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ConricSection The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRESS 16J>igesT«lay Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 14,1938 "TVt PRICE THREE CENTS School Congestion Faces Board High School Not Large Enough To Me«t Demand* That Will Be Made In September. Crowded cotiditlotin in the High School term with the alternative of pflrt time naaaiona or holding some clumps in tfce Columbus school build- ing loom as a problem erf the Board of Education In September. The mat- ter was brought to the attention of the Board Wednesday night by the supervising principal whi> pointed out that whVe sixty-three geniors will leave in June, 170 Freshmen will come in in September anil the ca- pacity of the school is now being used entirely. < Mis* Hermann outlined the enndi- tion ina talk with the -board mem- bers and then illustrated it with a graph that had been prepared to show the present class routine in the Chrome Business Man ] Fifty Amateurs Wait m pointed to take the matter up with Mum Hermann and work out a solu- tion. On the committee are Commis- sioners Jakeway, Lukach and I>r. H. L. Strandberf( In the discussion it was brought out that the junior higii school dis- cussed-some time ago, were it erect- ed and ready now, would solve the problem. Toward the end of the meetinjt President Charles Conrad announc- Dies In Hospital Stephen Szymanowski Passes Away After Long Illness W a . Resident Of Carteret Twenty-One Year*. .Stephen Szymanowski, a resident of I'arterpt for the past twenty-one years and a well known business man of t.hp| Chrome section, died Monday morning in the Perth Amboy General .Hospital. Mr. Szymnnowski was born fifty-eight years ago in Poland. He conducted a grocery store at 47 Un- ion sheet and resided on the floor iibovo th<- stori'. He had been ill for tirqe. urvivipg HT': a widow, two sons, I 1 rank nnd Arlnm, and .one daughter, Helen, a-II of Carteret. Thp funeral service was held Wed- nesday morning from the late Home in Union street, thence to the Holy Family Roman Catholic Church where n Mass of requiem was offer- ed for the repose of tho soul by RPV. Father Joseph Dziadosz. The church was crowded with friends and rela- tives of the family, and members of the organizations of which Mr. S?.y- manowski was a member. There w^re. many floral trihutpn from individuals nnd from the Pulnski Social Club, the St. Nicholas Brotherhood of Providence No. 74, nnd the Polish National Alliance Group No. 1023." The nearerfl were; Anthony Tu- cholski, Frank Sosnowski, Anthony Krasowski, Frank Pnviliilt, Ludwig iintalski and Matthew Lapchinski. in Bell To Open Quests In Casey Tournament Ten Township Boxen Primed To Briag Trophies To This Section Golden Gloves Start* Tuesday Night. FINALS APRIL 25 Foresters Install ; New Officers Supreme Trustee'Among Vis- itor* From New Brunswick Delegation To Attend Stats Convention, seas. Woman's Chb In Officer* Are Elected And Re- ports For Year Are Heard From Department Head*. The activities at the regular meet- ed officers were installed. There was ed that while the board hadj put into effect a twenty per cent salary cut the big taxpayers of the bor6ugh arc ' Interment WHS in St. Stephen's not entirely satined with the situa- Cemetery in Perth Amboy. tion and ask that $9,000 more be! __ taken off the budget in order to save the 927,000 that had been made a condition by the industrial group in return for paying taxes in advance. The twenty per c « t cut saved $18,- 000 of the amount. There was a lively discussion be- tween Commissioner Mittuch and President Conrad over the situation. H e Mittuch said he was not in fa- vor of taking dictation from the in- dustries; that he was put in office to serve the people who elected him. The meeting adjourned without any- thing being done in regard to the ad- ditional budget reduction. The reduction asked by the indus trie. Is not requested as a salary re- y g p diiction but may be eliminated if <nary to the primary election which " b hld th M 16 Democrats Prepare For Primary Day Nominating Committee To Pre- sent Slate At Meeting Thurs- day Night Next Primaries On May 16 Thi» Year. More than fifty amateur fighters, the cream of the Middlesex county crop of leather pushers, will f»o into action at the Raritan auditorium, Perth Amboy, Tuesday night, when the Golden Gloves tournament, spon sored by the Amboy Knights of Co- lumbus, gets under way. The finals will be staged the following Tuesday, April 25. The fistic tourney is the greatest indoor boxing show ever at' tempted ii< the county and is expect- ed to be one that will go down in boxing annals of this section of the state. For three months, entries have flowed into the Casey headquarters in Perth Amboy and the fame-seek- ing fighters have gone into training us their blanks have been sanctioned. Yesterday was the closing day for filing the blanks. Johnnie Hossio, one of the section's better known ring masters, assisted by Joe Kelly and "Juicy" Fauble, has directed * the training activities. With ten township boxers enter- ed to date, most of them rated a good chance to finish ontop, quite a hit of the laurels may be reposing on local mantelpieces at the end of the month. Entered in theextra-heavy divi- sion «re Vic Hall, 17B, Sewaren; Frank Fazekas, 170, ^Voodbridge, and William Smith, 160, Colonia Four townshippers are eager to show their wares in the 150-pound divi- sion: Frank Chaney, 147, Wood- bridge; Albert Palazza, ISO, Port Rending; Joe "Hutch" Runic, of Fords, and Peter Webb, 147, Iselin Andrew Lengyel, 1H5, Wnodbridge, is the lone township entrant in the 130-pound lot. There are no .town ship boxers entered in the 12(i-pound | t Jhi B i i 118 d a big delegation present from Marion , C N 4 f N B i k | f " r Court. No. H4, of New Brunswick, ac-, % , companying Supreme rrustep Char IW les Spratford and several other offi cers of the supreme court of thi> or der. The convention inAtlantic Tity in May was discussed. A delegation from thp court will go there by bus. tierc was much talk of the campaign John -S. Olbricht for Grand Ghief tanger. He is0 member of the Trtcnl ourt and at present vlce-g anger of the state organization. The new officers are: Chief Rang- r, Nicholas Fterardi; sub-chief rang- Harry Hock- treasurer, Joseph huttelo, Jr.; nnancinl spcretary, illiam F. LBWIOC; recording spcre- ary, Jnmos L. Phillips; wniort wood- vsrd, Martin Rock; junior wood- Th« exwjitivn committee of the '•' aSB but Johnnie Biscaia 118 and •mnrrRtin orranimtion nf thn hor- Manuel Carvalho, 1 IK, hoth of Wood- s- democratic organization of the bor- e- !> u « h met Tuesday night as a prelim- th l t hh y possible in some other" way. The in- dustries already have paid enough taxes In advance to enable the board will be held this year on May 16, much earlier than usual. At the prim- nry candidates are to be nominated' collector bridge will be ducking punches in th 118-pound class. Tickets arc selling rapidly, present reports indicate a sell-out fo the opening bouts. Wesley Wilson is general chair other'employees of the borough. present incumbents are Democrats Five applications were received " nd ar< r e *P ected l ° be candidates to for positions teachers. They were , c f mi themselves. They are: Col- from Roy Sims, John Eudie, Helen' l £\?. T ( , h b ar ' l ; s A " Bra ^;, A » esaor Kkhey, Blanche Grossbaum and Ol-l^. )lliam . D " ,, CaHey ; a1 "' ,, CoUnC1 . "rf" fa Winerczak. The applications were Charlea A - Conrad and Edwlird D °- 8lad and the clerk was instructed to wrtt«.,to the applicants informing them that no teachers are being en- Ian. at the meeting Tuesday favor at thin time, the following: Emil Bacha, Frank Se man, Ed Patten, Harry Wittenmeyer James A. Murray, Harry Me Cardl Joseph Smith Pat Kehoe, Jim M. Donald, Tom Bates, Harry Bates, Bo Bates, John Dtidor, John Brennar John Reilly, Joseph Duffy, John "Mo. Quade, Rev. P. N. Fuirbrother, Tom Henderaon, John Toolan, .1. V. Sniit R. J. Calvin, J. H. B J h S Mrs. I). Lnsncr. The work done durjng the year was re hy thp department chairmen 1 in their annual reports. Chairmen who gfiv<- reports w^ri 1 as follows Mrs. Loo Hrown, chairman of Art Mrs. (Icorgp Rrftchcr, chairman o! Music; (duo to Mrs. Hfnrher's nh sence, Mr«, John Abell reported for hcrj. Mrs. M. Spew«k, chairmnn <il American Home; Mrs. Charles Green ,._* „!,:„# chairman of Civics; Mrs. Wm. Cnney corresponding s«*ret«ry, apd Mrs. K I.pfkowitz, chairman of Publicity Mrs. T. J. Nevill and Mrs, K. I .of kowitz were elected delegates tot tho iinniml convention at Atlnntic City to bi> hold frpm May i)th to the 12th, with Mrs. C. Sheridan nnd Mrs, Wm. (Jisey an alternates. Election of of- ficers took place More Heighborliness In Relief Giving Plea Of Director John Colt New State Aelief Director In First Meeting With Administra- tors Of Emergency Relief In County Last Night, Declare* Task Is Far Broader Than Mere Feeding, Clothing and Housing Those On Relief—Urges Kindness, Understanding. .rani, Julius Hc-rardi; junior beadle, " 1 "' f \ "'"*• P HCl w ' ln '" (1 Villiam Bramlon; senior beadle, rier-" lslllt; President. Mr,, T. J ; miste«, Miix Schwartz. iard Kiefer; % T. J. Nevill; HrM- vice-president, Mrs. E. Lefko- witz; The offirial delegates that, will rep- ," ll/ -; , s( ' co " (1 vice-president Mrs. ( esent, the court at the state conven- ISt " >r " lan i- t £ l ' afll!nir ' Mrs - S ' " llrrl Joseph ion are: William F. lAwlor, ihutollo, Jr., Martin Hock nnd Elmer iuyon. The alternates nro-. Joseph Sarzilln, Edwin S. Quinn, William Morris, Jr., and William Brandon. 1; tjea mding field ! four entering the race again, and it I K - •'• S' a ' v ' n V ,, ' ,'"" wa« ouitn evident that thev have the man, ,). W. rU-lly, A. b- ed to various organizations that ap {died for them. Several communications were re- ceived from the State Department of Education relative to legislation ef mittee. Arrangements were made for a big meeting of Democrats ti> be ing committee will present the Demo- f e ^ s c h o o ^ t has*"~d or'K e»«c ££. Petition, mat b. ii.ed g oo t p in course »( being passed. The routine reports of the clerk, attendance officer, nurse and super- ii iil i d d , vising principal wert filed. p received and Frame To Top Racing Card At Reading, Pa. by midnight that night. The executive committee in addi- tion to discussing the primaries, also talked about internal matters of the" party and many interesting matters were Uken up. There-were several mbers of the Women's Democratic Joseph Se.a- Jos- tsph Maioncy, William I'U^oney, JOH- eph V. (lostello, William F. Smith, Fldwurd F. Kennedy, William Pauble, Alan Bates, John Ulbrich, Joseph Mc- Quarrie, Vincent Costello, John Dwy- Annual Meetings Held By Presbyterians Corporation And Congregation Hold Yearly Session—Many Reports Read Trustes Are Named. The annual meetings of the con- gregation and tho corpofution of the Presbyterian Church were held Wed- nesday night and the meeting of thi- congregation was very largely at tended. Rev. D. E. Lorent./,, pastor of the church, served as moderator. He- ports were received from nil organ- isations connected with the church. Puul Ncderberg presented a report on activities and the treasurer's re port for the Senior Christian Endeav- or Society. The reports for tho inter mediate C. E. were, rend by Mr. Lor- enlz because Mrs, Lillian Gawronski, head of the department could not be present. The reports on activities and of the treasurer of the Junior C. E. wore presented by Mrs. Cor- nelius Doody, counselor for the jun- iors. Mrs. Howard Thorn reported on the activities of the Ladies' Mission Hand, and Mrs. Koscoe. Leyi report- ed as treasurer. The activities of tho Mother-Teacher Association were re corresponding secretary, Mrs. Win. Cnsey; auditor, Mrs, George Ilalrym- ple. All of thoso officers arc for one year. Directors to serve three years: Mrs. If. Harrington, Mrs. Morris III miin and Mrs. T. G. Kenyon. The election of candidates as presented by tho , nominating committee WHS unanimous, there being nonomina- tions from th<\ floor. First prize in the. Art Contest conducted by Mrs. l/co Urown, chairman of Art, went to Mrs. C. Sheridan; second prize was a tie between Mrs. E. Stremlau artrl Mrs. E. I^efitowitz. Lots wera drawn for the prize, Mrs, Stremlau being the winner. First prize was an etching, second prize, wjis a copy of John Coll Parents Told Of Put more ncighborlinesa in r*li«f ifivinu, state Relief Director Joan C'>lt urged Middlesex municipal re- lief directors »nd representatire* of lor«l governing bodies last night at New Brunswick. j It wns tho first meeting of the new state relief director with adminis- ; trntors of emergency relief in th» I county, und was held in the court- , hotisp, "It seems to me that we have a . fur bmnritr and more vital task than thp mi'i'fi fording, clothing and hous- ing of the people under our care," Colt declared. "Wo are dealing with individuals with the same feelings, ambitions, aspirations and fongings I as wo have. This is the phane of our i work which is closest to my heart that you »nd I shall not fail in I accomplishing this largter task of '. giving not only sustenance, but also j hope and cheer to our less fortunate I neighbors. 1 ' [ Colt asserted that the brunt of tho morale effort, must fall on other shoulders than tho overburdened ones of Emergency Relief Admin- I ist.ration workers directly concerned , with furnishing means of sustenance to tho unemployed, but cicpresscd himself as "terribly anxious that in doing our work we shall Hli<rn with I ourselves every agency at hand— . thechurches in your communities, , , the fraternal organizations, the civic clubs, the women's clubs and the veterans organizations, and stimu- Speaker describes Institution J^J thcm t()0O(1|)llratp wlth w ,„ At P. T. A," Meeting Elec- 'doing this more personnl and equally tion Of Officers Postponed To May Meeting. Whistler "Mother A most interesting part of the af- ternoon tvaa ai discourse and demon- stration of table china byMrs. B. Bundsniann of Bamberger's. Mrs. Bundsmann very charmingly traced the history of china through the cen- turies, telling of the effect of the various nations upon its composition and design. China for the table takes its nami' from tho country in which it was originated, namely, China. Shi' showed various settings oT English Wcdgewood, Spanish and American china. She, also exhibited specimens of English Spode, as well us Italian and French china, Mexican and American glass, pointing out many enlightening details concerning these pieces. There were also exhibits of beautiful Spanish and Italian em- broidered linens, and gayly Masque linens. g, , Urban, David Fagan, John Powers, Charles Mikel, Henry Me Collough, John K. Sheey. me clu ub present. St. Joseph's Teams Guests At Dinner Following their victory in the final Inaugurate game of the /season last Monday Hanlunaon Will 1933 Season With JJj Card At Fair Ground Track guests of —Lower Price*. READING, Pa., April 14 Big- time auto racing will be again inaug- urated in the East this year by Ralph Hankinson with a major meet at the Reading Fair grounds on Sunday, April 30, when the dirt track stars of America will compete in a six-event program under AAA sanction which wiTl include 100 laps of motor mad- ness on what is conceded to be one of the country's finest dirt courses. Topping the card will be. Fred Frame, 1932 Indianapolis speedway 1 winner and star of stars the past three years in speedway and dirt track endeavor. Occupying honors also in the top bracket of speed fame at Reading will be Billy Winn, the greatest dirt track winner in the East last year and the king-pin at Han- kinson conducted races for 82. These honor at a spaghetti din- ner held at Bob Burns' Town Grill in. IOWQT Roclsevelt avenue. 1 The dinner was arranged by Joseph Shu- tello. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. William Biesel, Stephen Hamulak, Richard JJonovan, Bunchy Grant, Tommy Lamont, Ted llath- jen, Charley Sztlag, Joseph Malis- zewski, John D'zurilla, Jerry Hnv rigan, Andrew Ililu, Eddie Helley, George Toth, 1'at Donovan, Steve Mickics, John Szelag, Joseph Shu- tello, Herbert Nannen, Andrew Buckley, Meyer Rosenblum, Miss A. O'Huck, Miss Kuth Book, C. Viczas, Miss C. I'etrowski, M. Alten and Miss H. Turko. er, Joseph Kelly, Edward Keilly, ported by Mrs. William Elliott, and James O'Hagen, Jack Neilan, fYter Mrs. George MacGrcgor reported as .treasurer. Rev. Lorent?, presented reports on the affairs ..of Troop No. 82 Boy Scouts of America in the ab- sence of Scoutmaster William Mi.s- <iom. Mr. Lorentz also resented a report of the relief committee ap- pointed for the church, a report as pastor of the church, and a report of the Men's Brotherhood. Howard Thorn reported aa clerk of the ses- Miss Sacred Hearts Hold Dance On April 22 Tickets Going Fast For Twi Loop Show Phil Turk, President Of Twi- light League, Predicts Sale Will Top 250 Mark. Tickets are going fast for the Twi- light League movie show, accord- ing to an announcement this morn- ing by Phil Turk, president of the Carteret Twilight League. Mr. Turk predicts that the ticket sale will go well over the two-fifty mark. The popular show, "Half-Naked Truth," starring Lupe Velez and Lee Tracy, will be presented, at the Ritz Theatre in Washington avenue on Tuesday, April 2fi. It will be pre- sented first at 7 o'clock -and repeat- ed at' 'J. Tickets are, reasonably priced at twenty-five cents. The proceeds of the show will be used* as prize* for the Twilight League teams at the end of the *a- son. There will be cash prizes for all four teams. Initial returns ontickets will be made at a meeting of the league of- ficials Monday night »t Phil Turk's Roosevelt Diner. . N R. K. Brewer, of Rutgers College doing this more personal and equaTl important thing. the Emergency Relief Admin- Ition wprkers he said: "We milst be courteous" and gracious, even where it is difficult. We must wns the speaker Tuesday night at £ « «j|"«"'« the ever increatm. emotional strain under which peo- ple carry on today. We furnigh food, clothing, shelter. That is what the April meeting of the Carteret P. T. A. He reviewed the history of the college and showed howgreat the i -, advantages offered by the college "I are «f?anized f, )r . There is some- now, are, compared with those of I* 1 ""* more that we arc called upon some years ago. He said the improve- to give—something' of ourselves of ments today are notable. I patience understanding sympathy, - - - - human kindness and friendliness. "When we do that, both through the Emergency Relief Administra- tion and through the collateral or- f which I have spoken. Tho meeting) was scheduled as the time for election of officers but that was postponed until tho May meet- ing because some members of the nominating conimittoe were absent. It was held in Columbus school. "The Magic of Color", a fantasy was presented by pupils of the art classes under the direction of Miss Agnese Gunderson, supervisor of art. In the cast were: Cecelia Heinricks •the word 'relief will take on new force and now meaning in New Jer- sey." Colt is meeting groups of munic- ipal directors and their deputies at county meetings throughout the g trustees for three years d fll Chl B sion. Three e y were named aa follows: Charles Bry- er, Joseph Young and Theodore Ste- wart. Dr. H. L. Strandberg presided at the meeting of the church corpora- tion. Harry Baker's report as treas- urer of the corporation was present- ed by Rev. Lorentz. A vote of thank* waa given to Charles Bryer and Jos- eph Young for repairs to church property. M)rs, G>ewge MacGfreiJor noted the minutes of the meeting. It was decdied to hold Wednesday af- ternoon prayer moittings until fur- ther notice. The Sacred Hearts A. C. will hold . - a dunce next Saturday night, April two rivals, each of whom ^2, at the Nathan Hale School audi- won a race at Reading last year, are | torium. Dance music will be fur- favored to battle it out for honors j n ; s hed by Steve Gregor's Green- in an assured large entry list which j w j cn village Orchestra. In addi- tion to dancing, there-will be novelty entertainment. The committee on arraugeinentg includes John Roman, Nobby D'zurilla, Mike Poll, Schmyde will include the cream of the cropof present day thrill providers. Frame won here on May 15 just before hi: won the greatest of ail honors at In- dianapolis and set a new wmld'a rec- ord, while Winn was winner at Read- ing on July 17, when he outclassed Frame. Later at Harrington, Del., their competition was Jo keen that Frauve was run through the fence by the sliding Winn and Firnyin Lawshe, the late Bill Neopolitan and several ethers were tangled up in wreckage so that the event had to be started again. Frame wound up with three broken ribs and had seven weeks of inactivity to come back and beat "Bramrin' Billy" at several races, put Winn wound up with the most half-mile honors in this sector for the year. A new and lower acala of pricos will prevail for the races, Hanldnsoa n*» announced, atating the card would th* Mgnlar Woodbridge typeaisevent race program. Nobby Dzurilla, M , Muyorek and Anthony Zachik. CARD OF THANKS - the undersigned, desire to ex- through the columns of this paper our thanks und appreciation to those who befriended us in our re- cent bereavement in the death of iccial- sepn Chief of Police. Uttrriiig ' the th cent hereaveintuib in m»= MW»^" *• Stephen Szymanowfski. We especia ly wish to thank Kev. Kather Joseu Increase Of 22,000 On Relief In March According To Figures Released By State Emergency Relief Administration Today. NEWARK, April 14. — An in- crease during March of 22,000 peo- ple on the emergency relief lists ot* New Jersey cities of '^."i.fJOO popula- tion and over indicates that the roster of the destitutes has passed the half million mark for the first time alf millin in this state, Relief Adminis- fficials stated here today. PuUski Social Club, St. Nicholas Brotherhood of Providence No. 74; the Polish National Alliance- Group in New Jersey receiving emergency relief totaled 483,31)9 March X5. Final March figures for the entire Jednota Team In Initial Practice Mickey D'zurilla Sends Squad Through 2-Hour Drill In Preparation For Opening Game. Mickey D'zurilla sent hig Jednota baseball learn through ap intensive two-hour drill at the high school field Sunday afternoon, in prepara- tion for the opening game of the season with New York at the high school fi41d, Sunday, April 80. "" All the regulars reported includ- ing Schmyde Mayorek, Kootch Ma&- culin, Bmil Mudrak, Tommy D'zu- rilla, Joe Mazola, Nobby D'surilla. Frank Poll, Mike Poll, Sam Smolen- sk, Mickey Miglecu and Bill D'zu- ritta. The session consisted of batting and hittiptj practice, interspersed with an infield workout. There will he no practice next Sunday because of the Easter holi- day but there will be one the follow- ing Sunday, April 23. Steve. Chamra; manager of theteam, expects there will be so\Vn'al evening *»k)>uta starting nent Monday. Comedy-Drama In High School Thursday Hebrew Alliance To Present "Attorney For The Defense" Ca»t Perfect After Much Re- hearsing. The four-act comedy drama, "At- torney For The Defense", will be presented Thursday evening ntxt in the High School by the Dramatic group of the Hebrew Alliance. The members of the cast have been re- hearsing for several weeks under the coaching of Mrs. Samuel Kaplan, and are perfect in their rcspoctive parts. The plot is above the average both in interest and humor. There are many twists and a happy ending. In the cast are: Moe Leven.son, Ben Rabinowitz, Lester Sokler, Ma- deline Wohbzemuth, Mildred Kahn, Girard Goodman, Philip Goz ; Am and Ike Daniels and Sylvia Fisher. The Discussion group of the Alli- ance met last night in the home of Miss Efitelle Rauchman tn Barron avenue, Woodbridge. There were about forty members and friends present. Tho speaker of the evening was Moe Lcvenson and hia topic was "War Debts and Cancellation". After the address byMr. Levonson th« others present discussed the topic in formally. Refreshments were served by Mi&s Kuuchman . At a recent regular meeting of the Alliance a report was received on the card party held by the) organ ization for the benefit of the emer gency relief fund and the Hebjew Ladies' Aid. The attendance at the card party was small and the linan «ial return small, the report set forth. The'Alliance gave $10 to each f h ii Holy Name Society To Hold Smoker Event Will Be Held In Church Hall OnMay 8 Edward Dolan To Be In Charge. Tho next meeting of the Holy state, make the istration a personal endeavor, and represented tr "' 0U Kh I'liminating the impersonal - ' ' "''Miin the state-wide organization, bring about additional friendli- as the spirit of the rainbow: Fern Cheret as "Earth Child", Camilla colored i Enot an "Drab Girl". Rainbow fairies were u'iii«cuu» i ... . , , . --. , . .. by Louise Rapp, Lucille SUuba^h, ) vltl ? !n the stato-wulo organization, "•aulinu Fisher, Margaret Sidun and I •-, , ., Taylor Rose Prywat and !n< -' SH an(1 lr "l lvi <l' l »' consideration m IUI i UIIII: J- ttj i v/i j i\\/k.^17 • ijrrruv LLUM /iolet Van Pelt represented the tints, rlary Fisher played violin solos and ifarie Rapp accompanied on the liano. The next meeting will be held on 'uesday night May 1). the furnishing of relief. Rutgers Clinic Will Open Today At Brans. Fred Swan, Temple's New Lane Coach Under Pop Warner Will Start Four Day Coach- ing Clinic. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., April | 11 Fred Swan, Temple's new line coach under Pop Warner, and Hat- vey Harmon, head coach of the Uni- __ , . versity of Pennsylvania, will open Name Society of St. Joseph's churcn . the four-day Rutgers coauliing clinic will be a smoker, and will beheld today. Prominent coaches of this sec- May 8, it was decided Monday night \ tion will speak on their systems of at a meeting of the society held in gridiron play at the clinic which is the church hall. Holy Name societies being olfered to New Jersey's sec- from neighboring towns will be in- | ondary school physical instructors vited to attend. Edward Dolan, presi-1 und coaches by the university's de- dent of the local society was appoint-1 partment of physical education. ed chairman of 4>e committee on ar- j Professor George E. Little, direc- raiigemeivts. No other business was [ tor of the. department, who arranged transacted at the meeting. i the program, and Dr. Allen Ireland, The members of the society re-1 State Director of physical and health ceived Holy Communion in a body Sunday at the 7:30 o'clock mass. There wvre ncarlfy 300 men and young men at the service. Carteret Fiejd Club Dance Next Monday The Carteret Field Club will hold education, will talk on general prob- lems in the field of physical educa- tion ot tonight's meeting. Although the clinic, for which no instruction- al charge will be made, will stress football, attention will be given to basketball, swimming, track, and la- crosse under the direction of the Rutgers head coaches, all of whom are veterans of national standing in a monster dance at the Nathan Hale j their respective fields School next Monday night, April 17. Herbert (Jritz) Cm ^Prince- Gregor's Greenwich Village Orches- ill fih h d i ton's mentor, will spend tomorrow's two sessions discussing the unbal- anced line and the single wing baek g of the organizations. tra will furnish the dance music. Admission has been set ut forty ~L "T i_" v y t %., n,o ents. Tickets are going fast and j offense which he develops from the laTge turnout, is expected. The so-called Minnesota shift. •eneral committee consists of Mjss Frances Harrington Heads Jr. Woman's Club At u meeting of the Junior Wom- an's Club Monday night officers wero elected as follows.: President, Miss Frances Harrington; first vice-presi- dent, Miss Mary Filosa; aecond vice- president, Miss Wanda Knorr- cor- ojf. their cars and those who sent floral tributes, and all others whu assisted us with their sympathy and kindness. (signed.) Mrs Mm-v Szvnianuwski and family per cent. ,in a> DONT MISS Tlw GMwt 4-Act Comedy Dram* Th* Attorney Fir The Defense Of tfe Htbreyr Soctkl Alliance SCHOOL AUDITORIUM - 8;30P, M. Sharp * ten days. Tho rJst o n "major citien is at the rate of 7.5 month's time. ncrease iii snialler communities and e *l )e<te '' tob(Jat » s n rural areas leaser rate. With" app f the state' roximately one-eighth l lti of the state's total population now receiving subsistence from tk$ state and community relief funds, official*, of the administration estimate that the peak for the year has about been reached. ' ?s= HELP WAITED EXPERH OPERATORS ON BS; ALSO H0M.K .WORKERS. apkriY WORK, APPLY R08B DRESS SHOP ^ 186 Washington Ave., Democrat. And G. O. P. To Pick Men Next Weak A mass meeting of Democrats will be held Thursday night next in Fiws- ,houBe No. 1 to endorse candidates for tho primaries whieh this year wicur on May 16. Petitions muat be flted by midnight Thursdav night. Tjlie" Republican orgamzKtion, of the Borough will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock, in Falcon Hall to en- dorse candidates for the primaries. There- are two berths to befilledin th<* council and an assessor and Collector. . The Democrats mn likely to en dorse the,present incumbents. Among RepuJjlicnns who ara keing mention- ed as candidates for council are WU- lmm Qreenwaid, Joseph Yftung, Ml hl y i h k l J p h Trelink6 an responding secretary, Miss llelen Stmthers; recording secretary, Miss Kleiina Bryer; treasurer, Miss Eve- lyn Springer; delegates to the Atlun- tic City »tute convention of Junior Woman's Clubs April TZ, the Misses Frances Harrington, Eleanor Harris and Helen Struthers. Plans for a Spring dance to b< held May S in the Nathan Hale school were made and the following; were appointed on a committee on ar- rangements: th^Miases Helen Ju rick Lillian Doifnelly, Kvelyn Spring- er ,Wanda Knurr and Frances liar ring-ton. Miss Evelyn Springer was hostess for the evening and served refresh- ments after thebusiness meeting. Those present were: the Misses Ann Reilly, Catherine Grech, Lydia Ben- ning, Oliv« Gundttraon, Frances Har- rington, Evelyn Springer, Wanda Knorr, Eleana Bryer, Hekn Jurick, Lillian Donnelly, Helen Struthen and'Mary Filos«. Rosary Society To Hold Card Party Monday Night Tho Rosary Society of St. sph's Church will hold a card party Monday night in the church hall. Among the hundred prizes will be |2.50 donated by Mrs. Edward J. leil, a like amount donated by May- >r Ucrmam, and a hand--embtoider» e.d pillow donated by Mrs. John Adams. Refreshments will bt served. Admission will be 35 cents. yircheeklL WflUf V<*ah.tfH. ed m ewuStfta for -CARD OP THANKS We, the undersigned, cake this op- portunity to thank Rev, Hudiak an all our friends who abated in ttfe re- cent bereavement of th*death of 9we husband aijd; fjther eneral omiUe er Galvanek, Andy Galvanek, Stan- y Szelagr, Joseph Shutello and An- rew Hila. Wai- the opposite style of play will be de- veloped by the Coach J. Wilder Tas- lpd by ker of Rutgers in Monday's sessions. Tasker will lecture on the balanced *. line* and the backfield shift forma- I tions. The 1 final day of the clin:c wilt be turned over to Lou Litti- of Colum- bia who will present the six-man lino * _ . .__ .-1 -A.*.-. __J «ri II 4-1* <»w* flan Link Public Card Party On Tuesday Nighl Next Friendship Link No. 25, Order of the Golden Chain will hold a public card party irf Odd Feljowa Hall on Tuesday night of next week. There will be many prises for successful players, and refreshments will ' be served. Mrs. Abe Chodosh is chair- man of the committee in charge of the arrangements. Auxiliary To Brotherhood To Hold Card Party Apr. 24 A public card party for the bene fit of the auxiliary unit of the Bro- therhood of Israel will be held on April U in the home of Mrs. Benja- t mlu Klein, 673 Roosevelt ayenua, Carteret aeetion. Mrs. Ben Klein and Mra. Ralph Wttias will be the hosUwa- es for We evening. RefxeahmauU will be wmd, . [for consideration, and will then dis J0S " cuss various secondary defensive ar- rangements as he employs them. fwi League Meets Next Monday Night Special Session Called En- trance Feea Due Show Returns Made. . A special meqting at the Caf- t*ret Twilight League is scheduled for next Monday night »t Phil Turk's Koosevert Diner in upper Roosevelt avenue. Entrance fees which are due will be collected from all four teams. -Other important business that is expected to oome up Consists of the adoption on final reading of the league schedule and by-laws, and the initial returns on the ticket sale for tfi« Twilight League show to be presented on Tuesday, April 26. , Huns for tho opening vsuio 01 thd season between th«< Paatry Boys, last year's champst and the Boys Club, will bo made. It axpacUd that there will tx» approptiat* 0 M»- iBK day ceremonies precodiuff tae gam«. ' .

