liii'cs Bt tlint, sincu the most'^lTffI5iTTjrTirSTrtt--TifTrti7-the- tnttprun iit Perth Amhny, resulted ina (li'iiil heat between Joseph Boka,Woocllii'iiltto, nnd IlroRrntta ofI'erth Amboy, Incredible as the resuit may sound. The time of r>: 11> ',','"'kl:WHS vtiiy slow, :is three South iv!l,.'rRiver lads demonstrated on Tues- iifiiriday when they swept the fnur-lnp -MHb'i1

event with Rarrii leiulitlK the packhomo in B:).l. . s,,,,-

Wagenhoffcr Start • VillrtKAnthony Wiicenhoiroi1 lif Kens- ""i'<i

bey is the brightest hope so faruiH'overed. At l'lM'th Anihoy helihiced second lichinil Kiiillioil inlotli the sprints,, which were elock-i'd iu 10:;! nii(l.2,ri seconds. The100-yard dash was covered in timesovun-lentliH of ii second slowerthan that ut South River hut Tonycould do no better than third. Hearrived nicely in the furlong, how-ever, winning the 220 in 26 sec-onds flat.

Dun O^den, who surprised niland .sundry by rnciiifr to a MS.2 sec-ond triumph against Smith River'sbest quarter milers, wns creditedwith the other live-pointer. Uizarof Wondlii-idj!!! wua .second in the.440.

In the team's debut againstPerth Amhoy, points were alsoscored by Burrun I.evi, third inthe half-mile; Mel Anacker andJohnny Kiirbas ill the shot put;Anaeker in the linmil jump andKyiin ami Mclder in the hi^h jump,

Clear. S Ft. 4 1-2 In.1 A^aini-t Smith River, Meldercliinhi'il to 5 feet, 1 1-2-,inches andlost by nn inch to Zuhursky.

Tin.1 leap would have been Roodfor lii'st ]ilace apiinst Perth Am-hoy. Montazolli also picked up 11third place in the broad jump titSouth River. He was only a frac-tion more than two inches away •/•,from Pete Moroz, the"winner, who w.-n.-.••cleared 18 feet, 4 1-4 inches. ;

Hopkins, Borrl, Kurucza, Kren-i ynidel, iHenry, Merwin;•Stiuiffet nnd,iaz,'.i]iKnth also competed for Wood-bridge in the two meets. . ''•"'

Pete Kaspur of South Hiver sot ],'|( l (,|{a new Middlesex t'ouuty seholas- siiiuy.lie rccordlin the ilisejis throw. He l.;«'-:t'".-sent "the Grecian plate skimming, ^for 130 feet, 8 inches.

The summary;S I ' d T . ^ -i v r i l i ( i n l i i ' V .Ml, WHix l l i r l i lK i - 17 - - . I

| i n i - y : i r i l i b i s h -W1111 b y K a r l l m i ii l ' A i ; ' s i ' i - i i inl , W i i n i ' i i h o f f i - r . ( \ \ ' i :l l . i i i l . S w n n i c k I I 'A 1. 'I'iiiH'— 111;:!.

i ' l i - V i i n ; i l i m h : W i m b y K i i r l l u n i( I ' A ) ; si ' i ' -oiiti , W a t ' V i l l i i i f f r i - i W i it h i r d . N l s a u u ( T A I - T i m e : : 5 .

44M-V111M i l u s b : W i m b y I J I T o u r -i - t tn U ' A i : s ^ ' i u i d . I .uni l 1 I ' A ) ; l l i i r d ,

IloI - '0olt

l ib.I-111K. Hi 3l . ' s lmz . ::ii 2II . ini.-i r f L'

I j ' ,II VuiiiiB.1 Arv\,iv,1 l;'olskv.

If .1

2 B

r. b.0 1u 0i) «0 0fl 20 0I) 00 01 3

Brrors:M.nil i ' . -a lv

.h inn l . I i r innini i t id ,1 5

A,i'ini'1", l.ipsbii/. '1, Fer-

SI'II b y" 10(JIIO

J—li

l l l u r ,ln>K.lib. r.

Hill, 11) I II

While onlnnl). r. h,

i l i l l i s

M l 'M 1

••-. i l l l .

M ;:lib II

. f -zr r :tii1 :;

1

I ; l . ' l l l l i r i l ,

.1 Mnllllir,II Sillni. 11II 1 ' r , ; : bi i - 1 ; . . . I , , - t .