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Page 1: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

Conric Section

The Price of This Paper i s 3 cen t s everywhere—Pay no more

CARTERET PRESS16J>igesT«lay

Two SectionVOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 14,1938

"TVtPRICE THREE CENTS

School CongestionFaces Board

High School Not Large EnoughTo Me«t Demand* That WillBe Made In September.

Crowded cotiditlotin in the HighSchool term with the alternative ofpflrt time naaaiona or holding someclumps in tfce Columbus school build-ing loom as a problem erf the Boardof Education In September. The mat-ter was brought to the attention ofthe Board Wednesday night by thesupervising principal whi> pointed outthat whVe sixty-three geniors willleave in June, 170 Freshmen willcome in in September anil the ca-pacity of the school is now beingused entirely. <

Mis* Hermann outlined the enndi-tion in a talk with the -board mem-bers and then illustrated it with agraph that had been prepared toshow the present class routine in the

Chrome Business Man ] Fifty Amateurs Wait

m

pointed to take the matter up withMum Hermann and work out a solu-tion. On the committee are Commis-sioners Jakeway, Lukach and I>r. H.L. Strandberf(

In the discussion it was broughtout that the junior higii school dis-cussed-some time ago, were it erect-ed and ready now, would solve theproblem.

Toward the end of the meetinjtPresident Charles Conrad announc-

Dies In HospitalStephen Szymanowski Passes

A w a y After Long Illness —

W a . Resident Of Carteret

Twenty-One Year*.

.Stephen Szymanowski, a residentof I'arterpt for the past twenty-oneyears and a well known business manof t.hp| Chrome section, died Mondaymorning in the Perth Amboy General.Hospital. Mr. Szymnnowski was bornfifty-eight years ago in Poland. Heconducted a grocery store at 47 Un-ion sheet and resided on the flooriibovo th<- stori'. He had been ill for

tirqe.urvivipg HT': a widow, two sons,

I1 rank nnd Arlnm, and .one daughter,Helen, a-II of Carteret.

Thp funeral service was held Wed-nesday morning from the late Homein Union street, thence to the HolyFamily Roman Catholic Churchwhere n Mass of requiem was offer-ed for the repose of tho soul by RPV.Father Joseph Dziadosz. The churchwas crowded with friends and rela-tives of the family, and members ofthe organizations of which Mr. S?.y-manowski was a member. There w^re.many floral trihutpn from individualsnnd from the Pulnski Social Club,the St. Nicholas Brotherhood ofProvidence No. 74, nnd the PolishNational Alliance Group No. 1023."

The nearerfl were; Anthony Tu-cholski, Frank Sosnowski, AnthonyKrasowski, Frank Pnviliilt, Ludwigiintalski and Matthew Lapchinski.

in

Bell To Open QuestsIn Casey Tournament

Ten Township Boxen PrimedTo Briag Trophies To ThisSection — Golden GlovesStart* Tuesday Night.

FINALS APRIL 25

Foresters Install ;New Officers

Supreme Trustee'Among Vis-itor* From New BrunswickDelegation To Attend StatsConvention,

seas.

Woman's Chb In

Officer* Are Elected And Re-ports For Year Are HeardFrom Department Head*.

The activities at the regular meet-

ed officers were installed. There was

ed that while the board hadj put intoeffect a twenty per cent salary cutthe big taxpayers of the bor6ugh arc ' Interment WHS in St. Stephen'snot entirely satined with the situa- Cemetery in Perth Amboy.tion and ask that $9,000 more be! _ _taken off the budget in order to savethe 927,000 that had been made acondition by the industrial group inreturn for paying taxes in advance.The twenty per c « t cut saved $18,-000 of the amount.

There was a lively discussion be-tween Commissioner Mittuch andPresident Conrad over the situation.H e Mittuch said he was not in fa-vor of taking dictation from the in-dustries; that he was put in office toserve the people who elected him.The meeting adjourned without any-thing being done in regard to the ad-ditional budget reduction.

The reduction asked by the industr ie . Is not requested as a salary re- ! « y g pdiiction but may be eliminated if <nary to the primary election which

" b h l d th M 16

Democrats PrepareFor Primary Day

Nominating Committee To Pre-sent Slate At Meeting Thurs-day Night Next — PrimariesOn May 16 Thi» Year.

More than fifty amateur fighters,the cream of the Middlesex countycrop of leather pushers, will f»o intoaction at the Raritan auditorium,Perth Amboy, Tuesday night, whenthe Golden Gloves tournament, sponsored by the Amboy Knights of Co-lumbus, gets under way. The finalswill be staged the following Tuesday,April 25. The fistic tourney is thegreatest indoor boxing show ever at'tempted ii< the county and is expect-ed to be one that will go down inboxing annals of this section of thestate.

For three months, entries haveflowed into the Casey headquartersin Perth Amboy and the fame-seek-ing fighters have gone into trainingus their blanks have been sanctioned.Yesterday was the closing day forfiling the blanks. Johnnie Hossio, oneof the section's better known ringmasters, assisted by Joe Kelly and"Juicy" Fauble, has directed * thetraining activities.

With ten township boxers enter-ed to date, most of them rated agood chance to finish on top, quite ahit of the laurels may be reposingon local mantelpieces at the end ofthe month.

Entered in the extra-heavy divi-sion «re Vic Hall, 17B, Sewaren;Frank Fazekas, 170, ^Voodbridge,and William Smith, 160, ColoniaFour townshippers are eager to showtheir wares in the 150-pound divi-sion: Frank Chaney, 147, Wood-bridge; Albert Palazza, ISO, PortRending; Joe "Hutch" Runic, ofFords, and Peter Webb, 147, Iselin

Andrew Lengyel, 1H5, Wnodbridge,is the lone township entrant in the130-pound lot. There are no .township boxers entered in the 12(i-pound

| t J h i B i i 118 d

a big delegation present from Marion ,C N 4 f N B i k |

f " r

Court. No. H4, of New Brunswick, ac-, % ,companying Supreme rrustep Char I W

les Spratford and several other officers of the supreme court of thi> order. The convention in Atlantic Tityin May was discussed. A delegationfrom thp court will go there by bus.

tierc was much talk of the campaignJohn -S. Olbricht for Grand Ghief

tanger. He is 0 member of the Trtcnlourt and at present vlce-ganger of the state organization.

The new officers are: Chief Rang-r, Nicholas Fterardi; sub-chief rang-

Harry Hock- treasurer, Josephhuttelo, Jr.; nnancinl spcretary,illiam F. LBWIOC; recording spcre-

ary, Jnmos L. Phillips; wniort wood-vsrd, Martin Rock; junior wood-

Th« exwjitivn committee of the '•'aSB but Johnnie Biscaia 118 and•mnrrRtin orranimtion nf thn hor- Manuel Carvalho, 1 IK, hoth of Wood-s- democratic organization of the bor-

e- !>u«h met Tuesday night as a prelim-th l t hh

ypossible in some other" way. The in-dustries already have paid enoughtaxes In advance to enable the board

will be held this year on May 16,much earlier than usual. At the prim-nry candidates are to be nominated'

collector

bridge will be ducking punches in th118-pound class.

Tickets arc selling rapidly,present reports indicate a sell-out fothe opening bouts.

Wesley Wilson is general chair

other'employees of the borough. present incumbents are DemocratsFive applications were received " n d ar<r e *P e c t e d l ° be candidates to

for positions a« teachers. They were , ™cfmi themselves. They are: Col-from Roy Sims, John Eudie, Helen' l£\?.T ( ,h

bar'l;s A" B r a ^ ; , A » e s a o r

Kkhey, Blanche Grossbaum and Ol- l^ . ) l l i a m .D" ,,CaHey; a 1" ' ,,CoUnC1. "rf"fa Winerczak. The applications were C h a r l e a A- C o n r a d a n d E d w l i r d D ° -8lad and the clerk was instructed towrtt«.,to the applicants informingthem that no teachers are being en-

Ian.at the meeting Tuesday

favorat thin time,

the

following: Emil Bacha, Frank Seman, Ed Patten, Harry WittenmeyerJames A. Murray, Harry Me CardlJoseph Smith Pat Kehoe, Jim M.Donald, Tom Bates, Harry Bates, BoBates, John Dtidor, John BrennarJohn Reilly, Joseph Duffy, John "Mo.Quade, Rev. P. N. Fuirbrother, TomHenderaon, John Toolan, .1. V. SniitR. J. Calvin, J. H. B J h S

Mrs. I). Lnsncr. Thework done durjng the year was re

hy thp department chairmen1 in their annual reports. Chairmen

who gfiv<- reports w^ri1 as followsMrs. Loo Hrown, chairman of ArtMrs. (Icorgp Rrftchcr, chairman o!Music; (duo to Mrs. Hfnrher's nhsence, Mr«, John Abell reported forhcrj. Mrs. M. Spew«k, chairmnn <ilAmerican Home; Mrs. Charles Green

,._* „!,:„# chairman of Civics; Mrs. Wm. Cnneycorresponding s«*ret«ry, apd Mrs. KI.pfkowitz, chairman of PublicityMrs. T. J. Nevill and Mrs, K. I .ofkowitz were elected delegates tot thoiinniml convention at Atlnntic Cityto bi> hold frpm May i)th to the 12th,with Mrs. C. Sheridan nnd Mrs, Wm.(Jisey an alternates. Election of of-ficers took place

More Heighborliness In ReliefGiving Plea Of Director John Colt

New State Aelief Director In First Meeting With Administra-tors Of Emergency Relief In County Last Night, Declare*

Task Is Far Broader Than Mere Feeding, Clothingand Housing Those On Relief—Urges

Kindness, Understanding.

.rani, Julius Hc-rardi; junior beadle, "1"' f\ "'"*• P HCl w'ln '"(1

Villiam Bramlon; senior beadle, r i e r - " l s l l l t ; President. Mr,, T. J; miste«, Miix Schwartz.iard Kiefer;

% T. J. Nevill;HrM- vice-president, Mrs. E. Lefko-witz;The offirial delegates that, will rep- ," l l / - ; , s ( 'co" (1 vice-president Mrs. (

esent, the court at the state conven- I S t"> r" l a n i- t£ l 'a f l l ! n i r ' M r s - S ' " l l r r l

Josephion are: William F. lAwlor,ihutollo, Jr., Martin Hock nnd Elmeriuyon. The alternates nro-. JosephSarzilln, Edwin S. Quinn, WilliamMorris, Jr., and William Brandon.

1; tjeamding

field !four entering the race again, and it I K- •'• S'a 'v 'nV ,, ' , ' " "wa« ouitn evident that thev have the man, ,). W. rU-lly, A. b-

ed to various organizations that ap{died for them.

Several communications were re-ceived from the State Department ofEducation relative to legislation ef

mittee. Arrangements were made fora big meeting of Democrats ti> be

ing committee will present the Demo-f e ^ s c h o o ^ t has*"~d or'K e»«c £ £ . Petition, mat b. ii.edg oo t pin course »( being passed.

The routine reports of the clerk,attendance officer, nurse and super-ii i i l i d d,

vising principal wertfiled.

preceived and

Frame To Top RacingCard At Reading, Pa.

by midnight that night.The executive committee in addi-

tion to discussing the primaries, alsotalked about internal matters of the"party and many interesting matterswere Uken up. There-were several

mbers of the Women's Democratic

Joseph Se.a-Jos-

tsph Maioncy, William I'U^oney, JOH-eph V. (lostello, William F. Smith,Fldwurd F. Kennedy, William Pauble,Alan Bates, John Ulbrich, Joseph Mc-Quarrie, Vincent Costello, John Dwy-

Annual Meetings HeldBy Presbyterians

Corporation And CongregationHold Yearly Session—ManyReports R e a d — TrustesAre Named.

The annual meetings of the con-gregation and tho corpofution of thePresbyterian Church were held Wed-nesday night and the meeting of thi-congregation was very largely attended. Rev. D. E. Lorent./,, pastor ofthe church, served as moderator. He-ports were received from nil organ-isations connected with the church.

Puul Ncderberg presented a reporton activities and the treasurer's report for the Senior Christian Endeav-or Society. The reports for tho intermediate C. E. were, rend by Mr. Lor-enlz because Mrs, Lillian Gawronski,head of the department could not bepresent. The reports on activitiesand of the treasurer of the JuniorC. E. wore presented by Mrs. Cor-nelius Doody, counselor for the jun-iors.

Mrs. Howard Thorn reported onthe activities of the Ladies' MissionHand, and Mrs. Koscoe. Leyi report-ed as treasurer. The activities of thoMother-Teacher Association were re

corresponding secretary, Mrs. Win.Cnsey; auditor, Mrs, George Ilalrym-ple. All of thoso officers arc for oneyear. Directors to serve three years:Mrs. If. Harrington, Mrs. Morris IIImiin and Mrs. T. G. Kenyon. Theelection of candidates as presentedby tho , nominating committee WHSunanimous, there being no nomina-tions from th<\ floor. First prize inthe. Art Contest conducted by Mrs.l/co Urown, chairman of Art, wentto Mrs. C. Sheridan; second prizewas a tie between Mrs. E. Stremlauartrl Mrs. E. I^efitowitz. Lots weradrawn for the prize, Mrs, Stremlaubeing the winner. First prize was anetching, second prize, wjis a copy of

John Coll

Parents Told Of

Put more ncighborlinesa in r*li«fifivinu, state Relief Director JoanC'>lt urged Middlesex municipal re-lief directors »nd representatire* oflor«l governing bodies last night atNew Brunswick.

j It wns tho first meeting of the newstate relief director with adminis-

; trntors of emergency relief in th»I county, und was held in the court-, hotisp,

"It seems to me that we have a .fur bmnritr and more vital task thanthp mi'i'fi fording, clothing and hous-ing of the people under our care,"Colt declared. "Wo are dealing withindividuals with the same feelings,ambitions, aspirations and fongings

I as wo have. This is the phane of ouri work which is closest to my heart

that you »nd I shall not fail inI accomplishing this largter task of'. giving not only sustenance, but alsoj hope and cheer to our less fortunateI neighbors.1'[ Colt asserted that the brunt of• tho morale effort, must fall on othershoulders than tho overburdenedones of Emergency Relief Admin-

I ist.ration workers directly concerned, with furnishing means of sustenance

to tho unemployed, but cicpresscdhimself as "terribly anxious that in

doing our work we shall Hli<rn withI ourselves every agency at hand—

. the churches in your communities,, , the fraternal organizations, the civic

clubs, the women's clubs and theveterans organizations, and stimu-

Speaker describes Institution J^J t h c m t() 0O(1|) l lratp w l t h w ,„At P. T. A," Meeting — Elec- 'doing this more personnl and equally

tion Of Officers PostponedTo May Meeting.

Whistler "MotherA most interesting part of the af-

ternoon tvaa ai discourse and demon-stration of table china by Mrs. B.Bundsniann of Bamberger's. Mrs.Bundsmann very charmingly tracedthe history of china through the cen-turies, telling of the effect of thevarious nations upon its compositionand design. China for the table takesits nami' from tho country in which itwas originated, namely, China. Shi'showed various settings oT EnglishWcdgewood, Spanish and Americanchina. She, also exhibited specimensof English Spode, as well us Italianand French china, Mexican andAmerican glass, pointing out manyenlightening details concerning thesepieces. There were also exhibits ofbeautiful Spanish and Italian em-broidered linens, and gaylyMasque linens.

g , ,Urban, David Fagan, John Powers,Charles Mikel, Henry Me Collough,John K. Sheey.

mecluub present.