11 1 ii'S, l bz i i rU . i ,

-s: Miller Cillis, I'rnvZi'iiuhhl 2. I'r, S/.ui-k

111) 6 7.', Mon-

\ . n. II.A l l .

bull cxprui"UIL-«« for one"

"four fur two" imd. . . -.,„ menu?

ill. Huw can utTliilula tell whethera football riluyei' Is luehiiltully ont b s ltneof 89>luiutiHt)'f

Antwert on Back Pag*

nh3

H'IIUIH. cf 3D'rick, 3b -IIvan, lb r>[/Inuon, If 5Ml/, era It |i &PlirMler, v.-iKullnr, 2h ,1DuJus, rf 6

1Smtilley, If IVllrKlllii -b 3

_ Pursli'ij «M -1'i Mil'llKllI 3b f'J Vnvor, lb 3(l|Kllll(llHT, If i

M«lii1niif, p 2Mrakn, p ''

Totals .38by ink

BlTotalaiiiKa:

-01

Ill 8 10

F n i i l a 130 n i l M*-•••»Hrrora: Mi/.cruk 2, .Inc. Pur.il>'!1, Kcl-

IBI", .Verglllo, WIINMIISU il.'Home ruii--Kuiiilorr. Two-hanc lilt

—Huilimr. Sloliii bust's—Snuilb'v -.Mtj*io, Biuliiui', iliu'icllonii, iA'VitiS'.n.SUuck out—liy Mclliloin 4; by Mikoill by Dudiiu 3; liy Mlnernlt '4- Uii"snmi bllllB—Off Diulaa 21 oft UlKerilk 11off Melbloiii 4| olf Mesko 1. tlimiiro—MiUa Pursier. ScoriM"—Torn.

SCARLET FAVOREDLed by three defending cham-

pions, Rutgurs University1? trackteam is the ruling favorite to winthe Middle Atlantic States titlem«»t being held at Switrthmore to-d»y Hid tomorrow.

I l l -ni 'h 'Vh ' . . . . .. J l i n i n i . s , If . . .

i i n d i c H . p . I f , . .K l u l i , 1b

. l i l ' i u c s , !•lOlllSMl, I'ftIlllllliul, p

HI(II

II.I)11

il1(III(Iil

s 1

A. ]•:.

'29 5 27 16 1

rf

1 HH '1

. '•!' :iK ' I V H , ''jli ;i/ . n i l " , if ::l . 'b i in l l . l b ;i

TotalsSfiiri!

A . & 1.1. l l i l

'. i'.I 1, II 1

j ,I WiiKlh-k. .' 3

f

II. (Uliih. r. h.

0

! ("frcilii,l l l l l r l . illVl'iillliiv,

1 HYz.uU,• J i l l i i r i b i i ,

3h 3

If 3

I 13 lJITutillsInnings:

. . . 23 6 8

ftr.o os—13W12 1 1 — 6

.liuilor I,ensue

l ib . r .SSU-ym-i l r u n ; W o n l iy I t c l i l c ( P A ) ;

Miicoml , ( l l s i ' l t t l ' A ) ; l l i i r d . l J - v l ( \ V I .T h i n - : i ! :15.

M i l e r u n ; h r a d b f i i t l u l . w c c l l H i ik i i( f f i u n i l l i r o K i i l l a ( I ' A i i t h l l i l , S l l -MK>1 t f . M . T i m e : :• .!!) .

H l m i m i l : W o n by ( ' h l z i i i u d i i i ( I ' A ) ;H I T I I M I I , Ani i i ' l c i ' i ' ( W i ; l l i i r d . K i i r i u i s1 W 1 . l U M i i i n e c : i \ f i ' f i , t i u c h e . i .

l i n u i i l J u m p : W m i b y ( S l o r k n u ,1 I 'A 1 ai . e i i i n l S w . u i i r k ( I ' l : t h i r d .Aii ; i i . 'ki-r \\S\. l . i -MKih : 17 f e e l , 11

F. ('.'I'll, aii

H.'cVii.V :il.ipiak, rf IIHiikn. lb :•Tulmk, cf 2M'kli'i1, ib -

if •:

Uliick

.lint, 2blllllnck, If

TolMklZU'k

U u . iH;Slllli'l-. c f 3(HA. V' l i ly . S3 31;('. Vuly . 3h 4niN. Kllby, rf SiiilliuliK'ell. c 'Z(I N'flHon. D 1

•Hi i l l iKi 'orc

for AIIBIUIT In Dili.

lllclll'H.

iSl l ln m i d (Mfur Ihli'il b

r. h.1 00 01 00 00 20 00 a1 1.0 1

fur llrsl hclwet ' i iil il .i ' i l . l ' A i ; tii.-

Kyim und .Mi'Ulni

by Innings:. . 000

10300(1000

'201—SOdd— IKur-N 11. ir. s. ..

Two-base bits—AliKiiler. MnSS,""Bmffli." "Etft niv-tmscs—NrwKruiiHWlck 5, Wondhrldije 4. Dmi-hle nliiys—.lii(iu$!t to Hnn'k, IIIU'IM'Uin Hrnrh-4it-K4«Ui squill ta anjiih'Struck out—Hy HIKIU'H 1; hy flamVnfl" by Blnltll "; by Allftnler 3. Bilfe»n' liiilla—Ofr Kmlth i; (iff AllKiile.r 1.Wild plti'h—Gamhnl. Piisscil bull--Sciitll, Hits—Off Itadlirt. I In S'.'-anniiiKs nff (iiimbol, B In r, l-:i inii-

InBa; (iff Smith. Ii In 2 1-3 InulnKn;uff AllKiilcr. 0 In S 2-:i ItinlnKs. Win-nine |iltc|i(.r— l!iidk:n; Ui»lllK pllchur•• -SiuHli. i'mplrcM—.Stung unit Uc-vo-

WnoilbrldKr

IfK n ,

,T. ICanuiH,Si'iltll, c ..Lni|hy, rf, .Hurct'Uolui.Hinltb, lb .M. Kit ma H,I 'dru. li . . . .Alljuiicr, ))

3b.

ill'

All.S'i35,r<3I42

Tt'leshiuanii, lb .Ill-llllll , c fK l u m i i s , tin . . . .F i i r r e l l , If iM. I ' c i l l s h , i- , .Rui l i i , ;ib . . . . . . .l l n l . u n i i M . r f . . .I,. F e i l l x h , 2 b •••

ItueKek,rkuvv ski, p.

It.

R.12I)0

.0II0100

II.li0II

1101It0

TO. A.0 01 0I 1

8 27

H. PO. A,14

I131

Kcoi'o hy Innings;ThoimiH Jifferuoii ..Wo'oilbrldso

Tb

8 IU JI

003B31

3ft0010

000— B110—li

tb r s

Two-buaa hlta—r«i|l*|i. Scuttt 2,Umtitre—Buldwln,

• oili i \V). l l i ' lgbl : f) fact, •! inches.

l l l l .T IIS, \V<H>ilbrld|tf S- I•d diiub; Wim by Ptti- Mui'oy.

(SKI;, fi'cmiil, Mate (SHI; third,

22 -1 2| 26 3 4by Inntiifjs;

c S.'V<iclu'ck, HoUlH-tmer, A.Viilnily. liolluvoll, Ktlson.

Hl'iick lluwks 001 1(10 1—JKi-iivt-H Kca 400 000 X—1

< ronanordaab.

stuck, o 4rf 3

;l.'mlull, lb 2IC'ulya, p 3

22olyard dush: Won by wiigcnlior-'* I.niiJr,-8b--4-f a r * V ) ; s i icnnd, M c l i i i i i l c l l ( S i : i ; l f i c k l P , s s 2t h i r d . Mulu ( S l t i . T i m e : i^ii, M'Uno, cf 1

4ll).yard rui t : W«nH»y-Utfil*it4,WJi_Ji'"1,>-»t.Jib 2second, iJiziir l \V) ; third, Ywliu, jI«IJ>j<,SI!K TIIIIB: 56.'.'.

»«n-ynril run : Won by A|>|ilcbyi l l ) ; Mi'conil, Lcsl (Wi ; tliii'd,

d icke r ISI:i , Tlmr: 2:l,v-l.Mlli' run: Wmi |up Hiiru; sccund,

Znwiidaky; lliird, Ai'iilcby. (All i j l t j .T lm«: 6:11.

Shot pu t : Wmi by l l a n y Morosi;•c'liid, I'rycliuihi: i lunl, Si-nkn. (All

_SHJ . liistiiiicc: II (••el, 2 iiit'licn.Dlfd'on: W'nii liy Kaspui1; second.

Hiirrtnimkl; lliird,' Ki-nk". (All -SK).iHtuiU'e: 130 fi'i'i, S iiichus.l 'olc vnIIII; W'uii by b'rli*1i (SU) ;

st'L-imd, Mu-ikiiU'iilcli l i i l i l i t h i r a tlt 'd

|Score by Innings:

Crosswords i .A. & B. Oil . . . , '

A, * B. Oilr. h.i ab, r. h.-1 2lByl'klc, !b 5 2 12 1| Patrick, If 4 11 4H'-*':r«da, K* 1 1.3 2|llirl, lb 2 12 lpimlyk. Sb 3 00 l|Mariinkl, e S 1

i>--it-Hinrmt, v » 0 —0 0| nurclw, p 2 00 l|Wasillk. c f ! i

DaPrile, p 3 0

25 « 8

1

303100

Cuiueta (71 Ilib. r. I). |

<> t'

HiKlt-^tti:Male

fri ' l ,unil (.butli W)

U'nn by ZulKirBkyMulder (W);

6 fed,

Syne, as 3A'ruKii, l b 2E. H'kle, If 2Tnliiik,' rf 2F'lnger,liojak, lb

;U i A l i i i i i l k i i

third.5 1-2(SU).