St. Joseph's TeamsGuests At Dinner

Following their victory in the finalInaugura t e game of the /season last MondayHanlunaon Will

1933 Season With J J jCard At Fair Ground Track guests of—Lower Price*.

READING, Pa., April 14 — Big-time auto racing will be again inaug-urated in the East this year by RalphHankinson with a major meet at theReading Fair grounds on Sunday,April 30, when the dirt track stars ofAmerica will compete in a six-eventprogram under AAA sanction whichwiTl include 100 laps of motor mad-ness on what is conceded to be oneof the country's finest dirt courses.

Topping the card will be. FredFrame, 1932 Indianapolis speedway 1winner and star of stars the pastthree years in speedway and dirttrack endeavor. Occupying honorsalso in the top bracket of speed fameat Reading will be Billy Winn, thegreatest dirt track winner in the Eastlast year and the king-pin at Han-kinson conducted races for 82.

These

honor at a spaghetti din-ner held at Bob Burns' Town Grillin. IOWQT Roclsevelt avenue. 1 Thedinner was arranged by Joseph Shu-tello. Those present were: Mr.and Mrs. William Biesel, StephenHamulak, Richard JJonovan, BunchyGrant, Tommy Lamont, Ted llath-jen, Charley Sztlag, Joseph Malis-zewski, John D'zurilla, Jerry Hnvrigan, Andrew Ililu, Eddie Helley,George Toth, 1'at Donovan, SteveMickics, John Szelag, Joseph Shu-tello, Herbert Nannen, AndrewBuckley, Meyer Rosenblum, MissA. O'Huck, Miss Kuth Book,C. Viczas, Miss C. I'etrowski,M. Alten and Miss H. Turko.

er, Joseph Kelly, Edward Keilly, ported by Mrs. William Elliott, andJames O'Hagen, Jack Neilan, fYter Mrs. George MacGrcgor reported as

.treasurer. Rev. Lorent?, presentedreports on the affairs ..of Troop No.82 Boy Scouts of America in the ab-sence of Scoutmaster William Mi.s-<iom. Mr. Lorentz also resented areport of the relief committee ap-pointed for the church, a report aspastor of the church, and a reportof the Men's Brotherhood. HowardThorn reported aa clerk of the ses-

Miss

Sacred Hearts HoldDance On April 22

Tickets Going FastFor Twi Loop Show

Phil Turk, President Of Twi-light League, Predicts SaleWill Top 250 Mark.

Tickets are going fast for the Twi-light League movie show, accord-ing to an announcement this morn-ing by Phil Turk, president of theCarteret Twilight League. Mr.Turk predicts that the ticket salewill go well over the two-fifty mark.The popular show, "Half-NakedTruth," starring Lupe Velez and LeeTracy, will be presented, at the RitzTheatre in Washington avenue onTuesday, April 2fi. It will be pre-sented first at 7 o'clock -and repeat-ed at' 'J. Tickets are, reasonablypriced at twenty-five cents.

The proceeds of the show will beused* as prize* for the TwilightLeague teams at the end of the *a-son. There will be cash prizes forall four teams.

Initial returns on tickets will bemade at a meeting of the league of-ficials Monday night »t Phil Turk'sRoosevelt Diner. . N

R. K. Brewer, of Rutgers College

doing this more personal and equaTlimportant thing.

the Emergency Relief Admin-Ition wprkers he said: "We

milst be courteous" and gracious,even where it is difficult. We must

wns the speaker Tuesday night at £ « « j | "«" '« the ever increatm.emotional strain under which peo-ple carry on today. We furnighfood, clothing, shelter. That is what

the April meeting of the Carteret P.T. A. He reviewed the history of thecollege and showed how great the i -,advantages offered by the college " I a r e «f?anized f,)r. There is some-now, are, compared with those of I*1""* m o r e that we arc called uponsome years ago. He said the improve- t o give—something' of ourselves ofments today are notable. I patience understanding sympathy,

- - - - human kindness and friendliness."When we do that, both through

the Emergency Relief Administra-tion and through the collateral or-

f which I have spoken.

Tho meeting) was scheduled as thetime for election of officers but thatwas postponed until tho May meet-ing because some members of thenominating conimittoe were absent.It was held in Columbus school.

"The Magic of Color", a fantasywas presented by pupils of the artclasses under the direction of MissAgnese Gunderson, supervisor of art.In the cast were: Cecelia Heinricks

•the word 'relief will take on newforce and now meaning in New Jer-sey."

Colt is meeting groups of munic-ipal directors and their deputies atcounty meetings throughout theg

trustees for three yearsd f l l C h l B

sion.Three e y

were named aa follows: Charles Bry-er, Joseph Young and Theodore Ste-wart.

Dr. H. L. Strandberg presided atthe meeting of the church corpora-tion. Harry Baker's report as treas-urer of the corporation was present-ed by Rev. Lorentz. A vote of thank*waa given to Charles Bryer and Jos-eph Young for repairs to churchproperty. M)rs, G>ewge MacGfreiJornoted the minutes of the meeting. Itwas decdied to hold Wednesday af-ternoon prayer moittings until fur-ther notice.

The Sacred Hearts A. C. will hold. - a dunce next Saturday night, Apriltwo rivals, each of whom ^2, at the Nathan Hale School audi-

won a race at Reading last year, are | torium. Dance music will be fur-favored to battle it out for honors j n;shed by Steve Gregor's Green-in an assured large entry list which j w j c n village Orchestra. In addi-

tion to dancing, there-will be noveltyentertainment. The committee onarraugeinentg includes John Roman,Nobby D'zurilla, Mike Poll, Schmyde

will include the cream of the crop ofpresent day thrill providers. Framewon here on May 15 just before hi:won the greatest of ail honors at In-dianapolis and set a new wmld'a rec-ord, while Winn was winner at Read-ing on July 17, when he outclassedFrame.

Later at Harrington, Del., theircompetition was Jo keen that Frauvewas run through the fence by thesliding Winn and Firnyin Lawshe,the late Bill Neopolitan and severalethers were tangled up in wreckageso that the event had to be startedagain. Frame wound up with threebroken ribs and had seven weeks ofinactivity to come back and beat"Bramrin' Billy" at several races,put Winn wound up with the mosthalf-mile honors in this sector forthe year.

A new and lower acala of pricoswill prevail for the races, Hanldnsoan*» announced, atating the cardwould b« th* Mgnlar Woodbridgetypeaisevent race program.

Nobby Dzurilla, M ,Muyorek and Anthony Zachik.

W«CARD OF THANKS -

the undersigned, desire to ex-through the columns of this

paper our thanks und appreciationto those who befriended us in our re-cent bereavement in the death of

iccial-sepn

Chief of Police. Uttrriiig 'theth

cent hereaveintuib in m»= MW»^" *•Stephen Szymanowfski. We especialy wish to thank Kev. Kather Joseu

Increase Of 22,000On Relief In March

According To Figures ReleasedBy State Emergency ReliefAdministration Today.

NEWARK, April 14. — An in-crease during March of 22,000 peo-ple on the emergency relief lists ot*New Jersey cities of ' ."i.fJOO popula-tion and over indicates that theroster of the destitutes has passedthe half million mark for the firsttime

alf millinin this state, Relief Adminis-

fficials stated here today.

PuUski Social Club, St. NicholasBrotherhood of Providence No. 74;the Polish National Alliance- Group

in New Jersey receiving emergencyrelief totaled 483,31)9 March X5.Final March figures for the entire

Jednota Team InInitial Practice

Mickey D'zurilla Sends SquadThrough 2-Hour Drill InPreparation For OpeningGame.

Mickey D'zurilla sent hig Jednotabaseball learn through ap intensivetwo-hour drill at the high schoolfield Sunday afternoon, in prepara-tion for the opening game of theseason with New York at the highschool fi41d, Sunday, April 80."" All the regulars reported includ-ing Schmyde Mayorek, Kootch Ma&-culin, Bmil Mudrak, Tommy D'zu-rilla, Joe Mazola, Nobby D'surilla.Frank Poll, Mike Poll, Sam Smolen-sk, Mickey Miglecu and Bill D'zu-ritta.

The session consisted of battingand hittiptj practice, interspersedwith an infield workout.

There will he no practice nextSunday because of the Easter holi-day but there will be one the follow-ing Sunday, April 23. Steve. Chamra;manager of the team, expects therewill be so\Vn'al evening *»k)>utastarting nent Monday.

Comedy-Drama InHigh School Thursday

Hebrew Alliance To Present

"At torney For The Defense"

Ca»t Perfect After Much Re-

hearsing.

The four-act comedy drama, "At-torney For The Defense", will bepresented Thursday evening ntxt inthe High School by the Dramaticgroup of the Hebrew Alliance. Themembers of the cast have been re-hearsing for several weeks under thecoaching of Mrs. Samuel Kaplan,and are perfect in their rcspoctiveparts. The plot is above the averageboth in interest and humor. Thereare many twists and a happy ending.

In the cast are: Moe Leven.son,Ben Rabinowitz, Lester Sokler, Ma-deline Wohbzemuth, Mildred Kahn,Girard Goodman, Philip Goz; Amand Ike Daniels and Sylvia Fisher.

The Discussion group of the Alli-ance met last night in the home ofMiss Efitelle Rauchman tn Barronavenue, Woodbridge. There wereabout forty members and friendspresent. Tho speaker of the eveningwas Moe Lcvenson and hia topic was"War Debts and Cancellation". Afterthe address by Mr. Levonson th«others present discussed the topic informally.

Refreshments were served by Mi&sKuuchman .

At a recent regular meeting ofthe Alliance a report was receivedon the card party held by the) organization for the benefit of the emergency relief fund and the HebjewLadies' Aid. The attendance at thecard party was small and the linan«ial return small, the report setforth. The'Alliance gave $10 to each

f h ii

Holy Name SocietyTo Hold Smoker

Event Will Be Held In ChurchHall On May 8 — EdwardDolan To Be In Charge.

Tho next meeting of the Holy

state,make theistration a personal endeavor, and

represented tr"'0UKh I'liminating the impersonal- ' • • ' "''Miin the state-wide organization,

bring about additional friendli-

as the spirit of the rainbow: FernCheret as "Earth Child", Camilla

colored i Enot an "Drab Girl".Rainbow fairies were u'iii«cuu» i ... ., , . --. , . ..

by Louise Rapp, Lucille SUuba^h, )vl t l? !n the stato-wulo organization,"•aulinu Fisher, Margaret Sidun and I •-, , .,

Taylor Rose Prywat and ! n<-'SH a n ( 1 lr"llvi<l'l»' consideration mIUI i UIIII: J- ttj i v/i j i\\/k. 17 • ijrrruv LLUM

/iolet Van Pelt represented the tints,rlary Fisher played violin solos andifarie Rapp accompanied on theliano.

The next meeting will be held on'uesday night May 1).

the furnishing of relief.

Rutgers Clinic WillOpen Today At Brans.

Fred Swan, Temple's New LaneCoach Under Pop WarnerWill Start Four Day Coach-ing Clinic.

NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., April| 11 — Fred Swan, Temple's new linecoach under Pop Warner, and Hat-vey Harmon, head coach of the Uni-

„ __ , . versity of Pennsylvania, will openName Society of St. Joseph's churcn . the four-day Rutgers coauliing clinicwill be a smoker, and will be held today. Prominent coaches of this sec-May 8, it was decided Monday night \ tion will speak on their systems ofat a meeting of the society held in gridiron play at the clinic which isthe church hall. Holy Name societies being olfered to New Jersey's sec-from neighboring towns will be in- | ondary school physical instructorsvited to attend. Edward Dolan, presi-1 und coaches by the university's de-dent of the local society was appoint-1 partment of physical education.ed chairman of 4>e committee on ar- j Professor George E. Little, direc-raiigemeivts. No other business was [ tor of the. department, who arrangedtransacted at the meeting. i the program, and Dr. Allen Ireland,

The members of the society re-1 State Director of physical and healthceived Holy Communion in a bodySunday at the 7:30 o'clock mass.There wvre ncarlfy 300 men andyoung men at the service.

Carteret Fiejd ClubDance Next Monday

The Carteret Field Club will hold

education, will talk on general prob-lems in the field of physical educa-tion ot tonight's meeting. Althoughthe clinic, for which no instruction-al charge will be made, will stressfootball, attention will be given tobasketball, swimming, track, and la-crosse under the direction of theRutgers head coaches, all of whomare veterans of national standing in

a monster dance at the Nathan Hale j their respective fieldsSchool next Monday night, April 17. Herbert (Jritz) Cm ^ P r i n c e -Gregor's Greenwich Village Orches-

ill f i h h d iton's mentor, will spend tomorrow'stwo sessions discussing the unbal-anced line and the single wing baek

gof the organizations.

tra will furnish the dance music.Admission has been set ut forty — ~L "T i_" v y t %., n,oents. Tickets are going fast and j offense which he develops from the

laTge turnout, is expected. The so-called Minnesota shift.•eneral committee consists of

Mjss Frances HarringtonHeads Jr. Woman's Club

At u meeting of the Junior Wom-an's Club Monday night officers weroelected as follows.: President, MissFrances Harrington; first vice-presi-dent, Miss Mary Filosa; aecond vice-president, Miss Wanda Knorr- cor-

ojf. their cars and those who sentfloral tributes, and all others whuassisted us with their sympathy andkindness.

(signed.) •Mrs Mm-v Szvnianuwski and family

per cent. ,in a>

DONT MISSTlw GMwt 4-Act Comedy • Dram*

Th* Attorney Fir The DefenseOf t f e Htbreyr Soctkl Alliance

SCHOOL AUDITORIUM- 8;30 P, M. Sharp*

ten days. Tho rJst on "major citien is at the rate of 7.5

month's time.ncrease iii snialler communities and

e*l ) e < t e ' ' t o b(J a t •»snrural areasleaser rate.

With" appf the state'

roximately one-eighthl l t iof the state's total population now

receiving subsistence from tk$ stateand community relief funds, official*,of the administration estimate thatthe peak for the year has aboutbeen reached. '

• ? s =

HELP WAITEDEXPERH OPERATORS ONBS; ALSO H 0 M . K .WORKERS.

apkriY WORK, APPLYR08B DRESS SHOP ^186 Washington Ave.,

Democrat. And G. O. P.To Pick Men Next Weak

A mass meeting of Democrats willbe held Thursday night next in Fiws-,houBe No. 1 to endorse candidatesfor tho primaries whieh this yearwicur on May 16. Petitions muat beflted by midnight Thursdav night.

Tjlie" Republican orgamzKtion, ofthe Borough will meet Tuesday nightat 8 o'clock, in Falcon Hall to en-dorse candidates for the primaries.There- are two berths to be filled inth<* council and an assessor andCollector. .

The Democrats mn likely to endorse the,present incumbents. AmongRepuJjlicnns who ara keing mention-ed as candidates for council are WU-lmm Qreenwaid, Joseph Yftung, Ml

h l y i h k l J p h Trelink6 an

responding secretary, Miss llelenStmthers; recording secretary, MissKleiina Bryer; treasurer, Miss Eve-lyn Springer; delegates to the Atlun-tic City »tute convention of JuniorWoman's Clubs April TZ, the MissesFrances Harrington, Eleanor Harrisand Helen Struthers.

Plans for a Spring dance to b<held May S in the Nathan Hale schoolwere made and the following; wereappointed on a committee on ar-rangements: th^Miases Helen Jurick Lillian Doifnelly, Kvelyn Spring-er ,Wanda Knurr and Frances liarring-ton.

Miss Evelyn Springer was hostessfor the evening and served refresh-ments after the business meeting.Those present were: the Misses AnnReilly, Catherine Grech, Lydia Ben-ning, Oliv« Gundttraon, Frances Har-rington, Evelyn Springer, WandaKnorr, Eleana Bryer, Hekn Jurick,Lillian Donnelly, Helen Struthenand'Mary Filos«. •

Rosary Society To HoldCard Party Monday Night

Tho Rosary Society of St.sph's Church will hold a card partyMonday night in the church hall.Among the hundred prizes will be|2.50 donated by Mrs. Edward J.leil, a like amount donated by May->r Ucrmam, and a hand--embtoider»e.d pillow donated by Mrs. JohnAdams. Refreshments will bt served.Admission will be 35 cents.

yircheeklLWflUf V<*ah. tf H.ed m ewuStfta for

-CARD OP THANKSWe, the undersigned, cake this op-

portunity to thank Rev, Hudiak anall our friends who abated in ttfe re-cent bereavement of th* death of9we husband aijd; fjther

eneral o m i U eer Galvanek, Andy Galvanek, Stan-y Szelagr, Joseph Shutello and An-rew Hila.

Wai- the opposite style of play will be de-veloped by the Coach J. Wilder Tas-l p d byker of Rutgers in Monday's sessions.Tasker will lecture on the balanced

*. line* and the backfield shift forma-I tions.

The1 final day of the clin:c wilt beturned over to Lou Litti- of Colum-bia who will present the six-man lino* _ . . _ _ . - 1 - A . * . - . _ _ J « r i I I 4-1* <»w* flan

Link Public Card PartyOn Tuesday Nighl Next

Friendship Link No. 25, Order ofthe Golden Chain will hold a publiccard party irf Odd Feljowa Hall onTuesday night of next week. Therewill be many prises for successfulplayers, and refreshments will ' beserved. Mrs. Abe Chodosh is chair-man of the committee in charge ofthe arrangements.

Auxiliary To BrotherhoodTo Hold Card Party Apr. 24

A public card party for the benefit of the auxiliary unit of the Bro-therhood of Israel will be held onApril U in the home of Mrs. Benja-

tmlu Klein, 673 Roosevelt ayenua,Carteret aeetion. Mrs. Ben Klein andMra. Ralph Wttias will be the hosUwa-es for We evening. RefxeahmauUwill be w m d ,

. [for consideration, and will then disJ 0 S" cuss various secondary defensive ar-

rangements as he employs them.

fwi League MeetsNext Monday Night

Special Session Called — En-trance Feea Due — ShowReturns Made.

. A special meqting at the Caf-t*ret Twilight League is scheduledfor next Monday night »t Phil Turk'sKoosevert Diner in upper Rooseveltavenue. Entrance fees which aredue will be collected from all fourteams.

-Other important business that isexpected to oome up Consists of theadoption on final reading of theleague schedule and by-laws, andthe initial returns on the ticketsale for tfi« Twilight League showto be presented on Tuesday, April26. ,

Huns for tho opening vsuio 01thd season between th«< Paatry Boys,last year's champst and the BoysClub, will bo made. It i» axpacUdthat there will tx» approptiat* 0 M » -iBK day ceremonies precodiuff tae

gam«. ' .

Page 2: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1933

TO GLORIFY BREAKFAST

"You're Needed to makethe Party Complete"

Invitations to out-of-townquests—that "thank you" toyour hostess of Ia«t week—mean so much more whenyou deliver them in persoh... with your own voice. Inshort by telephone. At littlecost.

No(«> these typicalStatinn-to-station ratei:

7 SiIOD»y p.m. p.m.

24 miles 20c 20c 20c50 mlle§ 45c 35c 35c

100 miles 60c 50c 35c

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

Salt In Ocein WaferSalt contenl of a cubic mile of ocean

water weighs 117,08tt.2.SO mm.

Mayba Leap-Year, TooA. Sfifi dny ftscnl year wsi known to

the enrly Orof>k«

Or.n»Utan Mm Tenth lAVi- Mani ,f ,ni i . r m m . u t a n «r» tt

«nnii> In k ind ninl n i imhrr nA hfound in niMii. hut nn thp rirniiK-ntnnItrowK HI'IIT I In' l"ii|», p o i n t e d iPPthr n l l o l Id.. i"nlnc-i irruw Innifer nnilmure fnMividiiii!i> l,ll;p m n n «l«o, the<inirir iitnn linn iwn si' ls ot t rp lh , thefirm s i t milk i c e t h nnil I lie s ermid "M

and coffo« «n<l thv morningpaper!

Ooffae and twmt Rnil I lie morningpapert

Ho hum I That'i the urent Ameri-can breakfast—prepiirpil with ml«KlT-lDK«, awsltowed In hnme, not remem-bered long enough evun to be re-pented.

It Is perhaps n great pity that the<tay» when American breftkf«st« weremighty affaire, suited to pioneer-log activities, are gone forpver. Yetthere are still ways to arouse evenlagging modern breakfant appetites.

On* Is to add the delirious tang of

plneappto to thr. ninrnlMK inrnl. Andnutrltlonnl studios hnvf recpnlly re-vealed n definite Jicnlth rcnsr.n for theaddition. For mnm-d plnrajiplp tinsbeen found to ho rt gfMif'rotis nourcpof vltflmliifi A. TV ninl '' and five p*sentlal mlnfTBlp,. It In nlso rcvnlodas an aid tn the di lut ion of protein*.uuch an numt nnd exes and to theprevention and relief of noltiosls.

Bo hwj> Is a modern hrpnkfnnt suitedto modern needs—npppRlInu to the ap-petite, healthful and dimple to prerpare—two sllcwi of pineapple, a cerealIf desired, two poached eggs on toast,and coffee.

Heifht of the N.th .rUnd.The vrerage height above s«a level

of the Netherlands Is 87 feet

Always With Ui 'A friend -who IH not In need Is a

friend, lndp«l

Good CombinationWithout labor iherp rnn he no ac-

compllghmpnt; wltlimit accomplish-ment there Is no humnn happiness.

—Please mention this paper whenbuying" from advertisers.—

V ' I U V 1 - E I 1 T ( I f NKW .IKIISFY — PeI A . ^ N AMF1KOHR M H P l l A K anil MART\ M I I I I A K , hi* wife. Complainant* , and,.Ic >I1N 7 .KI .RZMK anil A N N * 7.KI.K7.-*• I k hU wlf"\ et a l s , P e r e n d a n t * K1 F«-

Kv Mrlii" .if the atH>ve Rtat«d writ, t" melliTjr.,1 fln«l del ivered, I will p i p n " '"

KliNRSIIAV. TlIK T H I l m D A T 111' M A , ,,\ l>, N I N R T K K N HUNIWICI)

T H l l t T V T H H E BH IM.I i . v t m k D a y l l s M Ravins: T ime In III*ifti-i mioti of the mil l day. nl th« Hherirrs>rn. •> In lh« f i t V »r New Brunswick . !* .1

All Ihp foll(.u-|riK Irart nr parrel t,f Ullilliil |irt'inlii*.B herclnftftpr pnrtlrulftrly 'If

H<iri>HRh f*r C'drt^rpt tn Ihn ('minty nf MId-1|C«(PK nnil Htnt* of N>w .r^m^y.

!il»-r!"

'iuilliniiyl the

runnlnir

wt1lnfith*fret

I ho rurnfr fnrnn1!] hyf th^ WMit hfrly IITlf nf

arrnn" wllli (h» wrntirly l ln . nfvnnnc. HB nhown tin Map i»f Hoof*1-H K M B . pruprrly ht KlTlK-MnrHfH'y w ,,ii file In th« f l i . f k > < Iff Urn

tv nf MIcMlMM; fnim thom-flK Dip nnlil wmtr-rly llnf ttt

ftv^nnc In 11 Mouthwpnt^rly dlT(*rtlonont lo thrt* northerly line of lot "11"ld mnp, thent-s ulnni th« Bam* !n a

Tlv il!r<-(-tliiTi to t**l tn the pftiterly>f lot N'), A on MM map; thpnrp aloniarnp In a ntjrtlipastorly (llrectlnn 100

tn lit*1 nuld nrtUHl*rlT llnfl nf U l i w u yiF., anil thpnrp alnnRrly <llrprtliin &fl 2S fe f l t p y rtliin

• ml iilii-a ..f Ilrtlnnlna-. l-on Hie wfnronillil innp-

Whl.-li nfllil pr<ipfrty In

llnfl nfthn u m « In

i*t to the pointtn Not ? nin

u\no knnwnKo. fir>t ]lud»».vp]t flvpnnr, ('iirtpri»t, NewJerupy

Thn apprnxImMfl fttiinunt nf th» Jerrfnto be natlAftfd by tiald KAI«> IB the num nfSeventeen Thnuaanil Tlirep Hunilred Plfly-KII ll.Hlnra anil Fifty.nln« (VntB ItH.SSS-r>9), togoth»r with the rout* nf thl» na!l>.

Tngpthcr with all ami ulnRulttr the rlgbtn.PTlvllda1*", hfredltaniMitn and appurtpniin^PBthurpiinln firl'inKtntc nr tn nnywlse apper-taining*.

• ALAN II. ELY. ShrrlffEMU. STHKMI.AII.129 to rlollcitur<• I1 4-7. II. ! 1 . IS.

, IMnr111"

n nf theIn Ihn «'I'V '

All l »» f"l

A, I) I ! ' "k . m n . l n r i l Him-said .l»y »' "1P, :

f New Hrnn^wl'l.iwIOK I r n r t or, h r l f

M i l lF l F a .

i lnt".I

,,1 w r i t I" '•""

IK A l ' H I l - ,

II f I I T

urrii-

s r r l l i e . l , - I t u s l e , l y l n * Cuunly nf Ml

nty five (!6> feet to Hi-. .. .nf Lit Nn 29 nn said map; theheft nlons; tli"time In an easterly direction one hundred(100) feet to the sold westerly line of Loleltavenue nnd tile place nf HKO1NNINO.

It being; Intended tn convey lot Knownami ilealRnAte.l an No. twenty-eight ( I I ) onthe Jifuresald rnnp.

13. " - « »ni1

l"H> Offlpm i Cmintyilperl« nt P»«' 2*8''

Thf apprnxlmfit<?tn hp l 1three

reciirded in.Tlro In Honk1

Fl. Pa. for the s*le OC mBtfHm* Urtmi.e.

pV*vini» of !»•' «»OT« *ta»»a writ to m.,lir.r»swi and djtflYWod. ' Wlll-swutae to m .>t pituMi- v«ndue onWKI>NKSI>AY. TUB THIRD DAT OP MAY,

A t ) NINfflTBBN HllNDHRDTHinTY-THH&E

», two oVIork Daylight Saving Tlm» In theafternoon of the »al<t ila», at the flhrwHf,offlo* In iho City uf New nnumrlek, N ,i.

AM. tnnan esrtaln lot*, lra«tt or naj-i-.l,of Innd an<l premise* situate, lyln» and h.Inr In the Bornnirh of Carteret. In tn«County nf Middlesex and State of New ,r,r

""ii|F,<1INNINa at a stake, on the southerly•Ide nf tlie roa« frnrn Woodbrld«» to Union[,«n.lln» (nnir Tlooseyelt arena*) ana atthe northwest corner nf -land formerly <>rI T Hart*lr-lc; thence ruifnlnf (J) wester]y fifty ISO) reel alnns; line irf lands r.rr'ail (now Hnnnevelt arenue) to a etako at

n.»rlhen.Ht corner of lot nrimbar five.thence mnnlnu I!) solitherly, one hundred.I,, nnd .meHenth (101,1) f»et to a. stake at

ortheant corner nf lot number thirteentheme runnlna- (1) *aeterlr, flftjr (50)

alonir line nf Inta numhare fourteennn.l flrteen (IS) to a stairs at the,vest corner of )nt narrtbe* slrtesn;

il thnni-e runnlnd (4) northerly, on* hun-re.l nno nnd flve-tMllhn (H1.5) f«»t alona,,.,I formerli' «f J. T. Harlwlek, belnt the!,l,,l nr |.lac« of nBOINNINO.

HOIMK Vnnwn nnd il«slejBat«rl as lots nnmers "In ("I "nil seven (7) In Olook nuinl.frne ( I ) on m«P of property nf Mary NimtwHI nnd filed in the office of theiirk «f' Hi" ''mitity of Mldifteaex a t New

'"'"so" Known' a» Nn <2-44 Rooee»e)t ave-,,e c-nrterel. New Jeraejr. .Tlie »ppriiilmnte amount ot the Decree

„ |,o nn Untied l,y said aale le the sum ofjlfven Thousand El iht minUred Nineteen)i>llnrd and Rl«lv-»l< Cent! (IU,!19.««). to-•ether with the costs of this- sale.

with «H and "lnnilax the Hfhta,* ippt'rtensnoes

nunt of the" decreeanle Is the sum of

ninV'h.indreil and fifty-nnd1 sevent/rone cents ( |I . -three dnllnrri nnd1 Neventyrone rnno \r».

563.71) toitathiT with the ro«'i of this aale.Together nit Ii all And singular the rlKhts,

i l t nd appurtenanceaTog

privileges,thereuntn holonirlnff

nit Ii a lhrmiltainenta and appurtenancea

In atiywlie apper-

t"'""'B A1.AN KTHOMAS H HAOEItTYlu.fo S o l l c"C. P . l - 2 t , l i : ' ' • ' •

ELY. Sheriff.

^ i b f t a t oAND

3RD ANNIVERSARY SALEIn announcing the opening of our branch store

at 278 Washington Street (cor. of Penn St.) inPerth Amboy on Thursday, April 13th, we takethin opportunity to thank you, our many friends,who have helped us to make this event posaible.

, Since the opening of our first store three years ago(originally on New Brunswick Ave.), our maineffort* have been directed towards a policy of

giving courteous service, quality merchandise andreasonable prices. Your response is ample proofof the success of our policy and it will be contin-ued in both stores.

We have timed this opening with our third an-niversary, exactly to the day, so in celebration ofthis double event we offer exceptional food valuesin both stores.

8ii}isl&j|ni WHEN YOU HELP US CELEBRATE OUR DOUBLE EVENT!

THURSDAY, APRIL 13 to SATURDAY, APRIL 22NEW VALUES WILL BE ADDED DAILY. THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE IN BOTH STORESSTRICTLY FRESH

Eggs 15C» Sugar 5 2 1 c MILK 4PALMOLTVE 4 A

SOAP 3 «14

EVAPORATED

TALLCAN

You can't afford to be without that 'school girl' complexionat this price!

RE-GOBBOPURE ITALIAN $1.59

GallonOLIVE OILThe fineat spring tonic—Use it daily with your salads.

1

' t

PROSCIUTTOCAPICOLLOGENOA SALAMI 29c

LB

WHOLE

PRIDE OF THE KITCHENSOAP POWDER 5 LB BOX 19MAZOLA OIL GALLON 62'COFFEE2LBS

25cOf course wo are revponaibie for that

tantalizttig odor of ro**tiup coffee float-ing down Smith St. every day—

WE ROAST OUR' OWN

RICOTTA2 lbs 25c

ITALIAN COOK

SALAD OIL 49 GAL.

PURE SEMOLINA

MACARONI 20 LEBOXES 98 BOX

PASTENE 5R I N S O LARGE

ROMANELLO WHOLE 35cIF YOU COULD BUY AT WHOLESALE YOU COULDN'T BEAT THESE PRICES!

TOILETTISSUE

7 RONZONI OR LA ROSAMACARONI «-«•

WIGHT RESERVED, TO UMIT QUANTITIES

IffITALIAN rCCD STCREi

gmith St. " » " " • » PERTH AMBOV 278 Washington St.

SIIRBIFT-B BALBIN CHANCERY OP NBW JEKSEY

twepn 1HA1HJHR BCHWAHTZ, Complaln-nnt. find JOHN UINUA and ANNA (SIN-I>A. his wife.'I»efen.iant» PI. Pa for snleof morlBHKe.l premises dated FebruaryIS, 1B3SHy virtue of th« ahove stated wrle to

direrted and delivered, I will exposennle nt pulill.1 vondue nnWRONEMDAV, THE JHD DAY

A D. 193!ftt twn u'dnrk dayllgllt HHvlnpr time In, thenfternoon nt th>> Kalil day nt the Sheriff'sOffice In the n t y of New flrunawlck, N. J.

Alt IIHI,".. .crtnln lots, tract or parcel ofuri.i innl iir.MmnM., hereiniifter jtartiriilitrly1. flrrtlii-il wihinte, lylnit »nil bvlny

iMiph nf rurteret, County of

OF MAY.

17y2c

Will, hl. i

.null

i>f N>w Jeray..HI it m m etitltlf.l "Map of Tract

iitral 1'urkvvay, Nttuftted In tltr,,f I'nrlrrct, Mldilleaei County. N1" f'lunlH til)', Slay. 1926." o\\ np<lnji il liy Hprmnnn Realty (;.MnvPjT.l nn'l mapped by FTtA Fj SIK , nnd which snUl map has ticer

.Inly filed In the orfice of tlio .County Clerk"f Ml.liilr.ii>*, nt New Iin nswli'k. New Jer-~<>'. 1 Inld itoMn, known and shown as an.

v l.i( miTntipr one hundreil nnd fourtcei111) nnil the nOJolnlnff seventeen feet (17')r un.- Imn.lri-il nnil thirteen t l U ) , frontlnKh.l fin [tie on llealcl street as shown on sail*

Htliiic a pnrt of the premises conveyed tu- sal.l .lohn Illnda by deeil of Ucrnuinnoalty Company and which said deed Is reir.l.'il in ll..c.k 938 of Deeds for Middle

i'\ County, nt pnge 88, etc. Reins; the sanuremlwes runveyed to Susannnh Kontz uiprll 10, l»2s by deed or John OlndB an.

vllt and recorded In Book »49 of Deeds foJIHdlewi Ciiunty, nt page t,2S. etc.

BelnK the premises commonly known an.•alienated as No. 64 Heald street, Cartereti*w lernoy.The apprcxJmnre amount of the dec

he xntlafleil by jnlil sale Is the Bumi"t thousand one hundred five dollars and

our cents (15.106.0(1 together with thosts of this sale.

Toerther with all and singular the rights.irlvlleg-es, hereditaments and appurtenanc•n thereunto belonging or In anywise »p.>erlainitig.

ALAN H. t L Y , SherifiBROWN.

Solicitor.21, 28. '

ROBERT5S14

14,

S I I E R D T S HALSM CHANCERT OF NKW JHB8KT — Be

tween THE CARTERET BUILDIMLOAN ASSOCIATION ot Carteret. Ne-Jersey, a corporation, Complainant, anMAURICE UOODMAN and UERTRUD _GOODMAN his wife, *t. als., Defendants.

TiiiioM"! withirlvlleice« heredltamenH andhereunin' h»|nn«ln« ' or In fa(i»wla« nper-

In In I . , A LAN H. HTLT, Sheriff,MOKAOHAN,

, , , , Bolloltor• 7. 14, II. 2«.

fmBsUTTH MJ.KCHANCEHY o r NKW JHR8BT — Be-

tween THB CART«HKt BUIUDINOLOAN ASSOCIATION of Carter*!, Newlersey a corporation Complainant, »ndMEM SANTA and MARY SANTA, hiswife et. nl,, Defendant*. Fl. F«_ tor thesale ot mortgaged premises datsd March16, 199!.ny virtue of tlfe s.bov« stated writ, «o

me directed and dellv«r»d, I will KpOMtn sale nt public vendue onWKDNKHOAY. TH*1 THIRD D * T OF KAV.

A D N1NBTRRN HUNDREDTHIRTY-THRBB

,1 l w . i n'llock Daylight Bavin* Tims Inlie Afternoon of the srnld 4***, *>t tb« Bher-ff's Office In the CHy of N«w Bniiuwlck,

N J.Al.l, those certain lota, tracts or parce l s '

of In ml and pretnisu situate, lying and be-m in the Hnrojgh of C«rt«ret, In the'ciuntv of Middlesex and Stata of NewPfiKiUN'NINn at a point I M B U S ] J a Uiaortfterly lino uf sit Ann street, distantwo hundred nine and thirty-four fta«-hun-

dre.1l I. • <20>SII feet, easterly from thecorner formed by the Intersection of «a.ldnortherly line of St. Asta rtrs»t, formerlyknown an FoUom RV*ntie, with the east-erly line of Hayward avenue, aa shttwn ona map entitled. 'A map of tsjids owned bythe Kooaevelt Realty and Investment Com-pany located at Carleret, In the Boroughof Roosevelt. Mlddleae* County, N. J., P.F Slrnnns. Surveyor, scale 1<E equals to-'January 15 1914," and from amid begin-ning point rvinntns; tlienc« U) In an «ai t -erly direction along tw\<i northerly line OfSt. Ann street, forty-two and flv« on<L-htindredths (12.(IS) feet to a P»lnt; nlH-nlng thenre (2) fn a northerly direction atright angles tn fbe sai<1 northerly Hue ot

.Ui St. Ann street one hundred U0») feett a point; running* thencs (3) In a west-erly direction parallel with the said north-irly line of St. Ann street forty-two andwo onr-hundredths (43.02) feet to a. pcrint.

running thence (4) In n southerly directionat right angles to th«.last mentioned course,one hundred (100) f £ t to the point ot BB-GINNING.

Melns; known and designated aa lot num-ber one hundred and seven (107) aa shownon the aforementioned map and the west-erly twelve nnil five one-hundredlhs < l » 0 ( )feet of lot number four hundred fifty-seven(457) as shown on map of land* of KactaelAnn Crowell.

Also known as No. 41 8t. Ann street,Carteret, N. J.

The approximate amount of tha dacre*to be satisfied by said aale fa the aura ofTwo Thousand Five Hundred Blxty-ulnaDollars and Silly-four Canta ( |! ,6«».«4),together with the coatB of this sale.

Together with all and slanjlar tha rlrhta,privileges, hereditaments and appurtenance*thereunto belonging or In anywise apper-taining.

ALAN H. ELT, Sheriff.FRANCIS A. M O N A O H A N ,IJ7.80 KollCltW.C. P. 4-7. 14, 21, 28.

Tire Dropped by World FliersDrifts 4400 Miles Across Pacific

LB An amazing ocean journey of4400 miltm made by a Firestoneairplane tiro dropntxl by ClydePangburn and Hugh Herndon inthtjir epoch making round th«world flight in 1931 has just cometo light through the clmcuvery ofthe lire aBoat In the Pacinc offCape Flattery, state ofIngton.

• , Stranger than Actlen, the utoryof the tirti'B wandering* cormti-futea a romantic epiflooe withoutparallel in laaritimaelnd aviationhi.tury. Tha world fliers cast thetire \aUf. UM M * with the rest otthe uiidHrcarrUgO of their plansshortly after taking off fromHamuihlro Beash in Japan Octo-ber 8. 1931, their puipoM beingto ligiktw their burden and thaato save gasoline and gain speed.Two day! later they mad* theirfamous "flahtail" land ing Td;WenatchM, WaaUngtun, slidlhfto a »top an the metar "belly" ofthe plane.

Ko OM ever expectedto boar of the discarded )•>•«(rear* Wd|*te4 with km? m

It waa auppoaad toa watery grave from ..—could never rttwrn. Butosaltires at least bad othar iffThrough the buoyancy ot Um *fully infltted tube. H cam* U> 'aurface and, carrying tM ~~*~with it, began ita remark "age to American shore*.

The count It folio*gumably the same at . „by the fliert, bat the tltM;sumed w u more than a t t . ^ ,monthi aa agbinat two dan thay -required f o» the trip, TIM ftt*waa discovered bobbing up NMdown tn the ocean by Captain I m ;Baggen of the wboonea:. PrMbolesslhan two hundred mile* ttot*

tUa country,After Captain *

brought We airplane mthewyrt%of*b». l tfrom wa» soon •-**—J

ltt •erifll

tad

Page 3: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

CARTERBT P^ESS

Send Baumann's

Beautiful Plants

and Cut Flowers

THIS EASTEREASTER SUNDAY APR. ltf

ALWAYS SOMETHING DIFFERENT SOME-

THING NEW NEVER HAVE OUR PRICES

BEEN SO LOW — OUR ASSORTMENT

• SO COMPLETE

Quality CountsAzaleas Gardenias in bloomBegoniu

Gnerarias Scotch HeatherHyilran(«as Rose Bushes PrimrosesHyacinths Jonquils • Tulips

PLANTS ARE SO CHEAP EVERY HOME WILL HAVETHEM - - - PLANTS AT PRICES WAY BELOW FORM-ER YEARS. SPECIAL PRICESTO CHURCHES. COME SEEOUR DISPLAY WHETHERYOU BUY OR NOT.

FRIDAY, APRIL 14,198?

County Tuberculosis LeagueBoard Approves Luncheon

TV. Board of Director* of the IMiddlesex County Tuberculosis Len- Igup apprnvecl plans for the Annunl.Ijijnchoiin meeting of th<> Leaguewhich will b<- hold on Tiiomtny, AprilIHth, Ht, tho Wonrtrow Wilson Hotel,New Hninpwirk, at thrir meeting otiKliclny. Mr*. A. I,. Gardner of Raritan Townsh.ii> wns chairman of the'iimiHrt> <m nrrantfiiTtn for the

rhi'on and rns secured us spruiti"r fur tho dinno-p, Or. Allfn (I. Iroland of the Department of Physicalunil Hoalth Kdnratinn of the Statsrtppftrtment of education. Dr. .Ire-land's mibjwt. will be —Public Health•—Tuberculosis and tho Schools, Be-sides Dr. Ireland'^ association withtho stflto <)opnrtm<>nt of education hehas a very close assuciation with theNew .Ipmoy Tubi'rriiliisia I^BKHC andwith ttif fltat* Congress of Pare.ntTeachers Asflo^iaHons.

The tonstmastw who will presideat the annual luncheon meeting; isDr. Benjamin (iutmann of MewBrunswick, member of the Board o f

DiDrectflrs of the. League and theftrrfl medical director of the NewBrunswick Tuberculosis League.

Chairmen who will present annualcommittee reports at this meetingare: E. B. r\>r«o of Metuchen, Fi-nance; Mrs. Axel OlsorT of Perth Am-boy, Seal Bale; Dr. Marshall Smithof New HrunRwick, Sanatorium; Dr.H. Ford of Woodbridge, Nursing andClinic; Miss Mary Richeson of PerthAmboy, Health Education.

J. R. BAUMANNFLORIST

St. George it Hazelwood Avenue*RAHWAY

Phone Rah. 7-0711 • 0712 • 0713

Gold Separator for Deiert Ui«A small gold separator. Intended for

•M OH the desert, can sometimes be•(Mrated without any water.

i

"By the Sid« of the Rou'd"Tim poem "The Mouse by the Side

of tlio Kond" wns written bj SamWalter FOBS.

LIGHTNING DIVISION SMOKER

Of interest to over forty thousandveterans of the 7Hth (New Jersey)Division is the announcement of theAnnunl Reunion Smoker being heldon Saturday evening;, April 2Slth onthe Hotel Astor Roof, New YorkCity.

Reservations may bo had from thesecretary, John Kennedy, 354 Bj-oad-w;iy, New York City or from EraestGenth'nar, (S2R Chestnut street, Ro-sclle, N. J.

> ftttttMt T * ft*Present At Meeting Apr. 20

All beekeeper* are invited to at-tend s countyTwide mretinit whichwill hv held in the rnunty extensionservice olHcra, County Record* BuiM-infc, Pateifion street. New Brunswick,Thursday pveninu, April 20th at 8o'clock. The moetinit which is heiajfcalled by Orley 0. Rnwen, CountyAgricultural Ajrent is iindor the aus-pices of, the State BeckoepcrH Asuo-eistion and thp X'ounty KrtensionService, and is one of * series ofcoiMrtty wide misting* that are being;held1 throughout the State.

Georjte Cattle, President of theState Beekw-pern Association ar\d El-mer G. Oarr, State Be. elnspector willbt- the principal speakers. "SpringMnnagement of Be.es" will be th*principal topic for discussion.

Thousand Autos To AnnounceOwn Your Home Show In Eliz.

ELIZABETH, N. J., April 14 —Ono thousand automobiles carryinghu(re placards will be. used within thenext week to announce to. the entireMetropolitan District the ElizabethOwn Your Home Show to be held atthe Elizabeth Armory from April 24to April 29.

Reports to the fWn Your HomeShow Committee imidatii the 1933exposition will be most successful,despite adverse business conditions.Attendance at the 1933 Model Home,lllR Galloping Hill road,.has alreadyexceeded 70,000, indicating the ffreatinterest in home-ownership andhome-making, and this is expected tobe reflected in the show attendance.

Witihn the last week, the sale oftickets for the exposition haR takena decided .spurt, according to reportsfrom all ticket agencies. Participantsin the ticket-selling contest also havebeen putting forth renewed effortsas the time for the show5 approaches.

Prediction cf Ctnttlry Ago RealiMore tliiin HHI >ears ago. the nutron-

omer Hprschel siiRnoted that qertainklpclH of axtlRinnllFiit mlfc'ht be cor-rected b,v lenses worn nRnlnst the eye-bull; today' thiit type of contactIs fpry helpful to certain patients.

Gold In B»th W.t . rA Scottish gold miner at Johanner

burg saved the gertlment of his b»th«fan* twenty years. Rec»ntly he ji»Bi)«dIt, and extracted gold dnirt worth i100.

Tho Only DrawbackHow happy modern ytfiitli could he If

a Mnnrt fellow could succeed withoutten hard years rtf learning how.---At-lanta Constitution.

1 1 7 Q . . - f f l NEAREST STOREH7 Smah St, PERTH AMBOY, Cor State

Phone P. A. 4-2873AUTO

Radiator Cap OrnamentNo Draft Ventilators

Our-trained ihoppori arepaid to keep T I M E SSQUARE STORES, price,lowekt.

You may purchase fram

u> with complete confid-

ence thmt yon are recei*-

iag greatest value a»ail-

able.

— S D*I SALE —We reiecTe tbe rlfht to limit quantltlet.

Universal Cement

Still remlarlr at fl.59.Sptcl.Ur redacct for IhU itlc

Leader Horns Genuine EVERKLEANSTRAW SEATS SPRAY GUN

For Daoo, touch-ap,cu»mel<, Ucqaen, ate.CompUU with

*IT preunre fromtptre tire.

\uto EnamelTlkniar t;a>, »la»f M

M Urn Khcttan «f H It\ lotra!

We IWVB c ample I* tta«ki ef allUei and types %\ lowmt l

SEAT COVERS

qolek dirlnc rabber enamel. Soli withit montj bafik Kaarantee of abeoinlnktUfattlon. Falnl nffllet at vuld'iural ailcet ai Tlmei Square.

and GOODRICHCOMMANDER TIBE8

NalUulli IimoM ilra «l tb*r i lc» In tin Ultoir. Comj.re!

HIGH (illADIi HINKLBSS

GARDENTJnjT«»Ai typ*, n«w p«tle

tori, Aa luxa itta io watch. B«*l aaletUani, giia

Brake Shoe SetsKrVNTRUSTproduct thai will [ In I n i Mr-

Ul with kraai otnilljwil«a, toBBUl. with kraai o t n i jNtnU mtth W-'l- Un(U> for 11.79

Made n « t W l j (»' poUjhluj and du>t-iar Butva. ( u a l l i n , •!•. Softtr and Miterthin fihaaa* fllota, KflX. W« vala«.

VALUE LIFTER 100% Pure Penn. Oillor Iho a*a*elatllia

a B \> 1« w and c i•clntcil on each can, »ion buy Peun OHi n i lieuuluo wlthimt It. Ottrbtlcea ate luwcat, etn

Uu(4 brake >ti«i »Ia(or M»4«l A Fordi, lr«»tor r«»r. Yo« t«n •••"»

nrr

N«* > Oeuulna

GENERALSUPERI2 Galu.Sak at Strand New Genuine

ELECTRICRADIO

WINDSHIELDCLEANER PARTS

Sturdy BatteriesHade I* awl at *» . Malaall umt^iUM. Oar H ' »wit ~

«•• Hi *"•»m a****

i»AGK THREB

New! SearsIntroduces the

KenmoreTriple-Action

Cleaningat Low Cost

Now, at Seara low prices,you can get time-aavinR,effort-saving Triple Actiondonning. Powerful suctionand a sturdily-bristledbrush sweep up surfacelitter, beat the rug on acushion of air, extracteven hidden dirt. Whetheryou choose the splendidDeLuxe, that moves -at afeathertouch, or a lowerpriced model, you'll getyears of superior service.And Kenmores are re-markably low priced—be-cause of Sears Triple Sav-ings. Waste no time—seethem now,'or send in thecoupon below.

PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

lSma.ll addi-tional charfflon lima p&r-m fl n t -pur*

chaaei)

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. «275 Hobart St., Perth Amber, N.J .To »how me the quaJitj of the saw Kenroora, pteaec cloana largs rug for me in my own home, without coat or ob-ligation to 016.Name , .;Addreia

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK

275 HOBART STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

RELIEF MENUSFollowing is the eighth of a. series

of ni(*nus planned particularly forthose receiving relief rations in orderthat some variation may be had inthe daily meals:

Vegetable*Tomatoes, oranges and raw cab-

bage have special values. Give babiesand little children some tomato juiceor orange juice* every day. Use forall the family from 2-4 times a week.Vegetajflea and fruits are needed byeverybody. When you have providedtomatoes, or raw cabbage, add greensand as many other vegetables andfruits as you can get.

WHEN COOKING VEGETABL-ES: Use as little water as possible.Cook beets, carrots and potatoes withskins on. Cabbage needs to be cookedonly 16-20 minutes. (Cabbage ia hardto digest w'.'. M\ cooked too lung).Green cabbat;,,' is bitter than white.Red cabbage U excellent. Soda shouldnot be used when'cookiiig vegetables.Use water in which vegetables havebeen cooked in sojps and gravies.Use left-over •ve(;«i;ibl<« in soups,stews, salads, hasii or escalloped. |

VEGETABLE CIIOWDE11---2 on-ions, 1 cup canned toimitut.-1,, 2 stalkscelery and leaves, any other vege-table, 4 medium potatoes, (5 table-spoons fat, li bay leaves, I carrots, 1given peoper, seasonings. Wasli, pureand cut vegetables in small pieces.Melt fat, add onions and brown. Adddiced potatoes, carrots, celery andbay leaf. Cover with water and coolvuntil soft. Add tumatues and choppedpepper and cook until weil blended.

VEGETABLE SALAD —• Use anycombination of raw vegetables, cook-ed vegetables. Raw cabbage makesa good base for it salad, and a littleraw union improves the flavor of any;alad.

ESCALLOPE1) TOMATOES — 1No. 2 can tomatoes. 1 tablespoon fat,2 cups bread crumbs, Vi onion chop-ped fine, pepper, salt, sugar. Arrangethe tomatoes, bread crumbs, onionand seasonings in layers* in a bakingdish, let the. last layer be of crumbs,dot with iilargarine or butter »ndItuke 30 minutes. Thia may be cookedon top of stove jtlso.

TOMATO SCRAPPLE 1 No. 2can tomatoes, L cup water, H cupchopped peanuts, 1 onion chopped,1 cup ccunmeal, salt HIHI puppet, j-carrot chopped, 1 teaspoon sugar.Cook all ingredients, except the pen-nuts, together for about 1 hour oruntil thick. Beat is the peanuts. Packinto a greased pan. Cool thoroughly.Slice and fry. Eat a raw vegetablefour or live times weekly.

POTATOES — Use potatoes dailyif you can. Cook potatoes in theirskins to keep their full food value.

SCALLOPED POTATOES — 6-Bmedium sized potatoes, 2 tablespoonsfat, 1 tablespoon flour, 2/3 cup di-luted evaporated milk, 1 teaspoonBait, Wash, pare and slice potatoes.Arrange sliced potatoes in layers ina groaned baking dish, dotting eachlayer with bits of fat, geaionings andfloor. Add sufficient scalded dilutedevaporated milk to nearly cover andbuke in a moderate oven until pota-toes are-tender ubout an hour.• STWFEQ POTATOES — Bakemedium potatoes in a hot oven untiltender. Cut the potatoes in twolength wine and remove potato pulp.Mash hot potato and to each'pyUt"mid seasoning m follows: 1 teaspoonwit, 1/8 teaspoon pejuwr, % tas|hx>nonion juice, 1 tefwpoon fat, 1 table-

diluted «vttyiojated milk. But~ Fill An\U with ttjl^tuie

ill « hot oven (about 10

many Hided foods. Use them freelyin low cost diets.

LENTIL SOU8.*- Wash and pickover 1 cup lentils. Soak over night.Add sliced onion and cook until soft.Mash or rub through a sieve. Addtomato and seasonings. Add flour

and fat that have been mixed andcook until thick. Lbnu beans or peabeans mny be used instead of lentils.

(to bo continued)

—Please mention this oaDer whenbuying- from advertiaer*.—•

You can scrub fruit*and vegetable* but

YOU CAN'TWASH MILK

Visit a Sheffield pasteurizingplant. See the careVith whichyour milk is protected fromImpurity. Aflcrwurdn, you won'ttake a chance on ordinary milk.You'll liny Slu'fTielJ'e and be sure.

SHEFFIELD FARMSSeadect

G R A D E - A M I L K

Phone, PUinfidd 6-3600

Bakers Attention!

CARBO COKEWith its high heat units and lasting quality, will get your

ovens to proper temperature in less time thanany other fuel.

SAVES LABOR AS IT LEAVESNO ASHES TO MOVE.

Get a Trial Load. You Will Use No Other.

WE ARE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR CARBO COKEFOR THIS DISTRICT

We also sell highest grade of coalproduced at reduced prices.

The quality we handle brings praite from mostexacting customers.

New Customers added daily. WE SATISFY WHEREOTHERS FAIL. Also handle different grades of

Soft Coal, Coke, Wood and Ice. .

NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR OUT-OF-TOWN DELIVER-IES ANYWHERE WITHIN TEN MILES.

Give Us a Call-Perth Amboy 4-2332

State Coal & SupplyCorporation

JOHN RYMSHA, Mgf.

State St. Perjh Amboy, N J . §

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CARTERBTPfiEaa

PACK FOUR

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, |1.50 Per Ye*rrnWinhed Every Friday By

C. H. BYRNE, 130 Jersey St., CARTERET, N. i.Telephone Carteret B-lflOO

C. H. BYRNfr Editor •nd OwnerMEYER ROSENBLU1I _ Pporta Editor

Entered as second <•!•«> nutter June 6, 1924, at Carteret, N. J.,Port Office, under the Act of March 8, 1879.

Foreign Advertising RepresentativesNew Jersey Nelfhborhoed Newspaper*, tae.

INDUSTRIES AND PAYROLLSIn any consideration or discussion of the differences be-

tween the Borough or Board of Education on the one hand and,the industrial group on the other, the fact must be kept in mindthat the industries are under no obligation to pay their taxeslf\ advance. The borough, unable to obtain money in the usualmanner from the banks, has been trying to induce the factoriesto pay taxed in advanc. The factories may be driving a hardbargain but they are feeMng the depression, too. If the boroughwere to ask the average wage earner to pay his taxes in, ad-vance there would be loud yells of protest. Whoever madesuch a proposition probably would be told that he would bedamned lucky if the taxes were paid at all.

The facts in the Carteret situation to date are tl&ese: Thebanks will not lend money on municipal bondB. The adminis-tration has little faith in baby bonds. Hence the big, industrieswere asked* to pay their taxes in advance. They did pay a con-siderable amount in advance and the borough was enabled asa result to pay back payroll* for January and February, in realmoney. The factories contend that another $9,000 should betaken off the school budget. They do not specify that it shallbe taken off salaries or off the salaries of any particular! groupof employees. Neither do they ask that any particular employ-ees be discharged. . They say that to balance the budget itshould be reduced another ?9,000 without any further condi-tions as to how.

In the last year or two one school commissioner, Schwartz,found ways and means to cut the budget some forty thousanddollars or more by eliminating waste and carelessness. The re-maining $9,000 may, perhap's, be cut out by more of the samekind of effort without effecting salaries at alf:'-

We are1 in a depression and all must do their bit in theway of economy. It is not a time for-antagonism. It i* a timefor intelligent team work. The borough and the school boardlBiiSt-rurtail expenses just as the individual must until betterconditions areibuilt upon a sounder foundation than was hadin the past.' /hose communities that are finding relief by theuse of baby ponds are not at all satisfied with them. They arerecognized rtierely as'a means dictated by a desperate emer-gency. Carteret is fortunate in not having to follow that course.

0 The Easter Bonnet. D

UNKIND WORDS

. ETII words cat worse than swords.1 ' •*

A word hurts worse than a wound.

Sometlroet words hurt more than•words.

A sharp word can come out of agood heart

*fc» love thinks•peaks no good.

no evil, so envy

Wounds ma; heal, but notthat are made by 111 words

those

ISN'T THAT SO?

Nothing helps' a jaded appetite likegoing without anything to eat tor •while. •

What a business the opticians wonlddo If we could see ourselves as otherssee OB.

Sometimes you know you have theright of way, but a raster enr beatsyou to tt.

Many a man who slnrts a runningaccount tins n hard race before heovertakes It.

Style* for Little Miss

Spohsmsn' By Paul B. Silver^

Deputy Fish-Game Warden

,4im *n» n ,Thr cum ileinnmlod of Mr ^

norrriiirv In nhoul the average goirgtilIn [he HW'Inrtlc. The swindlers Ogurepretty shrewdly the nmonnt thnt theirrlcilin might he disposed to nfty for ahnrpnln without nronulTlR undue SOBpti'lon in lilft huslness nssorlntes andlimit their doranndfl tn tiinu Thefr"fecit" Imve rnnced from V4<M1 to MO.IHM) In tlio complaints received nt polire lipinlqiinrtem.

Ih^t fnl I pel n KIII n In the ense ofNewcomb Canton, president of theWestern Union Telexniph and Cablecompany, pnrtly hfemwe the meRaagethey sent to his office wns on a Postalentile hlnnk. Mr. ('Briton's secretarywan quite certnln that he would notune a I'ostnl wire to send a menageto him office. Mr. Carlton was said tnh« somewhat vexed that even • awlnill or fihoulri send a m tissue to his offlee by Pnatnl wire.

TIMELY THOUGHTS

I.lttle strokes fell treat oaks.

A wooden lea Is better than no leg./ _

Truth Is hard and sometimes hurts.

Religion Is not an end, bat a means.

A Jest driven too far brings borne

hate.

Great virtues do not eicuse smallvices.

A nod from a lord Is a breakfastfor a fool

Better have a dog jpnr friend thanyour enemy,.

Re that fears leaves must Vmt goInto the woods.

MARKET ftEADYEASTER BUSINESS

The staff n t . the Sunnydale mar-ket, Perth Ambov, has been busy allweek prPparinK for the heavy Easterbusiness which will tA* the store tocapacity today and tomorrow.

M«»aiter !•«<'>« Rudermffn hasmany specials in the dairy »ndI gro-cery department while Jame* Brbpnym a n n e r of the v"«i t nVpartinent,will have a larjfp number of moneynailing items for hi.i customers.

Take Stamlcn, of the vegetable-de-partment is showirig some of t h smost beautiful Easter flowers to befound in this section which he is of-fering for ftftle at ridiculously lowprices.

I t the "breeders' bill a benefit tothe "one-gallus" hunter?

It will increase the general pm©supply and thus give him better hunt-ing. It will provide « practical gatnesource for the "one-gallus" hunfert<> get together with a group ofothers, including the farmers and ata small initial cost per capita, pro-duce a game crop or increase an ex-isting irame crop by propagation orgeneral game management and thusget better shooting for them in addi-tion to profit by the sale of shootingprivileges to others.

Such a plan is new in New JerseyAlthough the cunsemulve little' and its novelty should add to its at-

rnisa might not go so far as Mnrlene \ tractiven«ss. ' In other states it nasDietrich In masculine fashion, all of proved Jts "the smart children's ensembles forspring are In the strictly tailored jV™,1,1 '^hTc"n"are~more alluring to the

1 »!, ; a n d lovers of wild lifebreeding and raising ot

are simple and smartly tailored, snys game. . .Carolyn T. Kadnor-Lewls In Ohll<l What true sportsman would denyLife Magazine. The jumper dress as such an qppshown Is a woolen for early spring m*htdto«reLater cotton or linen can be worn. I11 • wny woum

Loo» Miy W« SUepThe happiest hours of a man's life

are spent In sle.ep.-Clnrence Dnrrow.

but "something on theinij ti

sportsman and lovers of wildboth one-piece and two piece dresses l t n a n the

pgmode: Gulmpes, Jumpers, shirtwaists, 1

The youngest edition of a ""suit" alsopictured ubove, consists of a sleeveless dress with Inverted plnlt backand front, In a plain or print cotton. Iand coat with drop shoulders In a |pnntei woolen. ~ I

India Still Growing ( ..Indlii's iiiipulntlon ha* Increased | pheasants and

more thun 10 per cent In n decade. ; ( ) v c r

- „ —- legislation which extendssuch an opportunity?,

Here is another question that ispertinent. Just how (1MS Senate Bill124 provide an opportunity for aclub or a'small group of gunners in

farmers will welcome the opportunityto earn some extra money by raisingthe birdi and supplying the shootinggrounds without interference withthe regular production of their crops iand the sportsmen will have an op-

ortunity to hunt where they will beelcome, where they will not findunnei-s so thick that it would be

.angerous to go into the fields, wherehey will not have to tramp all day) get. ii shot or two and where theyan j;3 un a Saturday or some other•fT-day with the assurance that somether fellows who can hunt any day.. .lie week have not beat them to itnd mopped up or scared away allhe «am€'. They will also 'be assuredf good shooting all through the sea-on "instead o£ the first two or threelays only.

And yet there are those who can-iot see the benefits of (this jilan, oro they say. If anyone tells you thathe breeders' bill won't benefit theone-gallus" hunter, find out whatis reasoas are, if any. If they seemlausible or leave you in a quandaryn any point, <Jrop me a line care ofhe CARTERET PRESS and ask any.uestions you may nave in mind. I,m on the job to give informationnd I am on the job to give the "one-;allus" huntef a square deal.

Houto Built in 1635 Stilt UinlA house built In lfi.'W by Thomas

Bird In still occupied byscendants.

QuickAction

M 0 8 T folk*, whm theydecide to have 1 piece ofprinting done want it at onceWe ire well equipped to givtprompt service on your work.

Furthermore, it wiD not tooklike 1 hurry up job, sjace ourability to handle rush workenables us to give it thesame careful attentkn thatit givtn less hurried work.

That's Us

is that by going to a few farmerswith adjacent farmlands'and arranging with them to breed and liberate

ants and provide guod shootinga season long enough to makearran^i'incnt worthwhile. The

iidelivery your 'store' newsHQMES like these".

IT i* in these home* that the vast majority of Carteret's"buying decision*" are made, whether the purchase, be000 directly concerning every member of the f&niily oran individual purchase by an individual member of thatfamily.

You as a merchant should therefore, be sure that your"store newt" is being placed in the hands of ALL of thesepotential buyer* BEFORE these family "buying decisions"have been reached . . . To do so economically

CONCENTRATE YOUR ADVERTISING IN THE

Carteret Press

CABLE RACKET ISREAPING PROFITS

FROM TRAVELERS

Netted Million Dollars in 1932;Starts 1933 With Big

Prospects.

New York.-The , "cable racket" Isone or the relatively few enterpriseswhich ended a successful year andstarted out «trong Into 1SKS, accord-.Ing to figures which police made pub-lic.

It Is a swindle worked by cable 115-on the secretary or business associateof n business or proresslfnal man travellng abroad.Flnanclers, attorneys andheads of great corporations have beenpicked as victims and ninny of themhave been fleeced. Complaints receivedat police heaiUiuarters here Indicatethnt the swindle yielded' at leastJ 1,000,000 ID 11KS2 uud reports fromPhiladelphia, 1'hlcngo and other citiesshow that It la nourishing there also.

Sailing Huts are watched for the de-parture of wealthy uieu and society[>ug«H for their Itineraries abroad. Inilue course the secretary of the traveltug mini of affairs receives a charac-teristically curt cuble message directIn); the puyinenl of a certain sum to 1messenger who Is to deliver "a valuable purchase."

Learn Tourist's Tasta.II the- traveler» fancy Is known to

run to rugs, it is Indicated that ruguare to be delly-ored for the money paidHomtiliiiea~lhe parcel Is supposed tocontain Jewels, sometimes rare honk aAIIIIOKI nlwaya there is the covert sug(,'i'stlon thill extraordinary means huvebeen resorted to for delivery In orderto avoid customs duties. Frequentlythe suggestion Is that the package tobe delivered contains liquor.

Never, however, dues the packagecontain anything ot any value. It uiu>contain rugs, but they are of thecheapest variety. It umy cuntulo bitof glass, posing us diamonds. In se,vera! Insluncef the packages have contalned beverages, but the beverage always was ginger ale or something obtaiualile with equal ease.

The inobt recently received com-plaint In Unit of Oeurge S. Wheat, vicepresident of the United Aircraft andTransport Company, Inc., aud vicepresident of the Aeronautical Chamberof Commerce. Mr. Wheat sailed forUlirope with bis family recently.

Didn't Work This Tim*.Ireiin llerriMtadL his secretary, re-

ceived directions, purporting to comefrom her employer, directing her topay 12,400 tv 1 inmi who was toliver a parcel. MUu Hermstadt con-•ulted D. d UKUM. «b assistant In Mr.Wheat's office. 8he thought Uiert 1something odd about the meHag* andwas convinced that nuch a surrepti-tious purchase was quite foreign to Ur.Wheat's character. Mr. Gauss agreedwith tier and • mesuge wag tent toMr. Wbeat unking conirmatlon of bitrequest His response convinced UlmUerrusUiilt and Mr. Qttuu that tfeejr•uiplclons were JusttQed iad til*

The sign spelled "A. Poke'sStore"; a spi ler read, and thenhe sa,id, "Homeseekine daysare o'er." His silken web hespun across the door, andnevermore was roused by anyorle. "Why should 1 advertue?Gosh! I've been, here nightwenty year with this tame tineof tie*I If folks come downthis way, they all can see that

here I be." Thus MerchantPoke would say. But on an-other street, a dealer true ad-vises ypu of wares and pricesmeet. The shoppers strain hisdoors; and with their scads heruns more ads, and builds uptwo more floors! Then to thistale give heed—and if you'dnurse a well-lined purse, justemulate Hi Speed. For in thisvery space he tells folks all,both short and tall, of bar-'gains in his place.

Carteret Press

M$

_« * • ' • •

Business StationeryEvery bueineu man should have letterheadsend envelopes printed especially for him.And it if a matter that he should noteconomize on by buying the cheapest hecan get Good stationery pays big divi-dends. Let us shov jfou samples.

CARTERET PRESS

Page 5: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

CARXlERET PRESS

BaseballFRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1933 PAGE FTVfc

At Carteret High Schoolf OAI Fellows Widen State Pin | OLD FAMILIAR FACES

Ibop Leqdjly Winning TwoIncrokse.Lead In New Jersey State League To Two Full Game*

Over Clinton By Defeating Marion In Two Games WhileClinton Loses Two To Pa»saic — Second Game Lost By

Only Fifteen Pins.

The Carteret Odd Fellows increased their lead in thestate bowling league to two full gamea over Clinton whenth«y wen two from the Marion pinners of Irvington Wednes-day night at the lutter's lanes. Clinton, bowling at Patsaaic,lost two out of'three to Passaic. With only two more matchesremaining, the Carteret team needs only to win fdur of theremaining six games to clinch honors in the state loop.

The first two games w«re partic- The scores:olarljr dose, the Carteret ^airi win- Carteret (2)•Ing the opener by fifteen pins, 898 Chodosh 180to ml, and losing: the second by Richardson .196the same margin, fifteen pins, 87G Donnelly 146to 881. The* locals, however, had Sloan , 182an easy time in the final, winninn McLeod 192this game bq close to a hundred-pins, ,S13to'719. . | 89ft 881 813

Despite the fact that the Carteret Marion (1)players failed to record a single Schmidt 226two-hundred score, the team as a Udvarley 160

SMOKY JOE - - By Gus Uhlmann

171161191167181

153154167158-81

the team as awhole rollW consistently. As usual, Dombrowski 131Oriny MoLeod stood out over his Burton 192team mateA with scores of 192, 181 Brunner 172and 181, (riving him an average of, • • .185 far three games.

Next Wednesday the locals willmeet Myramid of T.yndhnrst at theSlovak alley*.

190149171188177

183147106132149

881 876 T19

Trojans CompileBrilliant Record

Team Coached By HermanHorn Wim Twenty-SevenGame* ancfrLoses Only Three— Riley Captures ScoringHonor*.

The Trojan basketball teamcoached by Herman Horn, recently

Carteret High OpensAt Metuchen May 2

Twelve Game Schedule An-* nounced* By Coach Frank

' McCarthy — HilUide AddedThis Year.

v ——Carteret High School's baseball y , y

team will open a twelve game sched- closed a brilliant season with twenty-& & £ K f * wt atrnt-d j - n victories and only three dethis weak by Coach Frank McCar- feats. Much of the success of thethy. Except for one open date, the team is due Herman Horn whos<schedule is complete. The closing careful tutelage and persistent efgame .will be played June 9 with f o r t s m guiding the team has reWbodbrldge. The first four games 3Ujted in its splendifl record.•re tway, the next four home, two T w o o{ t h e Trojan defeats weremore away, and . the final two at administered bff largitr and morehome. . ... . ' experienced teams. Their third a

Home-and home series will be t n e n a n d a o f t n e p e r th Amboy Junplayed with Metuchen, New Bruns- i o r ukes w a 3 byan'18 to 17 scoreWick, Keyport, Woodbridge and i n a return game, however, the TroPerth Ambay. while Bingle games j a n a r outed the Ukes by a 41 to 22will be played with South River and 8 C o r e to avenge their one-point setHillside. • , " . back.

The only team that was dropped '•Riley captured individual scorinfrom last year's schedule was Irving- honors with 182 points, the reaulton. HilUide was added instead. - • • • - • -

The official schedule follows:May 2 Metuchen, away.May 5Maty gMay 12May 16May 17May 2aMay 28May 31June 2June 5June 7June 9

Open.New Brunswick, away.Keyport, away.Woodb'^sje, away.Perth Amboy, home.Keyport, home.Hillside, home.Metuchen, home.Perth Amboy, away.South River, away.New Brunswick, home.Woodbridge,- home.

of eighty-one field goals and twentfouls. Kubicka and Enot followei

R * RlS SPEEP -Sffcoqc OUT a GiM>r

W«E*> HE:

MOKY JOE-

p THE BASeBAU-OF TAMEr WHEAi

A

Forty Candidates Report, For The^ First Practice

Only Fiv» Regulars From U»t Year's Squad Back This Season—Many Rookie* Show Pramiae — Battery Work* Out—Opening Game At Metuchen May 2. v

Close to forty player* reported to Coach Frank McCarthyfor the first workout of the year at Carteret High Mondayafternoon. Of this number only five are regulars from lastyear*" Varsity'squad. They are Chap Thatcher and MikeMarkowitz, outfielders; Dinney Comba and Rudy Galvanek,inflelders, and Stanley Koeel, pitcher. It is around this group,that Coach McCafthy hopes to build his 1933 team.

However, with more than thirtynewcomer*, many of whom haveshown promise, (ouch McCarthy ispleased with the outlook {or thecoming campaign. "I believe," Mc-Carthy said, "thin year's team willbe better than last yetir.H."

Lust year through graduation Mc-Carthy lost such stars a» Al (King)Stutxkf, Mike Pull, .J*Jhr\ Hifhj'y,Pct<> Baksa, John Sehi-in, whotu* non-

j national hitting was a fonturr of thecampaign, »n<l last but not leant.Friupr IWch, whonc tragic untimc-

a great IOM to

Stars Take Lead InMatch With Y. M. C. A.