Inches. t

Iliuull . lump: Won by 1'. Mni-ozd / l k ( U h i di'c.iu

i.lll (Ziiliurnky ( S l u ; third, I

DlatuiiL-e; 17 fuet,;

Ouuao. |) 'i 2Uui'iiiik, ef 1 1Meyer, 2b I 1.1. H'lc, Sb •;Klok, 3b 2

ul).• 3If 4

2!Kaiiniu, \t 4; | S " i l u l k , 11) 4

•ilMiirl'li!1. If SlU'sivntik, if I

31, 3

30-»OS-J

(IS).' r. h."i.

3 3:

Muntii4 1-1 i

COMETS LOSE SPARK/The nice start by the Port Read-

ing Comets toward a winningstruuk oi ROIUB diiration WHS just.afond memory this inoniinir aa tfceboyu mournfully rehearsed detailsof the defeut they sulfer.ed inPerth Amboy this wnek aitiinst the |Blue Coiil Keserves. The scorewas 0-8 ss both Ed Zullo and JoeGenovese failed to keep a check-rein on the coalmen's free-swinir-Ing maces,

i-

Seiiiv byCullluls • • .rydol led . .

I1 l'"ick»,

3110112

31 13

2 - 7

x-VtijI'llutM 1

i 'hiwli ik, if 4K irsjiin, i! iMii/.ar. na 3..1. lluhk |) IIWind, lb 3K;«ri'r, ib 3li'urnki, cf 3A, ll'nk, rf 3,1. tt'on, 3b 3

ab. r. li.|

ii) 8 «by

I'l-t an. HSA l i l l l l l H . I f

ab.

pKara, cfHomer, u 3J. S'boi1, lb 3IT. S'ber, r{ 5

8I'lvon, 3ll0 0 Q.ilnn, Ub

400100

niwfl

Page 12: FROM OUR ROOSEVELT AID ENLISTED FRONT NITE-CRAFT …High School Commencement Program Will Honor Five Seniors ... the weiirht of his opinion to effec-tuate a irrant of $2,600,000 from

PA<;K TWELVEF R I D A Y , y ••V 1 5 ' 1 9 3 6 _

WOODRRIDGR INI)EPR>;]

FREDERICKS,r, -I.,.wh'-v

doubt

H«l Lonj

AtFor Title Of "Queen"Bertha Foldhaiy Tops List

Increased By SeveralNew Aspirants

\ r. : • -*!:;-• r ' r . i Fo ldha iy ' • '••rarr.s i r th<- -y-r.-.e--

y u e n --.f :h t >:.-.••allots wt-r-.- iSstK'

•jf-'iiy' ore '.•'. a

D > ' J . . . : . -.•T;<

- J.I-:';

CROSSINGS!>T of en;ra:.'-, amone tr.Bermuris :-.r

•: f public c-r:.ew hijrr. :r.-,

i the hopf'Tnation, ha'

r.:TT.

- . - f IV!1-,. r.ft. 'i-y :" -r :

- : H i t - „ • " . - . « ' • • • *

•. • • : * • • i •.-: • . ;

, • W • ; ' .- .."•

;.„. fei .r..Q ?••.'/

• .;: .a-,;. r\--,'•' WPA?.vi..' • • > ' :>-<- &r.-i

. , ' - - i r . ^ J : r . * . - .".,-•• tf<- 'XT-'

: fHK CM': . V i r . f » t < .

.i.ynuch a.*already

i

;•; M r .

:ickev«- to H th* umt-

which *r>

', ,j,__t ^ . ^ „ ,

1 from the b e <'.. • • - . . lure »how at the S-•-';• . • • -.'-morrow will be u s e• • :",<: annual excursion©' "

>-«te\y Patrols to the !• .-..•:ef-aM Benjamin Par

,. r - : today. The lad*^ r> ••(•:•• fchoolm»teR at '< -

• • •• : >.n-inn! throu(tho.i-• . • -•• • ;.v;i. have their outir ,I ,•-. .„ ' A: the show thf-j»:' • - r.r.'j :• morrow, the ft".;. -.,::t- :.iv The Story of ip.,---...-"' ;i:.: "Woman Trap

CLOTHING FIRMS' Contiivi i hom page rxi-

(•'-.' ..- tstai'.^r.ine a branch ]•,r. '•'•>-• U'«n?hip employing a n-. .niur;-. of 1*0 -jr.;-!?. Mr. Allira.-1cav,-'. a Hniniir,1? f--r that ftr--F/!'i-. also. No other sectk :.the nvjr.ieipali:?., he Mid, <•

«i..lLJ..i...

••-V to ajriir. inSer- ";,..•'" v't: 'v"t V- >?"<'** : ••!•• fci-iurt- :'-> e scape ' * •;'ij7-f.-»u<.rtiti{ : H • : .»e-J .:eeu a; prec:- ;-:aict- pv r , h;rr. • '•! -

c .'r.jvany hirr. »: '••.'. , , : K-'-erJ:*:- J.r*-V-

\

MISS VARGA WEDS

'•' Ktfwo « f _ t r , t t h r t e - n e w a;-i ,c t-an:> w^s 'especia l ly hear te i i . 1 .i"* Ktre Rtice reai corcc-rn had bf<•'• esT'kf".-! by the word t ha t t h e Nv.-, ' i.'r.af; • Company, -.which has -v' . . ti!a:.i- h t r * a:; i.a third in f1rai.tr-. . . a l ready has- repfesentativ*-- :••.•.;'*',-; i h ^ t h e S*--Jth iJokir.ir for a new i

. j cati in. Labor t rouble at the l !