221 17

2431

The Stars took a 100-pin lead over 21the Y. M. C. A. pinners of Perth i»Amboy in the first of their home J a

and home series -played Tuesdaynight at the Recreation alleys inPerth Amboy. The Stars totalled2728, while the Y. M. C. A. teamtotalled 2628. The Stars hit sc<*reBof 900, 927, 901. The return matchwill be played some time next week.

The scores:SUr . (2728)

FurUn - 176 166Masculin 182 177HedveU 191 190Cbamra 178 201McLeod , " 8 193

with 162 and 146 points respectively. TheTrojans rolled up their big-gest score of the season against theRahway Lions when they made fifty-five points. As a team the, Trojansscored 'JOti Joints against 659 furtheir opponents.

The Trojans will again reorganizenext fall under Herman Horn. Theyexpect to acquire several new play-era.

The team record follows:Gamei Won

Trojans Opponent*

13

4032302938

I "166 33179 3 0

200187169

28

900 927Y. M. C. A. (2«28)

162 215167 173146 168

Henderson 21J 172

901 4 1El

Stark ..Stopin

Beniak 180

164 «180 «168 ,36174167 853

867 908 853 142217

906Udzielalu Lose Two~To Woodbridge Pinaer»

Chalk up two more games for the RileyWk innect* BowUintf a t Kubic

p yPWkway pinnect* BowUintf at Kubicka 30Woodbridge, the Udiielaka lost two Enpt 22Uor« fame* to the township pinners Spewak \iTuesday nifht. The BCBMS were .841to 825, and 849 to 816.

The scores:UcUielak* (0)

169

u%* .:::::::::::::::..:....• m

Hebrew Alliance 211.Rahway A. C.St. Joseph's SchoolCarteret AcesSt. Joseph's AlumniUke & C. ReservesSt. Joseph's SchoolHebrew AllianceSt. Joseph's Alumni 10Carteret Aces 16Y. M. C. A.. Grammars 15St. Joseph's Juniors 20Campbell A. C.. 21Boy Scouts Troop 8Z 18P. A. Rockets . 17Rahway Lions 13Boy Scouts Troop 82 24Linden Arcadians 19Roselle lions ' 14Y. M. H. A. Jewels ISRahway Lions 20Roselle Lions 24Rahway Falcons 2©Universal A. C. 16Campbell A. C. 39P. A. Junior Ukes 22Universal A. C7 . 1 4

, 468Gamea Lott

Elizabeth Jelf Boys 39Hfahway Boys Club 34P. A. Junior Ukea * 18

559Individual Racordi

Ga. P.G. F. T t29 81 20 182

75 1270 6 14546 10 10241 4 ?

37 4 7833 3 8916 1 33

!) 4 2210 1 21

3 0 0

Red Devils Win15 Games, Lose 10

Compile Creditable RecordFor Season Recently Closed—Bunchy Grant High Scor-er With 168 Points.

The St. Joseph's basketball • teamclosed it* season with u creditablerecord of fifteen victories, t«n de-feats, and one tie game. Amongthe teams defeated Were the Men'sClub, of Perth Amboy; the SouthAm,boy Sacred Hearts, the KeyportA. A., Merles, Caret's All Stars,Fords Firemen, Linden Visitations,Elizabeth Boys Club, and the Cyana-mid five of Linden.

"Bunchy" Grant with 168 points161 was high scorer by a big margin.15 Bill Biesel was second with 973 points and Kichey Donovan ran a

10 close, third with 1)6.16 The outstanding feature of the

7 season was the eleven-garne home12 winning streak compiled by the team.

Wadiak 20Lukach : 29Dorn ......... 30Campbell 18

189 Watcher 23J.72 Green , 19149 Stankwitz 6128228

816

160150145170224

~«49

UdaitUlu Beater AtWoodbridge Alley*

— •

•winning the last game byptos, the Udueluk pinm

thMwelves from a three-gam*at the hand, of the Parkway

he first two game* by «»0flI to 796, and 1000 to 834.

? w i n t to the Udriatato

4 2 1 64 <J0(i

St. Joseph'set Won

Oppoo

Medwick Gets One OfFour In League Debut

Joieph Medwick, Carteret't lonerepresentative in the big ihow,made his bis; league debut thi*rear witb the St. Louii Cardinalsby getting one hit in tour tripsto the bat, ai the Red Birds drop-ped a 3-0 decision to the ChicagoCubs at Wricley Field, Chicago,Wednesday afttVnoan. Hit hitwas a single and was one of onlyfour hits allowed by Len War-neke, ace of the Cxbs' pitchingstaff. Dizzy Dean p'Wthed for St.Louis.

Track Team IsShowing Progress

Carteret High School Runner*Under John CzerniewiczAre Doing Well — ScheduleOf Meets Announced.

Udzielaks, With AnaBack, Beat Parkways

Mishka Returns To Lineup andTeam Win* Two Game* AtChrome Alleys.

Strengthened by the return ofMishka Arva who was a good bowlerin his day,, the- Udiielak pinners roll-ed better than usual and defeatedthe Parkway bowlers of Woodbridgein two games last Friday night atthe Chrome alleys.

Averaging an even. 900, the localswon the first and third games, hit-ting scores of 913 and 925. TheParkways rolled 909 to win the sec-ond.T Mishka averaged 192 and WalterRose 180. The scopes:

Ud*i«laks (2)I Avg.

Arva 201 182 192—192Dezo 174 178 170-T174Derzo 160 J46 218—175Rose 178 183 180—180Zysk . • .... 200 174 165—

Stars Win 3 Games,

Under the careful tutelage ofJohn Czerniewicz, the Cartereb HighSchool track team is coming- alongin fine style. Mr.' Czerniewicz is

, sending his charges'through dail.• workouts at the high school field inpreparation for itg opening tneiat

I l ' s n 'II* P o f t l l e season at Long Branch, Tues-Hll K n l l i a n i N r f t f M (lay. AP"' 21. It will be the Cen-l l U D l l l l l d l l l JMJICd tr/j J e r ; e y t r a c k a n d field m e e t .

Other scheduled meets in which

Parkways (1)Avg.

913 863 926—90Sraithefs 210 182 174—18Binger 161 158 164—16Gerck 180 159 206—18Je-llick 195 208 181—19Gross 156 204 161—17

ly ijenth has beenCoach McCarthy.

The outdoor prscticei were notheld because of bad weather thisweek but the battery worked out inthe gym two days.

Coach McCarthy iR VPry muchplpasiM w i $ his pitching Btaff whichis headed by Stanley Kosel and con-sists of Rudy Gnlvnnek, who sawsome hurling duty last year; GeorgeSloan, John Barbnrc7.uk, and JosephTYri'bt'cki, three rx'wcomerH who areshowing u|> well, II is th« first timu

a goixi many years (hat CoachcCarthy is us well fortified withtchers HS ho is this yeaKon.In the workouts thin week Kosel

howed good control and abi ( t vari-ety of hooks. Rudy (ialvanek look*irell, too, as did Jot1 Terebecki andJeorgo Sloan, both of whom arereshmen.

Although no one on the team hasPinched hia position as yet, Coach •HcCarthy indicated he will prabablv

use Dinney Comba at first and bothRudy Galvanek and Stanley Koselin the infield when they are not

itching1. Their hitting will bo a'alunble asset to the team.

As far as the oqtfield is concerned,he two regulars back from last yearire Chap Thatcher and Mike Mark,-iwitz. Both are fine fielders butihow weakness at the bat.

In the catching department, a'oungster who stands out with hislitting is Botanek. Others who areiut for the job include Dixon, a new-:omer, and Jacky WicgeSinaki, whoaw service last year.

Suits, were distributed on Tuesdayafternoon. Those * who receivedhem were Chap Thatcher, Mike

Markowitz, Dinney Comba, RuryGalvanok, Stanley Kosel, • Barbar-czuk, Bohanek, Dixon, Wiefrelinski,Sloan, T#rebec*i, Jimmy O'Donnelly,Red G^oderstad, Such, McCann, Sos-nowski, Medvetz, Kilyik, Bryer, Du-manski, Lukas and Martinmk.

Charles Bryer and Dudley Kahnare managers. ,

892 909 886—89

. _ mt,8 Men's Club 27

44 Chancellors 1530 Lutherans 1!)31 Sacred Hearts • 3039 Keyport A. A. 2927 Mercks 22+1 Carey's AH Stars 2434 Victrix .3138 M Fords Firemen 1824 ~ United Presbyterians 2424 Imperials* 2321 Visitations 1933 Boys Club 2635 Cyanamid . 1323 Elizabeth All Stars 15

G u m Lwt21 Boys Club 2525 St. Stephen's 3021 Fords Firemen 3825 Pioneer Panthers 4114 Keyport C. JD. 2529 Pioneer A. C. 3122 - St. Stephen's 2640 Lyceums - 4327 Rahway Ramblers 30

Individual Record*G. F. T.

Grant 47 74 168Biesel 36 25 97Donovan 39 18 96Medwick* „ 21 21 63lamont _ .- 17 27 61Hamulak 24 13 61Szelag 17 14 48Malaszewski 17 5 39Sabo 12 4 28Rsthjen 10 2 22D'zurilk - 8 3 19Benzing ...- t 4 4 12Zoller , 4 0 8

Roll 1043, 1069 and 1045 ForSensational Average of 1052—McLeyd Averages 245.

Hitting, tremendous scores of1043, 1069 and 10-l.r>, for an aver-age of 1052, the Stars completelyrouted the Metuchen Kiru Compjfnypinners at the Slovak alleys Sundayafternoon. The Stars were neverbetter as they recorded no leas thanten double century marks.

Individual honors go to Ormy Mc-Leod whose brilliant bowling was,a feature of the game. He hit 222 ,in the first game and followed it Iup with scores of 258 and 256 W |a splendid average of 246 for thematch. ' I

Masculin with scores of 222 and233 averaged well over the 200 mark'as did Gus Medvetz. , (

The scores:Sttfj (3)

Furian 202 195 193Medvet* ....'. 221 180 2181Chomicki 176 203 2101Masculin 222 233 1681McLeod 222 258 266 1

~1043~1069 1045 iHcUchen Fire Company (O) I

Danford _.._ 202 192 184

the Carteret squad will compete arethe South River and Metuchen meetat South River, May 3; the. Middle-

sex County meet at Perth Ambo.May 13; Roselle. Park meet at Warinanco Park, Elizabeth, May 17, an.the Central Jersey meet at AsburyPark, May 27. The team will com-pete in the 100 yard dash, the 220,the 440, and the 880.

Those out for the track team areConnolly, Bryer, Zanet, Kovacg,Haras, Fuchs, Demeter, Breske,Owens, Se^iowskim, Bradley, TFlers-herger, Tomczuk, Thorn, Hegediis,Fun Yew, Gaudet, Horvath, Michics,Van Deventer, Sorok, Coughlin,Schroeder and Toth.

Dardanetla Boy* DanceApril 2& At Dalton'*

The second^ annual dance, givenby the Dardanella Boya, will be heldat Clalton's Auditorium fn Cookeavenue, Saturday evening, April 29.The dance music will be. furnishedby Lind Brothers' Cliffwood Orches-tra. Admission will be forty cents.Dancing will start at 0 o'clock andcontinue untilthe morning.

the early hours of

Switierlancl for PesceSwitzerland tins probably had ft

longer unlntorrupted term of pencethan liny other country In the world.

Mackwicki 154Dudack 202Bersley 155Yemett 193

156203190157

17'173180164

906 897 878

St. Joseph's Close SuccessfulSeason HM 23 To IS Victory

London's Great FireThe great fire of London started tn *

wooden home on Pudding lane on Sep-tember 2. 1660.

Tel.fram. SHU PopvUrIn normal timed, about 200,000,000

telegrams are sent annually bj Amer>cans.

Grant, g

itbt s acorei:Ud>UUki (t)

two hundred

173 146160 14816» -174148 182m 186

1U1199208S08-00

8M 966

Defeat Elisabeth All Star* In Final Game—Victory b Elew*th Straight At Horn* — Bunchy Grant OirfaUnding SUrWith Thirteen Points — GiHt Team Lwea PnetimmaryGame, 29 to 5.

The St. Joseph's Red Devils closed a highly successful,sea»on at the ttitfh school court Monday night when they de-jfeated the Elizabeth All Stars for their eleventh straight home|triumph. The score was 23 to 16, The Red Devils haven'tlost a home game in over two months.

^SSS>VS 4£ tE Bfc HMMKfSrtall anSesV* the court, were noth- Joaeph'n girl* team, pitted agaiatfing less thflv apectacukr. Fast «B ^ M M k j^inbow girU quintet idlWhtnlng on the court, he baggedfour field jroiOs ««d nve fouls lora grant total, of thirtewi point*.

Close guarding featured the firstquarter which ended 2 to 1 m a tJoMPh's furor. In the second pttnod,however, the Red Devils broke looseand rolled up a 10 to 6 margin »tthe b*U.

The locals enjoyed their greatentwcm in the third »«£od-during

8 7Eli»hott> AJ1 SUr. (IS)

G. F.Bhke, t - 1 0Fyne, f 0 0Cron, c -,..- T. 2 8Strubel, % J. :- 1 2Boyle, jr 1 0UreyiU, < 0 0

Hall Mark EST'D

For Easter-;An Ultra SmartDisplay of Mpn's

Suits$15

1896 of Quality

\

$35

13

23

T.2 '07420

6 5 15

Perth Amboy, wag Boundlyby » 29 to 6 wore. Mb* Pucci, ata*female all-round uMete from PerthAtoboy, »nd one «f the bes t j ewjkbowlen in the world, played withPerth Amboy-

The scoresiSt. J (M)

O.

I1

L

JOMph'8B Stars iBaferee; Conba.

.Girl*' CaJM8k J«M»a't CitU

6 9—16

"'" Thi»" it to be a season of pattern effect!—checks, overplaid* and stripes. Even theman who associates sedate unobttrusiveeffects with Easter drefsiness will findthese suits adaptable because refinementhas been well controlled by adept designersof smart clothing.

We have thousands of suits from whichto make a selection—four large floorscrowded with the choicest merchandise—aUrge store with the atmosphere of refine-ment and men's clothing marked at a priceexceedingly popular.

Men's Top, Coats

$12.50 to $25Tot C««tf

S " • W

5 K l Ih.to. «r» to UH tart

One Broad St, FJizab«UiQmrnm of lUaatotk AVWM

Page 6: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

STX FRIDAY, ArRIL 14,

CARTERBT PRESS

FREEsample can

for youD U R I N G T H E BPS F R E ED E M O N S T R A T I O N O F

BPSPflINT • VARNISHENAMEL • STAIN

TRY GLOSFASTTHE NEW DECORATIVE ENAMEL

. . . THAT DRIES HARD IN 4 HOURS

flT OUR STOREBEGINNING APRIL 19

KITCHEN UTILITIESamJPAINT CO.

4 Green StreetWOODBRIDGE, N. J.

J.w.lrj Fails Nol N.wModern Jewelry fnilH. unrh ail th«

"do* collar11 nnri (tie wcnrlnc of manybracelet*, hnte Iwn found to datiilxifk more thnn l.nnn year* In NorthAmerlni to tho Indlnnw

M«aam«nl «n Old-Tim»rTrie <ll»coTfry or nn Important mng-

illlhlc monument, bcHpvod to b« th»Pruldlen! dim Temple, h»s t*«i r«-pflrt«<1 from flrllljr, Fnince. It <tat«sbuck to 10,000 V. 0.

YOU'LL HAVE TO HURRY\ IF YOU WANT TO

VISIT

ELIZABETH'S $12,000Model Home

ins n«iispii>it " I " K»*'1

l « II la III*

Main Award of theOwn Your Home Show

Elizabeth ArmoryApril 24th to 29th

Thm olll lino be Mtl> In Mali ordtrm r d i Hid H V n lwbk lUla.

Tiek.L 38c — book 12 • |3.B0

"Double** for Her D*d

Mini .IfHin Unkor, riiiiiRhtw of Heglnnld (Snowy) Unkcr, one of ttip mostfamous nthlptpj thnt fvrr lived. Herfather, nn AuMrnllnn, died In theWorld wflr, hut hl» memory Is alwayscarried on beonuse of the fact HintHIM Jonn Is the Image »f her father.

The Quality of the Food you serve is »o very important, that thouRandsof,Wine Homekee.pe.rH buy exclusively at their Nearby ASCO

Stores, for experience has taught thorn that it paysto ,Shop and Save the "American" Way.

Gold Seal Finest

Fresh Eggs cartonof

twelve 25-Selected I"1

Fresh t-ggSdoz 17

10c B a c o n , A S C O N Wale 2v2ibPkg8 15cPancake or Buckwheat Flour, ASCO PkK 5C

J e l l y Eggs, D ljd > lb 9c : 3 »» 25cChocolate Easter E g g s 'Cocoanut Eggs,('hocolate Covered

E ^ ^ L / V e S ''''L'k-t'lik'k or Magic Wand

Mackerel Filletsf O f l f l S f l (-iorton's reiidy-to-fry

18c P i n e a p p l e , A S C 0 or ™ M™te

P i c k l e s , D i i i o r s°u r

P r e s e r v e s , AscoPure ". :

l O m a t O e S Standard Quality

S u i ^ a r C o r n ASC0 crushed °r G°iden Ban

T o m a t o e s , ASCO Fun p *

Salmon, **t p^Horn-de-Lite Mayonnaise

3

32

ib.

.......

2 #2

3pt

for

lb

Pk«

for

cans

can

jar

can

can

cans

cans

; jtr

10c15c10c10c23c15c25c15c5c

iOc\ VI4*

25c19c

Standard Quality

ASCO Pure Grape Juice 2 pt bota 23c

_»£ Pale Dry Ginger Ale(£«)QtM12c

Calif. Seedless Raisins 2 pkga 15c

Fruited

Loaf Cake each 23C

ASCO Peaches halves - sliced, can 14cASCO Bartlett Pears big can 19cASCO Stuffed Olive* 11-oz bot 25c

Cocoanut Marehmallow

Layer Cake " * •

ASCO Quality CoffeeVictor Blend CoffeeAcme Brand Coffee

a- 21c">19ctin 2 5 c

Finest Fresh Fruits jand VegetablesCalifornia

PEASlb. 12%c

ORANGES

LuacMnuBANANASDozen 23c

SnowUUCAUUFLOWERl

H c d 18c

Fancy £r«enASPARAGUS

Bunch

Extra LargeFlorid,

ORANGESDozen 35c

Fancy AJf«rUGRAPES

lb. ISc

Crisp IcafaargLETTUCE

2 Heada 25c

FreahCutCARROTSBunch 5c

Fancy RepackTOMATOES

lb. 15c

grattfjrw* to Shftp mad Sav* UM "AmeHcan" Way.

RETURNS TO CELLHE FLED IN 1917,

SEEKING PARDON

Woman Appear* From Pa*t t«Wreak Vengeance on Man

Now Wealthy.

Onron City Cilonn. Rmecmnn, thir-ty-three, Is Imek In the state prisonkere, again rotirlct tOH47 nh ha M lwhen nearly fifteen y*>nra OK" he fledaftfT serving inly n few innnlhs ofhlH thre<> yenrs for unto theft.

I>iirlne thone fifteen years, tinrler thennme of Hurry Stanley, he hecnme •

i siKveiwful mualr publisher In Cleve-land, married Into n well tn do rnmlly,bnllt * KIS.OOO home and hernme thefather of a hnliy girl now three tnonthsold.

Threnlened with exposure, hy th*wornnn with whom he wns living whenhe wn« sent to prtiinn nnd who. h«wiyn, hud heen Wwdlnft him of moneyfor yenm Rlnre she found him flffnln,Rmeeman rnmc hnck to Colorado th«other dHy to null for B pardon In viewof hlii present pood fltnnftlntf.

flov. Edwin (!. Johnson refused lind«lso dpollned to grunt him a plnetr-day pnrnle for the piirpoK* of puttingMs Cleveland nffnlrii In order, bnt saidthut If Smeemnn returnwl to prisonand mndn application for pardon IBMil lar order h« would give It eonslil-tratlon.

Back In Prison.

Bo Shieeman, In a shiny s*dan drlT-M by his business partner, Oeorge A.Bronson, who now Is revealed i» hlafoil brother, drove up to the prison toreoelv« the treatment accorded any"fish" (new convict), his old nnmb«and a convict nnlform bearing thewhite stripe which shows he la a non-trosty.

Becaase SmcemRn returned at hla»wn expense and paid a reward of$B0 for hla capture,, he, will be sparedthe naual trentment for returned ea-«pe<1 prisoners—ntnety dnys on therockplle with a hnll and rlmln weldedabout the ankle and head half-shaven.

Bronson was groetMl cordially byZeno B. Spurgeon, veteran gunrd,Aa Convict No, 10347 Ilronson serveda term for auto tlieft from October,181T, until July, 1010.

Smeetnan, nn a hoy of so veil, lostBin father and wa» denerted by hisstepmother In Grand Hnplds, Mich.There followed years of wandering. Inall kinds of comiinny. In St. I/nitshe became ennmoiiral of a woman fif-teen years his senior, with whom helived as mnn ami wife.

With tho woman, known ns buluKelly, Smeomnn Cfuno to IH'nver In1917 and went Into tha automobilebusiness. Some of the enrs he han-dled were "hot." ami the Inw pinnedon him and Rronson the giilll of Bteal-lng an automobllo btlonslng to a dep-uty United States district attorney.

Eludes Guard.

Smeeman and BroriBon were con-Ttcted and sentenced w from three toDT« years In the state penitentiary.Smaemao was aHglgned lo a convictgnus building n hlgtiwuy up ltoulderCiinon, went of Boulder. One day hewent into Boulder, accompanied by aguard, to get n haircut. Ue slippedout a hack door of the barber shopand Hed.

Itronson served out his term In thepenlteiniiiry. Later tlie brothers werereunited in Flint, Mich., and formedtho buslines partnership which laterled to success in Cleveland as the flrmof Stanley SL Ilronson. A year a«oKmeemiiH married Marraret Stuti,daughter of lloriniin Stutl, operator ofa chain of meat markets. She hadb««n educated In nn exclusive girls'fichitol at Heidelberg, Germany.

X mtmlur of tho Mentor Yachtingcolony mid tho Cleveland Chamber ofCommerce, Stimlcy moved in the bestCleveland social circles. Ills flrm wasthe. laryiHt den' r In guitars in theworld and Hixinsorcd a radio programon n nallnnal hookup.

Then ci.me Lulu. How she hadfound him Smeemuii did not know.But there slio was. demanding her bitfor koeplns silence. Smeeman paidher Binull sinus. Then Bhe demanded$1,IHX>. He refused. Lulu uotlfledWarden liny Best of the Coloradopenitentiary.

Nurse Kills Patienton Smoothing Pillows

Sortn, Bulgaria.—Catherine Constan-tliius, u nurse In a Sotlu hospital,straightened the covers and arrangedthu pillows on the bed of Christls Tra-Jonov, a imtlem under her care. When'i'rajonov had been made comfortable,the nurs* drew a revolver and shothim dend.

Tho shouting waa another incidentIn tha Bulgarian potlticH) feud. Tra-]onov wa» t ie asgasHln Of SlmeoneEvtlmov, editor of tins newsimper Ma-cedonia. He was wounded and takento a boaplhil.

TIM. nurse wild she waa given a re-volver sud told to kill her patient KBpunishment for the murder of Evtliuuv.

Conscience Fund Gets25c by Death of Rabbit

HutcJiinsou, Kan—"I waut to leadan huueut life slnca 1 have been con-verted," said a letter received by O. O.WMllamu, Ueno county clerk.

lu the euveloiw was a quarter, andtho writer, Abe Tavee, eiplalned thathe had received tha money for bountyon jack-rubbU ears Heveral years ago.