„ ant 'e pfar/. was blan-.ed _f-ir ;':' ~ nlfve. a!'.1-.''Ulrh the s tr ike the re " j .•.'• «•:'.>! ar'-K-atly last week.

Won'tlloteTciay. however. Pred Kaufma

Tv

Tht Record

•*<- R r - t - r

Becomes Bride Of LombardiAt Local Church

fi.r Lady nf M'.. ' 'armel Ch-jrch

*1 c-an-.f'Ivon-.bard: <:•

A-g t . .

ll:ss Marira Varpa of;Avert!" an i Ownte I

Netvsrk. A *ister of

• t .k

NF ' . ' - • :

r - • -.

. < *.•if. _ KF

I I - -r.

Fr- i-f.' -

i;..

.- , '-. ; . •"... ,'.- ! Brf-klvr.. was rr.a;-; -'if r.rir.-->r. andJ'.i'r.r. Dtsar.dera v.a- -vr bride.-

• . ' . " "" A , 'M 'V-"-'"1- tToom'- best mar...... ._ r' ...... .,'.'r , Tne bride v.-ore ;ir. F--;<*-:r.'-le .--J::• -• • •- ) • • «'••: - - • • jw i th accessor ies t " mstc'ti and car-. - • • * - „ ; _ i r : e d i. cor-iii't- of (rardeiiia.«. Af t e r.'• "."-7 ' pir T' \- - ' *^e ceremony a reception was held

.'with truest- frelt-r;', from Xewark.:—AF =in-,-jt'. F.-e4- Elizabeth. Brooklvn, Philadelphia

'T.and Wood bridge. * j

BOOS-UNDY!Co>:timied from payei i h~<\ party orerar/zation.

h

ymar,ae*r here, definitely ,*aiddo not.think the company is ?(•• •ou.«!y t'jri'idering niour.g. V. ecould manage it financially ,i .dwe have had a series of man-el .;-propositions from Southern to n-

"«mxwti* frrr 13? to moTT thff?. )'\:'there i-B no reason now why '.veshould do >o."

The two plants in Woodbr: ..'£•prosftr employ 270 eiris. Wi:.-t?scale up to $22. Mr. Kaufman * . iHe estimated the average t'•'•''•Sli for a total pay roll of $3, ' ' ' ' ' .All of it, he pointed out. is fmor.ey sent here weekly since

and makes no effort to sell its goc .Merer: t with President T'r.oma-

arreerr.a man.

the mer.1? division an j n . h ; , t t r r i t o r v .was.hfracned whereb;.' L.

h-.-r thai, a woman.

Jl.-re-.J

SportsfCnr.tir.ued from Sport Pare)

: I ' S r - - : . ' • - - •• - . - ' - u p i e - 1 . i

• ' - • • • - - . i , - .

• - f i - ' l

11 yard*

-^-M.^^.,.:^,.-^,.Rojal.Arcgnum Honorsa'confM-eiice'w wVlch i / w a s not Grand Regent Wednesdayinvited to attend, she added, t-i permi; the raming of Mrs. Mundy.

Booi-Mundjr FeudMr-*. Boo = . shrewd Darty «traie- D , . • . , , ,

whom much nf the or- R'J-v:l! A r c a n u " ' - lr- h<>nm o f Th"

Many local residents are e x j w -ed to attend the New Jersey "4::.anr.iver.«ary of the fjrar.d C

r-.r',\r M.'i-.

W-rk.1Vi. I

T:i •'• : I i

i>-r

.-ik.r.i:Dil-

Frcler- . •„•

TWO STORES RAIDED ><Thieves raided two township j ! '

stores \hU week. In each case theprincipal loot was cigarettes. Jos- ; "eph Batrdi. May Street, Hopelawn, ; •'and Joseph Turck, Cliff Road, Se- iwaren. were the victims. I.

;••.. . .•,! I ' J n . a k v

A t i . r - ; , c • • • .

Th.. nr;..;.-.-T.U*«'—r.ni.ii -r-i... in! rA w;iT, r !MI;

i •• •i-."igiitr' r.Hin \vali-rUiili.m<.r.-.If f ' . ' i lH w!

• : n t . ' t w n •>} HiT:

•>i- of n o r m a l I, . < • " i n l '• i i '

17 Y : . > vi ! , i , !, 1: is p n i d u ' P ' i m o » t' It f- (.'",,.! i i j , , . - > . , u U i e r r , r . t ! : f ( j r -::: is i t - -!.!>" I ' v a ]

: ^ Tt.-- 1 r.|M" rrn-lre run.) ' . ' . T * , . l i H " I n f i i u r o f f l r l . i l t i m e s

t I t . i l . u n c l i i t i r i t l i r i - * - t i m e s i*t

»»>Zaiior. of first Ward cam- ' ' " p ^F'SK 3? K rCC 'Ipaipis has devolved for several o f , ,R ,o f e '^ , P a l k , J h

le . ° ! )

1 - e . r v ^ c ".n n-t Lcvears . v.as charged a couple of wi!l be held in the Elks Clue. Lliz-

i-1- • i months a?o bv Mrs. Mundv with • a b*; 'h ' o n W e ( i n ^ d a > ' -' I o r S ' -„ . : being responsible for her dismissal' A n " O p t i o n a l program of er.;

"'• I from the clerical staff in the Muni- U-rtainment has been arranged an i'I cipal Buildine. • It was pointed out. ' l a n c l n ^ W 1" !o:loK-

'' at that time, however, that lackj of work was the reason for the legion Battles To A Tie; chang-e. » • « < • • • T-I

The charge was made by Mrs. '/n i4 Sei^fn-inmng | I «,r,'i not mteii.if.-J B M 5 t n a t t n « matter of the Mundy — r —su,illy. merely a \ appointment was never submitted Thp Wondhridpe Post, Am-eriear.

' on the floor of a Women's Division . Legion, 'and the Metuchen LegionX iii I ]•,- art ,,i ' m e e t ' n ? a^d t n a t this- was the basis • wound up with* a 3-3 tie at the lat-

If fouli'Vlr. the ;f°r the resentment. She would not ter's (rround yesterday in a seven,o . on.-hlif/t. Tl.e i venture an opinion on the outcome , inning duel which was called onof nhootini;-1 i»i,,f the controversy, and neither ' account of darkness.

would the men. ; Perth Amboy clicked off a 1-0victory over tht hijrh school team

<:!'. ' l . t ) . :

.ir\J

NEW YORK INSIDE OUT

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

run HK.vrl ' ' i r i i> ) . f i . l p a r t n u . i i t : a l l m c l e r r i

i n ! | , r " V t - m " r ; t s ; jjriViLti- l»utf. an-1 t-n-t r -J r. - - r(-H,(ltntifi! s . . ' - t ion; n*-arI I : K I . .-: ! ," . / ; . 550 M a p l e AVI-., W'ouil-

I if i i , )-,ar..N o r h . , t l ,i : , , - • > i . i . - • . « 1 1 • -

h

(Continued from Fage 4)| the Bank of United States just

„.; , r;fore it closed.,, _ with-! In an effort to snap him out of ;

i n a y , . n i uf t h e n i - u t r a i z u n t . w i ; i . h i t . E v e b e g a n t o a d l i b d u r i n g t h e

nr ! u "M '" '"""•' ' b>' " " l l ' "R t 'M act. I t finally got so that Jesse, was,• laiighinp- with the audience. Her

NOTICE OF I T B L I C SAI.K ad lib stuff become the most popu-TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: ( a r p a r t of t h e act, and pretty soon

At a regular nutting of the Town- lV^ , v . _ » . ^ H,»i, ,m,tin<. tn fitTWO or thr-.-room furnlshert apart- l ^ h ' c'mBm!"e"«i'U.l T ^ w n s ^ S ; they changed their routine to fit.mem for sin«!e gentlemen must WoodhrnUe, he-Id Monday, May 4ih, It's their present day routine, andhe modern and private, Call In- 193C, I Wj« directi-.i tu advertise the they've been successful With itdept-ndenl fur details. 2t fact that .jn Mnn-luy evening, May s i r . c e

1 Uih, 1930, the Township Committee Mn£!v , , . . , .iim.r w AXTKIV-KEM.UB

K \ l M : i ; l i ; N ' . - K i i ' i l l l L — F u r l i g h t1 l ^ A V d

W A N T i : i > — U i r l t'Jk r t l i i l i K A p p l y Hisli

TO MKN A.M.' WDMRN' witha h i l i f ' . K 1 ' " ' a i i j u - i i r a n f ' - ' , e t ic l u r . i ' i > - r . - ' - I f - • <.i , t i i lei i••».- .

l ian;ti- i l n e

bi.-i v - .> J i > ,

e v . - u t u ; i t i ybe

I'J makt aFelling iin itlisulute

ii t-vf.r\'nti,- must.Those svlei'ttiil will

tnilrifl. Valuuljie

will" meet' ut 6 P. M. (DST) in tht When Jesse learned to laughCmrniu,-e ChamlnTs, Memoria.1 again, he forgot his old love . . .Muni.- !i-a! Building WoodbrlJge. ini a few months later he and Eve«I,