11B sulil lu tha letter that tha rub.bltu hud been killed In Uci'herson Instead of Ituuo comity. The law de-mand* tha bounty clnlniB be luiiila Inthe couuly lu which tn« aulaiaht ar«killed.

Beauty LalksBy MARJORIE DUNCAN

Famous Reavty Expert .

Every Uem Dcsirves Attention

B lIIXiBTS nrc hecoiuliiR morn anilmore popular hiraiisn their effl-

Clency nnd viiln« hns ln>en broughthome—repentedly. Few home, build-ers, for Instance, can hn accused »fpnttlnB ail their PRRH In one basket—financially upeaklng. "TIs nhfer follyto upend all of WIP'R Having on a rug,for Inmnnce, when thn windows needrepairing and the chnlrs need recovw-ing. And so on.

Yet a greater group than we limnglnesflll continue to concfnirnte on onephnse of the bpnnty ensemble. Some-Imen It l» the best feature thnt rp-

celvei special attention (»nd womenr» wise to wish to heighten their

Vtilefest charm.') More orten, ofcourse, attention Is focused on the feaure ng needs It And you can't bl»nvi womRn for thnt. eltiier.

But the wisest plan *nd the on«that makes for the utmost in bean-ty is the "budgeting for beauty"system.I nave known women-to spe,nd s,

half hour on. the crowning glory to th»exclusion of all oth«r beauty rites.And while their hair was lowly andustrous, they did not—as yon haverohnbly guessed—present a completeIcture of careful grooming. The fact

R that too much concentration on one;>art of [he picture mnrks a very nhnrp•ontrast and emph«»l7,es the unlovell-less of the uncarwl for portions.

If yon have heard this preachment>efore, It hears repeating for It la nleauly ainxlm. Budget your beautyImp, llnve you two houra to spend?

Tlien he sure to devote enough time0 brushing your hair, massaging your

Rcalp, giving your skin the treatmentt needs,, and your figure Its dn« share

of exercise. <!et out tn the open— re-member that the renlth rules are all1 very Important part of the beautyegim*. In treating the iklD think ofhe fnce, neck, shoulders, arms and

hands us one unit. Don't neglect the'ace for the hands, th» handa for th«hair nnd so on. An unbalanced pic-ture 1s tln> result. Bo fair to every[iliase of beauty and to every Itemthnt goes to make up the wholfl, har-monious tteauty ensemble.To be sure you will have to d«vot« nwr*

time to that part of the picture whichs not perfect than to tlie mpre satis-

factory portions of your ensemble.But do give a little time to each Item.You can work out your own budget

ccoriliiiK r o your own needs. Or oncertain days you may wiBh to concen-rate on your hnir—or your skin. Tha

hlg point In this sermon Is do notneglect any phase of beauty. Studyyour own needs, then set about en-hancing your loveliness and preserviniiwhatever gifts nature has endowedyou with.

(©. n i l . Bell Bindlemti)—WNB tarvtclk

A CUutttw* A.dv. WH1 I* _

I. MANN & SONOPTOMETRISTS

HOURSOuily 10 to 12, 3 to 5 «pd 7 to 8

W d l l 10 tu 12 only

89 Smith Straot Tel. 4-202TPERTH AMBOY, N. i.

Rstdy to Heave AnchorA captain's clearance ptu>ors show

that his ship ha/i been "rleiireil" »t thecustoms house. This means'that hehas conformed to all the customs andother port regulations, that he haspaid his duties and fees, and has ob-tained iiertnisslon to leave the |>ort.

BotanUt Endi Tour 'A London girl has completed a ili-

tnonths' tour of the Peruvian AndesIn search of plants, during which sheworked at times at a heicht of 17,000feet.

Rug-i . Carpets • Draper!eiSilverware * • •

MAURICE 0 . GAREYInterior DecoratorFURNITURE

55 BROAD STREET,ELIZABETH, N. J-

EUzabeth 2-0813 — 2nd Floor

MEATS&POULTRY

I

c i f h Effect ThurtJisy, FriJty & SrturtUy

FAMOUS "DE LUXE BRAND"

TURKEYS

Cream of Northwestern Flocks!

VEAL * 16.CHOPS *

ARMOUR'S STARor SWIFT'S PREMIUM

HAMSIb.

WHOLE or HALF

RUMPS ofMILK-FED VEAL, 17-C A L F ' S

ft

n

Star Sliced

LIVER fc 39c Bacon 10c

F A N C Y M I L K - F E D R•ROASTING-CHICKENS

ANYSIZE 23 PER

100 MAIN STREET, WOODBRIDGE572 ROOSEVELT AVE., CARTERET

VOUR fAOMEY BUYSMOf^E ATA WAGNER.

-HERE-On DRAUGHT and BOTTLED

"OLD HEIDELBERG SPECIAL"UNION CITY BREWING COMPANY

» «il«iiMM^il^iM^iiiiiiiiiiiii^

TRAINER'STIP - TOP

LAGER BEERIN BOTTLES

TRAINER BREWING COMPANYPhiladelphia, P«.

Distributed By

r

GADEK & MAILLETTPERTH AMBOY, N. J.

175 Chauncey Stre«t

r '•'• ; v ^

T«L P. A. 4-4210 , 4231

\:h'

Page 7: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

O E J A N T S CLASSIFIED,TF-: S CENTS PER LINE

,rBn«iriH «di are payable inAd« will h« figured by

,-M,.l number of LINES the' , , ! , „ , irreipoeti™ «f the

im|,rr nf word.. lp ettim«th.g,„, of ad In »dT»nce allowaverage word» lo the line.

^Minimum ad accepted FIVE

N*o ad accepted for leu than

pa'" adi cancelled before themher of iniertiont Ariginally

d™,.d.-REOJND^1irb. m , d .,cept in eatet wheTe contracti„ , been lifned.

CLASSIFIED ADS ACCEPTED

10 A. M.fRIDAY MORNING for publica-

tion the •am* day.All adi restricted to their

.•roper «la»«lfication and thef ARTERET PRESS .tyle of type.p[\,t, pabliihen reserre the righti|o clatilfT. •<•'* o r r"Jee l " T »d-

Small Farms; in and,'Vround Woodbridffe Township. A.| De Young, Avenel, N. J.•" I 2-10 tf.

"MENU(OR RENT—Three-room apartment;, private bath; all improvements.|44 Main Btreet, Woodhridge, N. J.(V. I. 12-9tf.

LTTRACTIVE five-room apartment.AH improvements. Steam heat. 639

Uhway avenue, Woodbridge, N. J.«. i. 2 - n tf.

'OK RENT—Apartment; attractive-ly furnished, including two rooms,

jtchenette and bath. All modern im-provements. Near High School. Rent'easonable. 560 Maple avenue, Wood-bridge.

I. 8-10 tf.

|0R RENT — Five and six roomhouse*. All improvements. From

20 up. D» Younff, Avenel. Phonefoodbridge 8-1220-J.

I. 3-10 tf.

IIVE-ROOM HOUSE—all improve-ments. Inquire 76 New street,

tToodbridge, N. J.F. I. 3-8tf

EWAREN, 528 East avenue. Half[of double house on water-front,prage. Rent reasonable. W. T.

nes. Phone Woodbridge 8-0228.{. I. 4-7, 14, 21, 28.

|)R SALE—Five room house withith and all improvements in Row-

place. Telephone Woodbridge-1710.

(USE FOR SALE — 6 rooms andii; all improvements; garage;

eh screens and awnings. ApplyAbridge Independent, Box A.,dbridge, N. J.

yet!SHOULD READ THEWANT ADS —

Thry are intensely interestingior,-«irn new issue pnwenta aItem section of the wants ofcitizens . , . Somo want to buy— Some want to sell — an4-they find the most satisfactorymeeting place in the

Carteret PressWANT ADS

SAW FILING

i. r u n . HANSF.N AI,L KINDSof saw filing liy marninc. Rn-

"nlhinK or rhnniro t,f tepth. Gen-riil marhinixt. H(;win(( machinpai')i.'iiic(I. Rnzors sharpened, toolriniiinu, m-issDrs ground. 145 Fay-tti1 slrp<'t, Perth Amhoy.

IV. T. 7-2K.33*

SPEEDOMETERS ~ ~IAI/R SPEEDOMKTER SF.RVICE

H41 Madison, avenue, Perth Am-•>ny. I'hono 4-1728. Vacuom Tanks,

-1 Pumps, Wimlshipld Wipers re-nd. Also auto repairs.1. 7-28-3.1*

UPHOLSTERING

tluthW.Motto'..

1HARLES SERMAYAN—Upholster-ing and cabinet making; tnattreas-

es; chair caning; also carpet clean-ing. Special price for this week. 28Main St. Phone WoodCTJdjge 8-1217

OrafrtiDoea Not Curry Slingtr

TTic dragon fljr, or darning ne«<lle atIt Is commonly called, fortunately can-not live up to either nf the auperitltloniwhlrh hiiv<> been built up about It, m ; ia writer In the Washington Slur. It Insnp|His<><! hjr children to be nhle to sewup the rnrs or to stlnj. Tlie first be-lief I* nbminl nn the face of It, hntrnnnj nilnlln hoi I ore It ran sting. How-orer. us It tins no (ttlnuer, It cannottinrm human hoinpi In any way.

The dragon fly feeds on Insect* whichIt ratehps nn the fly and holds aecure-Ij with Its at rune tilting Jaws.

The dragon fly Inyn ltd ojgn on stillwater and the larrae live In the wa-ter, fenllng upon Insert* and tiny fish.When It arrlrea at maturity, the lar-r*e crawl* up on the bank, the shellbreaks open and the adult fly emerge*.

GET XETFOR

SPRING DRIVINGCAR WASHING and POUSHING

U»« Hi* But L*>tu*f*A young man alwayi tue* a choice

nprwNrion when «e »«k* * |tr! to b*-flMne hli wife.

Kind That Don't BoutYou can tell the people who have

always been poor. Thej don'l bragabout It.

Testing Jdb Seekers by Machine

BUSINESSDIRECTORY

TUXEDOS TO HIKENEW TUXEDOS TO HIRE WITH

shirt at a very small cost. Moesenberg, 279 Madison avenue, Perth

Amboy. Phone 44370.W. I. 5-12*

AMUSEMENTS

DANCEliven by "Two Pals". Benefit of St,

Frahcls Church, Metuchen, N. Jat Columbia Hall. Walnut place, Me-tuchen, April 28th. Music by Knightsof Melodies. Refreshments. 8 p. m,Admission S5c.

AUTO SUPPLIES

ROOMS FOR RENT|O VERY ATTIUCTIVK UED-

)0MS with private family, nearSchool, suitable for schixol

era. Will accept Baby Bondsaymtnt for rent. f>T>0 Maple

|ue, Woodbridge.

FTRADE FOR USED CARI TRADE two city lots in Fords

r good used car. Write, givingand make of car to Box CO,bridge Independent.8-10.

USED TIRES FOR ALL MAKECars. Also new and used replace

ment parts and accessories. 24 hourservice. Horup'n Auto Supplies, 1HHAmboy avenue, Perth Amboy. Phone4-0031.W. I. 7-7*

Change that old dirty thin Winter Oiland

Refill with Full-Bodied Oil

FIRST CLASS GREASING SERVICE

MUNICIPAL SERVICE STATIONRahway Ave. and Main St., WOODBRIDCE

Tel. Woodbridge 8-1280CARS CALLED FOR

LJfa tniuranca Im Fore*The total amount Of life Insurance

In force In the United State* In 1910was $lfl,4O4.22fl,O25; In 1920 It wa».•*2JW),nB8,00O, find In 1930 It was$108,948,277,782.

Act.al "Dot* • ' Wur" One*"DofB of wnr" were no mere figure

of speech In ancient time, for the As-tyrlana and other nations uw<l dog*In the flghtlni. and often dog foughtagalott dog when armies met.

Giraffe C u R«» FailIn spite of Iti awkward method of

getting over the ground, mot Ing u ttdoes the fore and hind legs of one tidealmultaneously, the giraffe can roawith the ipeed of a good hone.

A machine to iletermlmi wliclhcr appllcnnt.1) fur Jobs lire of the neuroticor obscsslonnl types or whether they are nf tlie median, iiormnl type has beenIn use at the Hartford House, Y. M. (.'. A. According to slaternentu by psy-chologists at Hartford House, the machine's results coincide with those ob-tained hy personal Intorviewa with Job Keekers. Photograph RIIOWH, left to right:One of the psychologies tesls lieini; given In the. Hnrtford—John J. O'Connor,taking testa for susceptibility to monotony; ,1. Elliott Fisher, heml of testingdepartment conducting tests mid \V. I,. Hewitt tnhlttfc testa for neurotic teudeocles.

Getting Ready for Traffic on Lakes

AUTOMOBILE PAINTINGCARS PAINTED — $12.00~COM-

ptete job. Trucks $15.00 and up.Cars called for and delivered. StateGarage, Superhighway No. 25, -13 Ed-Kar road, Rahway. Phone 7-0244.W. I. 7-28*

BATTERY SERVICE

DALTON'S AUTO ELECTRIC ANDBattery service. General auto-

motive repairing. We specialize ingeflerators nnd starters. Also Strom-berg carburetors. 742 State street,"•erth Amboy. Phone 4-1815,

-21-33*

CATERING

1927 HUDSON COACH1026 Cadillac Coach1928 Chevrolet Cabriolet1928 Stutz Coupe1927 Buick Sedan

Avenue. Garage, Metuchen,Phone 6-0851.

841

STATION FOR SALE OR_ n t and lunch rooms. Gas,Eric and city water; roason-V Frank Priess, super-highway[corner Spring street, Bonhamn, N, J.

OHN'S D I N E R — CORNER OFSuper Highway Route 25 and

Amboy avenue, Metuchen. Phone6-2097. We cater to occasions ofill types at prices fitting present day

conditions. tf

ELECTRIC WELDINGEAK WELDING AND RADIATOR

Company—Electric arc and acetylene welding done anywhere. Woodbridge avenue, Port Reading, N. J.Phone Wuodbridge 8-0541).W. I. 5-5-33-

LOCKSMITHS

I). DEKOFF, LOCKSM1TH-GUN-smith, general repairing, safes

opened and rupaired and combina-tions changed. Ice skater sharpened, sawa filed. 154 New Bruns-wick avenue, Perth Araboy. Phon4-2222. tf

. .£RET MOTOR SERVICE—ntomotive repsiring - welding -

Iblines . oils - accessories. Radiosdied in any make car. Rooie-

avenue between Carteret andnay. Phone Carteret 1657.

SHOE REPAIRING

IF YOU WANT economy and relluble work, call at Idea) Shoe Re-

pairing Shop, 77 Main street. Men'ssoles and heela, $1.00. Ladiea' heels,20c. Work guaranteed.W. I. 10-14* tf

Workmen at Detroit nlllnn the hum1 (!ivnt I.IIUHM huoys with misollne Inpreiuirution ftir the opening of marine trnlttr on Lukes Krle, St. ("lair andHuron. Each yeur the buoys are brought In at the close of navigation nnd aretnken hack to their stations In the spring, when tlia luke Ice hns broken upsufficiently to allow the resumption of lake truffle.

THE

FARMARKET

"THE FIRST AND ORIGINAL LOW PRICED MARKET"224 - 26 SMITH ST. PERTH AMBOY

Young JerseyROASTING

PORK

»»; YOU BREAK DOWN CALLfoodbrujge 8-8S65 Clover LeafKg*. Frank Lenches, Jr., prop.•rt auto repairing. Gasoline—

-—t jrtu and tubea Body andder work. Super Highway Route

J Avenel.1-83 •

PAYETTK GABAGE — AUTOervicc to the minute. General

repairing. Day and niffbecker service. Guolinea, oils, ac-

pries, storage. Paul Fopovitch,Supejtftighway 25, Wood-Township, Metuchen, N. J.

one Met. 6-093.6.[I . 7-28-88•

PROMPT SEBVICi) CALLV Oarage, Ptrtb Ambos 4-

0 kinS of aptoaottaf i«-. wrecker service^ !4!%our188 Amboy a w * P*rt(

11-1*

TROPICAL FISH

TROPICAL FISH. GOLD FISH,Breeders our specialty. Aquariuma,Grass, Food» and supplieo. VisitorsWelcome.

CARTERET FISH HATCHERYShow and Sales Department,

BraiUey'a Pharmacy,71 Washington Ave., Carteret, N. J.4-7, 14, 21, 28.

TRUCKING

TRUCKING, local or long distance;two trucks at your convenience.

Phone Woodbridge 1«8. Jabn Thornu , Oakland avenue, Sewnren.

HKNBY F. NK1KENIGTrucking and Moving

Letrfl and Long Distance427 East avenue, SewarenTel Woodbddge 8-1283

Armour's StarBOILED - SLICED

HAM

FRESH KILLED

ROASTING CAPONS 2 1 i bMILK - FED

ROASMVEALlOu,GENUINE SPRING

RIB LAMB CHOPS 1 4cIb

FRONT PAGE NEWS!A Real Remington forThink of it! Now you can buy i.real typewriter and get changOiback from a twenty dollar bill 1

Remington's new low-pricedRemie Scout is sturdily built, withunusually legible and long-wearingtype. A thoroughly practical type-writer—yet it costs only $19-75;

Dad, Mother, and the youngsters,all will find a portable typewriterthe handiest sort of help with dailycorrespondence and other writing.Just ask them. Then, come in andtry a Remie Scout for yourself.

Ste the other popularRemington too. WTIKJ / jr \5Oboth imull and capital j "Ictttrt—cott* only

.75

ON DISPLAY AT —

W00DBR1DGE INDEPENDENT18 Green Street Woodbridge

Tel. Woodbridge 8-1710

BANKRUPT STOCK

SALEOF THE

GlfT SHOP110 SMITH STREET PERTH AMBOY

$10,000 stock of China, Silverware, Suitcases, Toilet Goods, Cosme-tics, Ladies' Bags and hundreds of items which space does, not per-mit us to enumerate. Now is your opportunity to save a real sum ofmoney. Get here early while the stock is complete.

Must Be Sold Regardless of CostKOTEXA REAL VALUE-LARGE PACKAGE11 Easter Bags

SQUIBB'S TOOTH PASTE

If you could buy at wholesalyou can't beat thisprice.

ELECTRIC CLOCKS

Guaranteed to give you goodservice. d» 1 50

Reg. $3.95 $iBABY PICTURES

"Just A little Dream""Precious Awake" / » £Reg. $1.50 \)OQ

CWhjdeBRIEF CASES

»-pocketa, A real buy. <t 1 9 6

LATEST MODELS —

In Grey, Blue and £ A

Beige. Val $1.60. #

Neweat Model

B A G SFOR EASTER

May be had in Grey, Blue,

Beige and Black.

Val. to $2.95

THREE FLOWER

FACE POWDER

Buy 2 boxes atthis price.

HUDNUrS TOILET WATER

This a regular $1.00 | * A

LADIES' FITTED CASES

Thia will make a fine WeddingGift. frQ 95Reg. $6.95 $3'

IS PIECE CEREAL SET

Here is a special value. tf» O50Reg. $4.95. Special $&

THOUSANDS OF OTHER

ITEMS TOQ NUMEROUS

TO MENTION•if'

v»/,

Page 8: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

• « * • *

"•' — *—*. ^ " ^ S v CARTERET PRE98 __"" *" FRinAY, APRIL 14, 1933 . . ,—• """"""

FAGE BIGHT 1 . • • " "Y"4 4

Mary Pickford In "Secrets" At Strand TheatreZ . » . . . crniE CDAM TiVAirAnP" " " « • • » » - " « "AMERICA'S SWEETHEART" AT STRAND "Cavalcade" Comes hHnwIRmkp ntn SCENE FROM lAVALLAUt B u , p i w ^ . r f « . i . AIBUUIAa•>"•••.'U l™' ^ ^ ^ _ . • . . • i i - u U XHow I Broke Into

The Moviesto#n*fW fcy M*l C.

GRETA GARBO

IP YOU think It In hnnl to hrenk In-to motion [ilcturmi In America you

atould try It In my nntlve country.The Swedish government encourage"

young boy* and girls In their thcntrleal aspiration) and endeavors to re-•WT* M many obstacles from theirpath as possible. This, In Itself, la an•Bconrafetnent to the ambitious hut,b j living nearly everybody an pqimlcbance, ntikef the competition even•harper than It is In the UnitedStates.

Ever since I can remember I wnntwlto be an actreaa and would hare quittchool at an earlier age to tnkn uptheatrlcali had It not been for theWishes of my parents to see my edu-cation completed.

Neither my father nor mother wereprofessional people, but when thejsaw I was determined to achieve his-trlonle success, they did all they couldto help me.

IfyYflrst public appearance on thestage was In a spectacular scene Inone of the old Swedish plays. I wasonly one of many young folk who ap-

" jeared In It for tht experience andto observe the technique of the (In

. Ished srtlits who headed tlie enst. Ilyjrorklng In auch plays with ninny othm young folk. I bognn tn lenrn the

Qreta Qarbo,

rudiments of technical grace as wellas to develop stage presence.

It came to my mind that I mightmake good on the screen, but sincethtrt are so few motion picture stu-dios' In Stockholm, I thought I wouldnot really hare a chance because somany other girls were applying forfilm work.

Sw«d«D DM a traditional characterwhose life has been dramatized Into"Qosta Berling's gaga," which, In Eng-lish, means the story of Qosta Berllng.

I was familiar with the play, sowhen I beard that Director MaurltzBttUer was to produce It as a pictureat the Swedish Film Industry, lac, Idetermined to seek a role In the castI didn't have (buch hope of success,but I put on my newest dress and•ought an Interview with Mr. Stiller.

When I talked with him I was much•urprlsed to learn he had noticed meon tn« stage, The result of the Interview was that I was given one of thethree Important feminine roles In thepicture of which Lars Larson, who Isno,w well known to screen audiences,was the star,

The picture was well receivedthroughout Europe and many criticsspoke of It as one of the best everproduced In Sweden, the countrywhich for some years led the Euro-

Diana Wynyard in a scene jrom "Cavalcade.," the FoxFilm pic-turimhon o) the (freal drnma by NoelCoward, with Dick Render-*fnn, Jr. and Douglas Scott, two of the younger players in thephotoplay.

Often • drunkard but ncTer •drink, ii thf way Una O'Connor,Iriih character "actreii, para-phratti th* familiar catch phraie.

MUg O'Connor, who ha> one ofthe principal role* in th« Foxproduction of Noel Coward'i"Cavalcad*," opening at the Ma-jeitic Thentr* tomorrow, iayi thatduring her career ihe hat almottconstantly been called upon toenact the role of a drunken wom-an, the wife of a tot or a dealerin tpirituoui liquors.

"And I're never had a drinkin my life," ihe IITI. "Not that1 have any particular convictionsregarding drink, but liquor neverappealed to me and I've nevertaken it."

"Cavalcade" offers an exampleof the sort of role Miti O'Con-nor has often been called uponto play. As Ellen, wife ofBridges, butler in the home ofthe Marryot family, the is happyin serving her employers.

prnn producing tlcld,UMIIH IS. Major, head of the Metro

Goldwyn Mnyer studio In California,happened to see the picture whileHbrond three years ago, and offered mea contract to come to America andappear In pictures produced at theMOM studio. I accepted and havesince been with that company.

My only secret of beauty Is scrub-bing the face with a complexionbrush and soap and water. Nothingmore exotic than that

In my country, Sweden, we do notuse cold cream so much as In America.It sounds strange to American ears.I know, but a good soap, plenty ofwater and a small scrubbing brush Isthe best akin medicine cosmetic.

One of the recent pictures In whichI played was "Grand Hotel" withLionel Barrymore, John Barrymore,Wallace Beery, Joan Crawford a adother prominent movie players.

Mae Civk Advances RapidlyMae GWke first came Into screen

prominence with her outstanding per-formance of a "bit" In "Front Page."She has since greatly enhanced herreputation as a screen actress withsuch productions as "Fall Guy," "ThePublic Enemy," "Waterloo Bridge,""Reckless Living," "Frankenstein,"and Columbia's "The Good Bad Girl"and "Three Wise Girls."