J-Mi|.yil,,;!irf.lS!le.t8ebidVer!1"^>-««"married. They're still one ofji-ct ti-i Hie following provisions. Lot ! the happiest couples in radio.1 in Hlock fj'.T. Woodtiridge Town- -shin As^.-Fiu-ni Map. ! '29 PLANS REUNION^h^™^X^^n\ fWoodbridge High School. Classand pursuant to law. fixed a mini-1 " f l'-*29. will have a reunion at tnemum price at which said lot in said j Hotel Pines in Metuchen. SaturdayIjlot-k will be sold ami to said mini- 'evening June 13mum |irk.e must hi- a'J.U-d the costsuT advi.rtisiny this sal'-

Take furlhtr notice "that a t said _ _ _sale or any date_c> whi,-.-h j t may bn \ fi^y;^ b y virtue of! an --.Act for the |

TO WHOM IT MAT CONCERN:TAKE NOTICE that the uncler-

We render a complete

LCANOSERVICE %FOR THE .A

HOME U

SERVICEFOR THE

HOME<l\ v n l l l OWN «iKCI HITV

U e ruu arrangr JUMI tbr t j p rof luatl ><>u H i m - - - on Tr-

(•BHIIJ Hffuril.

INDUSTRIAL1OAV SOIIITV li«.

H, : : , h-i R.-rr. KS

it-, i,i- ? iMiisi.,,1 I't-rniani nt i-inpt'O- , adJouKntinuiii. vVi-.u- .1. T. li'ivpr, r.lfi Per th | n-si-rves

_ o r _ - . . . , , . . . . - * • • - - - - - •

a i j o u l n e d V t h e T o w n s h i p C o m m l t t t c j ti.-n.-r p r o t e c t i o n of g a r a g e

NiitFi-ril. Aniliu;. X. .1

llanlc Building.t h e rltfht m its . d i s c r e t i o n j , i r i ,i a u t o m o b i l e r e p a i r men." ap -

I H I M I H T K I ) I I I U SI H s r i i S l N V ; , , t c i v i i i uai-r lH' e

- l : l i i - /. - ' - , 1 1

nmt.li-<-i]Uiii<- in i j i o i - t edii lit pi't'EV" t i . i in-" iu - l iundii .-i l i l u l -n i u t v l i s l j i t e t ;

a l l - r sizi- a m i K)ts , , i,\i>ysi/.^- ' . ' \ 1 _ '•-'ii Mi11- u n p o r t t - r ,r , i^,r , w i l l , - k u ^ S

to re jec t a n y on* or nil liids a n d to | , , r , , \> , i Apr i l 14, 1915, wil l sell a t !,-t-ll said l o t ' i n said blovk t o such I , i u t , i ,. a u c t i p n — :blddi-r a s it m a y h f l c t in ca se one ' , r i i U I ' T W O DOOR SEDAN. 1S:9, •or m o r e m i n i m u m bids sliall be r e - ; s, rial a n d m o t o r n u m b e r A 4866.'3,ci-ived. ' ,--,vi.i-,l l.y C l a u d e Jeffer ies , 315 No.

l.-pon HL-i.-i'ptanoc- uf l h c min imumi 1 T - i r - l .-tr<>et, C a m d c n N". J., s u b j e c t : 'Ijid b y t h e T u w i i s l i i i i i . - ' i n u n l i l e e a iv l 1 : i , , t h i s s a l e a t Clovi- r l ( - ; i f G i i r a g e , !Oit- l . B y m i - n t t b e r c n f by (In- p u r c b a s - ' s - . ; i i > r l i i g l i w a y . n e a r C l o v e r l e a t '••r. th.- T o w r i s l i i p w i l l t x c c u t f an>5 A v,i i..-l, in t h e T o w n s h i p of W w d - Ii l t l i v . - r M l ' ' t i t , ' , i . | i :itid s-ilo d e e d fur hr . j i i r . . . S t a t e of N e w 3"tf-\\ on T u r i - ,s a i d i i rcmis i - . - . ' . l a y .May-36. 19S9, a t 1« -j-.rloi.li in t b c '

B .1 l l l ' .N ' l l iA.N, I f.-r,.; . „ , : ,T, iwti . - , l i ip i. 'l.-rk H E N R Y C M A l ) i : s .

1 J . \ T i - : 1 >• M . I V ; , th , 1 c*3r.. ' n . n i i t fw 1 r . - \ 1" . \ v 1 r. - s. 1:,

JOSEPHEANDRASC1K!i 562 ST. GEORGE AVLI

Tel. Woodbridte 8-1210

FRESH KILLED

FOWLFOR FRICASSEE

29c lb.LONG ISLAND

DUCKS23c lb.

FRLSH SHOULDER

PORKGRESH KILLED

ri

atALBREN'S

----thisweek!2 DIAMOND BAGUETTE

>|» ,\—(lit* uiofsl uiiiitxIuK J-itlik-

..fill JUMI n ft-n ul ((.r-r Bin*- ttMll>bi>u talurH ftu uu mtlt* !•*•- | | |iiiorriiu, 4>eiiului* liattucttcMl>)r CUNC hultttUK •**<) RfUU-hie HimrklhiK illuiuoud*—vufit-

jileU* it lib tiuk baud. \ n mum*tnK *slut* fur lumitrfuHS

50c A WEEK

LOVELY

8" DIAMOND

BRIDAL PAIR

PRIME BEEFRIB ROAST

27c lb-

$29-75uud n

IIHIIII — a lirnulllul

JEWELERS OPTICIANS ^iJ"!1"" "" • " to"

133 SMITH ST., PERTH AMBOY 5<k A W E E K

RUMPS of VEAL2 3 c Ib.

JERSEY FRESH

PORK LOINS2 3 c Ib-

GENUINE SPRING

LEGS of LAMB29c lb.

SCHINDEL'S BIG MAY

i —A Classified Adv. Will Sell

Gnce Aoain SCHINDEL'S Sets the Pace (or Sensational V a W m n ? to Insure i!,rsuccess of This Great Event. Note Carefully Each Item Below o d Then Are Hundreds ofOther - U n f e r f e d "Buys" Throughout the Store. Look for the Dollar Day Signs TfePoint the Way tp Greater Savings. We're Prepared for Great Crowds rom Woodbr,^Let Nothing Stop You From Coming to Schindels Tomorrow. Open TilM O PJH.

Mothers! Save on Children's Needs

CHILDREN'S DRESSES 3 for SIGIRLS'DRESSES 2 for $1CHILDREN'S SUMMER ANKLETS 7 j r j lGIRLS'SLACKS SIZES

10 TO 16

GIRLS' SHORTS. SIZES10 TO 16

1200 BRAND NEW

WOMEN'S WASH

Dresses

.i? for nnr. l.nrnr *tln \ In,• t> l . - r hi r*<t «Mi|<»r t.rlni- I InMHtolIltT A II • i lCk

CHILDREN'S UNION SUITS . 4 for $1BOYS'BROADCLOTH SHIRTS 2 for $1

^

BOYS'SUMMER SHORTS 3 for $1BOYS'WASH SUITS 2 for $1BOYS'GOLF HOSE 6 pair $1

WOMEN'S RAYON U N D I E S . 6 (or SIWOMEN'S FULL FASHION

'S NEW B L O U S E S . . .WOMEN'S ACETATE DRESSES.

WOMEN'S NEW SILK

VALUES TO

$3.98

Ml lit-^ s.\} |pn. \ uii 'il i i r ^ r rit-» *• unl.i #l. 'i!t VBII tilt) Much

l+riuii It-*, M < | ^ fur Hir i - r i , t t f t ^ r -IMIII. Itiisiui'n*. MchtHil n o d eI ii n v\ r i ir , "Mill<ln, DttitielM amir i i n ^ . \ l t * l / r* .

BETTER DRESSES $2.94-$3.94

MEN! BE PREPARED

FOR WARM WEATHER

SHIRTSSHORTS

6 for $1»li|riM. \\e\l

xdinilnrdM l r>i/t-<>.

MEN'S FANCY HOSEMEN'S DRESS SHIRTS 2 for SIMEN'S POLO SHIRTS 2 for SIMEN'S BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS 2 for SI

Special Basement Dollar Day BargainsWomen's Arch, Sport, Dress

SHOES• WHITES

• BLUES

• GREYS

• PUMPS

• STRAPS

• TIES

• Hl-HEELS

•CUBANS

•SPORTS

SNEAKERS HOW U1U 49cCHILDREN'S

Straps-OxfordsMEN'S WHITt

OXFORDS

VAL TO $3.00

\ \ l i l l r a m i . .L . t l r i i iui l i lunl luUKin till i l , r p i i p u l u r P t t l l r"{••••, ii

BLEACHEDSTRONGSTURDYMUSLIN

FULL SIZE SHEETS

3«-*lREG 15c FULL SIZE

PILLOW CASES9 A M. TO 11 A. M. SPECIAI

WforSl

Cannon Turkish TowelsRAINBOW BORDERS 12 FOR18x36 10 FOR22x40 7 FOR24x48 5 FOR

UNBLEACHED MUSLINFull Size SHEET B L A N K E T S . . . 2 j o r gWINDOW AWNINGS, 5S5.CompIete_J l8 1 " - 9 - 4 Unbleached SHEETING j

6x3 WINDOW SHADES, washableJ for j l

Size 2x4 Oriental THROW RUGS._JACQUARDBLANKETSFULL SIZE

PART WOOL

WOMEN'S

NEW SPRING

HATS t i II \ hi I"OVER N I*-'J

CASESTRAVKlf

STORES $T O , . . . 97-105 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY

1