Hamilton an Old TimerHale Hamilton launched hla dim ca

reer many years ago, coming to pictures with a lengthy stage experienceas a background. Included among hisproductions are "Good Intentions.""Common Clay." "1'ald," "Murder atMidnight," "Grent Lover," "New Ad-ventures of Get-Klch Quick Walling-ford," "Cuban Love Song." "TheChamp" and Columbia's "Love Affair."

Avoiding EmbarrassmentThe reason some people are never

embarrassed Is because they never tryto seem what they aren't.—Los An-geles Times.

JOHN SCRIBE AND HIS ORCHESTRA DAILY

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Mr. Joseph Frye, Vocal Soloist, Sat. and Sun. Eves.

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BRIEF BREEZES

Airplanes hiive proved useful forsowing rice seed In California.

Slrus, the Pou star. Is morethan thirty times as brlicht as ourouu sun.

Not all kinds of mosquitoes areequally affected by pennyroyal andother repellents.

Miss Pickford HasIdeal Vehicle In

Her Latest PictureStory Is A Simple One Of Love

And Elemental Emotions; AtStrand For One Week.

Surrounded by one of the largestcasts in her long career and direct-ed by Frank Borsaze, two-time Acad-emy winner, Mary Pickford comesto the Strand Theatre tomorrow in"Secrets," an adaptation of the

play by RudolfEdgington. And

thus, according to all advance re-ports, motion picture fans will seethe star in one of the best picturesshe has made.

"Secrets" gives Miss Pickford whatshe believes is an ideal vehicle. Inthe first place, it is "motion picture"from beginning to end, and in thesecond place the story is a simple

*Mary Pickford star of 'Secrets *was Miss Pickford's lo-atlinfi- man,and Mona Maris is the "other wom-an." Then there are C. AubreySmith, Blanche Frederici, DorisLloyd, Herbert Evans, Ned Sparksand Jerry Stewart.

But in addition to thege Miss Pick-ford surrounded herself with sev-eral stars of another day, actors andactresses who use to count theirsalaries in thousands of dollarsweekly. These included Bessie Bar-riscale, Ethel Clayton, King Bag-

!,' Fr" •-

DUTCH WISDOM

Great wealth, great care.

Wake not a sleeping dog.

Tall trees catch much wind.

Sloth Is tbe beginning of vice.

A little too late, much too late.

The less said, the sooner mended.

From a spark the house Is burned.

Half a word to the wise Is enough.

What coats nothing Is worth nothing.

All do not bite that show theirteeth.

Talk of the wolf and his tall ap-pears.

From small beginnings come greatthings.

The best cauBe requires a goodpleader.

The pot upbraids the kettle that itla black.

The worse the carpenter, the morethe chips.

Don't crj "herring" till they areIn the net

Better reap tw.o days too soon thanone too late.

It Is good speaking that Improvesgood silence.

The lacy servant takes eight stepsto avoid ona

He that wants the kernel mustcrack the nut.

Be who would gather roses mustnot fear thorns.

fie who slanders his neighbor makesa rod for himself.

One "Take this" Is better than two"You shall haves."

What lay hidden under the snowcometh to light at last

An ass does not hit himself twiceagainst the same stone.

He taat spares something today wllhave something tomorrow.

More fleas are caught with a dropof honey tban with a cask of vin-

gott, Florence Lawrence,' Francisone of love and elemental emotions, £°rd,. Theodore von ElU, Huntlywith no wise-cracking and no sophis-1 G

t f d ° n " n d P a U ' P ' *- • --• — - - - - r - others.

The story of "Secrets" is in threesections showing Miss Pickford asa young girl, as a young woman andas a middle-aged woman. Its localesare Salem, Mass., the Middle Westand California, with a final localein Washington, D. C. From begin-ning to end there is breath-taking

tication. It is Miss Pickford's sin-cere belief that simple tales, simplytold, will be the salvation of thescreen, just as they are bound to bein literature.

Months of preparatory work wentp p yinto the picturization ofIn every branch, Miss

d

Secrets.Pickford

action, and that, after all, is they ,

spared no expense and time in pcuring the best material and the best -•-.- . . - . .. - . .personnel, as will be borne out by P n m e requisite of ajnotaon picture.a glance at the production staff andthe cast of players. Both before andbehind the camera were "names"known throughout the world.

In the latter category were Fran-ces Marion, -scenarist, ajid FrankBorzage, director, who recentlywere awarded their second trophiesby the Academy of Motion PictureArts and Sciences, thus joining thevery small army of two-fime win-ners in Hollywood. Also behind thecameras yen Ray June, camera-man, and Richard Day, art director,who vre?e recent runners-up in theAcademy awards. And, both beforeand behind those cameras, was MissPickford herself, who won an Acad-emy award for her "Coquette."

In front of the cameras was anall-star cast in every sense of theword. Leslie Howard, English star,

Tho Friendly WordA Homely in London was being

shown the sights, and was givenlunches and dinners at the best hotels.

To his friend be said: "This Is allvery well, but what I want Is some-thing more homely—homely surround-ings, simple food, and the friendlyword."

He was taken to a quiet place InKensington for high tea with egg andbacon.

'This Is exactly what I want," hesaid to the Waitress; "homely sur-roundings, simple food, but what aboutthe friendly word?"

The waitress whispered In his ear,"Don't eat the egg."—Tlt-BIts.

Tobacco S«d Utotl at Foodanimals cau Hva and thrive ou a

diet of little else but tobacco seed.This was proved by the Comiectlcuagricultural eiperluieut station experts, who declaru that when tobaccoseeds are fully rlp« they are entirelylacking III nfcolluu uui] HO nutritions Inquality as to uiNku a guuil food fomanuuala. The ductum base this statement ou rtmitta otitnluuil rioui eiperlintuiting with albino ruts. It wufound tliat thrbti milmuU wuuld gruwto maturity and i«|)roiluce vuccvBafuIlyIf fed almost eicluslvely on ripe tobacco seeds. All that wus udded tothis diet lu the cuao vt the. UUIUJUIHUted lit the experiment* » m it umullpercentage of luorganlc salts and af«w drops of cod Uver olL

MAJESTICPERTH AMBOY THEATRE Telephone 4-0108

CONTINUOUS FROM 1:30 TO 11:00 P. M.

LASTTIMESTODAY

"AFTER THE BALL" ANDWALTER WINCHELL in

"I KNOW EVERYBODY'S RACKET'

IN GREAT BRITAIN

Only one woman In Cirent Britainpractices the profession of lea lasting.

Raffle lights have been Installed Innytte than 200 towns In Great Britain.

London has only fifty automatic tele-phone exchanges, covering 220,000lines.

Slaughterhouses belonging to pri-vate owners In thla country numberabout 16,000. #

There are 250 trade unions In thedvll service alone, one of them havingonly sii members.

Last year over 100,000,000 pennieswere collected from telephone callboxes In the London area alone.

One London manufacturer, whosefactory did not exist nine years ago,*> now turning out 280,000 toys a week.

"Cavalcade" Comes ]>Majestic Theatre FirOne Week Engagement

Picture F W d On Play WhichShowed In London For OneYear; Noel Coward Is Au-thor.

The lonif-awaiteH Fox Film pro-ilurtinn of Noel Coward's "Caval-cailr" mnkes its local bow tomorrowni the Majestic Theatre, Perth Am-

i "Cavalcade," which ran for a Jlldyi-nr at the famous Drury Lane The-

t litre in London as a play, attracted1 more attention than any drama pro-

(IWCIMI in England in a generation.I'enplo stormed the theatre to seeit during its run, and it is expectedHint the screen audience will ex-cool that n hundred fold.

"Cnviilcade" is a story of howworld events affect the home andthe family. It is the story of theMnrryots, a middle class family con-soling of Jane and Robert, themother and father-, their two sons,KilwEird and Joe; their servants,Kridges, the butler; Ellen, his wife,ami Fanny, their daughter.

It covers the period from 1900to Ihe present day, and the absorb-inir story in etched against a vividbackground of historical happeningsluting that time.

Numerous spectacular episodesmid to the dramatic power of "Ca-valcade," and include a number ofhistoric events leading up to akaleidoscopic resume of the chaoticcondition of present day life.

Frank Lloyd, who directed, spentmore than six months in prepara-tion with a large technical staff be-fore filming one scene, and everydetail is authentic in every partic-ular. He scoured the world for themost suitable players for the vari-ous roles, (fathering1 an all-star casto , g gwhich includes Diana Wynyard, CliveBrook, Beryl Mfercer, Herbert Mun-din, Una O'Connor, Irene Browne,Frank Lawton and Merle Tottenham.

The Misses O'Connor, Browne andTottenham were members of the.Drury Lane cast o>f "Cavakade,"and were brought to Hollywood tore-enact the roles they created onthe stage.

Bird'i Hud Fattened Like Hinf*A bird? hoiid Is fit»teneil at one

place, very much like a hinge. ThatIs the rciison It can turn Its headaround BO far. Few creatures canturn their heads as Tar back as a bird.

— Please mention tnls pajxn Vo advertisers; it helps you, it helps, thetu.K helps your paner. —

Part of Mammoth Cavo Ufht*JThe portions of Mammoth cave

most frequented by visitors are light-ed by electric llnhtn. Hut miles of theless accessible sections remain verymuch an they have always been.

SEVEN (7) DAYS STARTING TOMORROW

THRILLING ENTERTAINMENTTitanic )in its

Power!

i

^

I — CUssifMd -Adj. Hrrng Result! —.

by NoelCoward

THKl'ti seething decades of relent-less change sweep before your

eyes, plaguing nations, threateningempires, smashing civilization . . aCavalcade of mobs and monarchs

• the march of time measured bythe beat of a human heart . . . amother heart. . triumphant in itscourage and steadfast faith

40 Featured Pl<jy«ri—Cait of 3500

A FOX Achievement

Produced at Fox Movi«lon* City

C O M I N G APRIL 2 2 —

'MUSSOLINI SPEAKS!'t *

STRANDPERTH AMBOY —THEATRE— Telephone 4-

CONTINUOUS FROM 1:30 TO 11:00 P. M.

TODAY HSL "CHRISTOPHER STRONG"SEVEN (7) DAYS STARTING TOMORROW

LESLIE HOWARDAll th* (ham »f "SMUtT TriROUOH"All lh» iw**p «f

COMING APRIL 22—

"GABRIEL OVER THE WHITEHOUSE"

Special Bargain Matinee Monday to Friday1:30 to 2:30 15c

NIGHTS-ORCHESTRA 40o-BALCONY 25cCHILDREN AT ALL TIMES 10c

A»k For STRAND REBATE Ticket.

A:.t -

Page 9: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

tart Gardens nowAnd Study Soils

|,,llrli>i Tel l t HOW /To Go

A I, o <i t Cultivating Reliefr.rHn. And Where To Lo-

Hrciuific a great m»ny community-,Wn* will b« cultivated this yearjncmint rtf the depression, authfir-iivr information a» to how to gomit it is (>f »pe«a! value. In addi-,, to the community garden* thatl»'in(f ur«d by relief admitiiiitra-

|inn<< everywhere there will b«* homeItiinionn cultivated- by thousands ofIndividual* who are not familiar withWardrninir and run tne risk of wast-fn>; the rostM ieed and the time putin nn irarden work if they are notj-clinbly informed about soils and how

f>d the best results.For these reaionti the following

flmllotintt, iisued for relief garden5 service by experts should be studiedi f arcfully. It is Important to note thatFgarden work should be started im-1 mediately.

The bulletin follows:It is now time to prepare the soil

in the home vegetable garden forplanting. Tbis chore should no longerbe delaped ertcept on plots whom ex-,cessive hiolrture in the soil wouldinterfere with spading OT plowing.

Many lot* and other pnrcels oflnntl on which vegetables will begrown this season have been lyingidle fer years and have either grownup in weeds or sod. If such land isplowed, now, the sod and other or-

, APRIL 14, 1988

JHym hnvo'm problem., ,o n r mhld

The very amb'tlou* mlw mtnt hewBOly friendships.

lightening the shad-h

M-

What a gift fwi of the w«rld

Polltkians nrnierttandThat ' l l** butlncn.

Onltnrt iliould ma*, one kind toothers' IgnAanoe, tat does-It 1

A man wltt » too large waist linela aeldmn able to do omen for It

Don't Kct excited about what youbelieve, it doesn't convince others,

tf jou make «liarp rejoloflera, peo-ple will always speak jou fair—If atall I

"I'll think It over" la about aa non-committal at "Come and aee me, some-time."

Bnvy la a peat rtlmnlant-oftenurging one on to endeavor aa orach«• love.

Blessed an the peaeemakera;thonfth the} often suffer from titteretbatmtion.

We live happily ever after, If eachla composed of the right material.There's tha rub.

Even In the bad [tact the gnashingof teeth mutt wear oat as a meansof expressing one's reelings.

An old-fafhloned criminal alwayshad an eicase. Throe of today won'ttalk wlttiout permission 6f their lawyer.

The madding crowd's Ignoble strifeseems more Ignoble when you are sitting on the portico of yoar suburbanhone miles awnr in the evening.

frame materials turned under willsoon staft to rot and thus improvethe condition of the irarden soil.

Soils, especially the heavier types,should not contain an excessive am-ount of moisture when they are plow-ed or spaded. The usual result ofworking the soil when it is too wetis the Formation of clods, which willmake cultivation difficult.

Much needed organic matter inthe soil may be added in thf form ofmanure, leaf mold, sod, and grassclippings. These desirable materialsdug into the soil will givu "body" toit. They act Bimilar to n sj«jnge inabsorbing and holding moisture inthe soil, giving off this moisture tothe plant through the plant root*.A soil full of organic material willbe better able to <[row vegetables,especially during dry periods. Or-

| jranic matter in the heavy clay soili?I will tend to help make them more' porons, which is also desirable. Or-iganic material when plowed under,[will start to decay ur rot, Durifty this[process it will tend to liberate some[plant nutrients whiih th i[plants can use.

When plowing or ?padinc be) cover all of the organic matter

with soil. If this material is not en-tirely covered, it mny start growth

h h can only be removed by muchhoeing. In spading the ground, use

strong spading fork and dig to adepth of at least, six inches. Start 'shade over part of the

Break Into Church to WedWhen a hrlde and bridegroom ar-

rived at the Cnngrpiutlnniil church InBuckley, North Wiili'g, they found thedoors of the church locked ami minis-ter nnd gui'RtR wnitlnc "lUstilr. Kf-forts to nlitnin the k-.-ya fnlled, andafter a w«H <>f imir<Mli;in mi hniir thehrli|<wnciiii mill ni'icru hurst open adour. T!ie wi'ildli a w.m Qiilrltlysnlenmlznl

T.Midf TruthThe man who Is too lazy to staud up

and tell the truth Is apt to lie about It

sun exposure of at least 5 to 6 hoursevery doy. Large trees on or adjacentto the garden may not only produceshade over part of the garden, but t

long one side and dig a furrow, then ; the roots which reach far out will one location, we became,

Elizabeth Boasts OfNew Clothing Store

Stein and Marfcowitz In New,Mod«m Building At BroadStreet and Elizabeth Avenue—Offer Many Values.

Elizabeth run boast of having eneof the most modem retail clothingestablishments in the state. Afternearly thirty-five years at Firststreet and Broadway, the clothingfirm of Steifl & Markowiti has open-fd ita new store at Broad street andBJizabetli avenue.

The decision to quit the down-town location was made lairf yearwhen the firm's owners, JosephStein and Abraham Mnrkowitz pur-chased the site formerly occupiedand owned by William E. Townleyat 3 Broad street. At that timeMr. Stein announced plans to recon-struct this property and join'it withthe corner buiMIng at 1 Broadstreet, converting them into one bigstore. The projwt which Rave workto many craftsmen for nearly a yearwas completed with the installationof tfae mast modern type of fixturesand lighting facilities.

The entrance, presenting a foyereffect, is on Broad street. A spe-cious stairway leads to the secondand third floors- of the building.Another stairway from the groundfloor level lends to an elaboratebasement, which will be devoted toboys' and young men's clothes.

All floors of the new home haveplenty of daylight, Modern displayfacilities are provided. On the thirddoor is the tailoring department incharge of Joseph Etkin, who hasbeen with the firm twelve years.

Other veteran employes trans-ferred from the downtown store tothe new quarters are ,1 u 1 i u aSchwartz, a salesman, who has beenwith the firm twenty-two years;Thomas Keilly, a salesman, twelveyears, and Sidney Lifschitz, a sales-man, eight years.

Mr. Stein and Mr. Mnrkowitz willhe in business in this city thirty-five yVars next October.*, Comingto Elizabeth from Spartansburg,S. C, in October, 1K98, they locatedon what was then the city's mainshopping thoroughfare, Kirst street,and opened up a small men's cloth-ing store. During the years thatfollowed, they bnilt for themselvesa— reputation for faif dealing andreliability and as a . result wereobliged from time to time to ex-pand their store space. Their cus-tomers came from all sections ofthe state and Staten Island and oneof their proud boasts is that theyhave served three generations of thegame families.

Mr. Stein said:"We leave First street rMuctant-

ly, for our years in that locationhave been happily spent. Comingto Elizabeth thirty-five' years agonext October, and remaining in the

and nat-

FAGlNlimTHEY SHOULD KNOW

Lir« Is a fatal complaint tod ateminently contagions one— Holme*.

Uk* honor. Is a rockya b«awh.—Napoleon,Inland without

Th« amiable fortnn danWtth tofts,tha contrary fortnn* ttacheth,—Ohao-

Leave your mistakes Nhtod yon, hotdon't forget how yon mad* them.—Central Booth.

"To him that lira* well," answered! thev hermit,' "every form of Ufe Isfood*

' There are penons who We so bide-• pendent that yon cannot depend npon[ them.—Sparg'eon.

I hart generally found that the manwho ' rood «t en «zcnN ta good for

' nothing else.—Franklin.

Many of the most precious reward!of life do not lie on the side of •a t*rlnl gain.—Calvin OooHdga.

News of All Carteret Borough in thePress, the mort widely read

piper in Carterat

CLASSIFIED ADSNURSERY STOCK

EVERGREEN BARGAINS — First{jjaality, freshly dug, cash and

carry, 25 cen,ts up. JWadmeadowNurseries, West Inman avenue, Rahway.W. I. 4-17, 21, 28; 5-5.

sion of our faith In the future."Mr. Markowitz said: "We arp

indeed proud of Our new store amate sure it is a step in the righldirection. We have spared nothingin our efforts to make this gtonthe model which others will follow.We have installed the most moderntypev of store fixtures and lightingfacilities and above all, every suit,every topcoat and every other pieciof merchandise in our bip store wabought especially for tHi«j occasionWe welcoim an inspection ofstore by our old friends and cordiallyextend an invitationvisit our new homo."

to others t(

ntovuntBrie ot pray do Mt sin*.

Oood eouael l* \ t t er than a greatarmy.

Cheerful company sVirtena &•

in ttsa* to Sal* wttt**

Better a feather In the hand tbaoa Mrt ta tta Mr.

The ssa B not learned though hebe loaded DM) book*

Charity fim Itseif rieb, covetotnneas hoatdt lt*aM poor.

If yw a n an anvil be patient; ifyon art a hammer strike h*rd

la U* taat % years the Motor snflOytta grades Bcoernlent rnnd of l/on-dm has oistrflratpit tmo.nrw to *),-OM member* and cOucatrd ion phli-dren of nwmbtn who hid dtort.

h an thloff thrvafhmit tha «HUtbt Man who looks for the oootodMfl eee eroefed, and the mas «k«lobkt for th« atralght will ae» th*atralcnt.

— Pleaae meatton thia papez to ad-terttaemt It Mtas n n . It hetpe them.It helps rotar oapar. —

— LADER'S270 Smith St., PERTH AMBOY

DRESSES$2*7

VALUES UP TO $6.96

OVER 1000 TO SELECT

FROM — SIZES 14 to 54

SUITSFUR TRIMMEDTRIMMED.Value, to $6.B5

ALSO UN-

*2 8 7

LARGE SELECTION TO

CHOOSE FROM

Manufacturer's Public Disposal

SALE!Out they go to the pub*

lie at Sacrifice Prices!

COME! SEE! SAVE!ALL WOOL WORSTEDS

SERGES TANSCHEVIOTS GREYS

Fancy WORSTEDS BROWNSAND TWISTS BLUES

1 PANTSSUITS . . . .

Students'2 Pant*

Suit*.50

$7.50

$7

Men'sDresaPant*

.SO$1SIZES TO FIT EVERYONE

A t THE FACTORY—LOOK FOR OUR SIGN

L & W. CLOTHING CO., INC.284 STATE ST., PERTH AMBOY 2nd Floor

OPPOSITE HIGH SCHOOL*

Open Dailji, and Saturdays Till 6 P. M.

art with next furrow, turning the ; have a tendency to consume the soil urally so, very much attached tomanure and othfr nruanlo \ moisture at the expense ofl the vege

atter into the first furrow, turning i table crop*.i ll f i Uo not plant on

ground, or jjroundrecently filled, unless top

' d i h filli H d

ow, tuupside down, covering all fon-ign

aterial. After a few rows havu beenrake over, level imd smooth thed i Thi i

poorly drainedwhich has been

iiut'u, umes) VWJJ nOH was

led portioh. This is done to till' used in the filling. Hard subsoil ashthe Ibwer places and to break up

clpds, and, if done now, tt willbe necessary to walk over

i,ly prepared soil,are must be exercised in the sf-

tton of a frarden locution. Manytions should not be attemptedyear, because failure of crops

I be certain. An-ideal (rarden locais one in which the irround is

level, well drained, and has a

piles, und steep slopes which are liko-ly to wash badly during the heavyy y ttains cannot he expected to grow a

profitable crop.Soils must contain plant food. To

grow vegetables successfully, theremust be available plant foods in theBoil. Thcsa materials are taken fromthe soil through the plant roots andu&ed in the leaved and in othertyu tsof the growing1 plant.

our place of business" and its manyand friendly associations.

"However, \ve no longer hadroqm to expand and as a result ofa sU'ildjiy incrousing business wewere, of necessity, compelled toseek larger <|uarter» and in a morecentral,and convenient locatiftn fortwir great family of customers. Wehave great faith in the City ofElizabeth and its future growth orwe would never have considered theinvestment of so large a sum ofmoney necessary to obtain the prop-erty and its reconstruction txpense,

"Our n«w home with ity splendidappointments is but a small expres-

SUNNYDALE170 SMITH

STREET

74 SMITH ST. Phone P. A. 4-1960 PERTH AMBOY

STRICTLY FRESH, LARGE

PURE FOOD MARKET PERTHAMBOY

BROWN

87 Years of Honest Business

Backs

HOMEMADE

CREAMCHEESE

LB.

25'GENUINE LB.

SWISSCHEESE 291

ARMOUR'S and SWIFT'S

SKINLESS SMOKED

HAMS 18-lb.Average

RIGIDAIREA GENERAL HoTORS VALUE

Imagine a refrigerator that

uses no more current than

one ordinary lamp bulb

WHITE ROSE large can A / \ .

ASPARAGUS TIPS I UWHlit ROSE

CHILI SAUCED

ECONOMYHer* U * aew »t»nd«r4of economy. Aj*""'"*Frigjdd** that operate, ooM little dectik (Wient uooe ovdinacr 1ra»p talb.

CONVENIENCBAutomatic gtray* that flip aot of th«tnmmt at • touch of thefingerUcontain*!*m*nt for »»«*g«-

COME-IN,TODAY

mmmmm.

" loo* far lif Oom Am

BEAUTYThis new Frigidalre Intf*

due.* a dbtinctiv* «yl* i»

cabinet design, with a finish

of white Dulu* and hand-

w>me cbroiniuo1 kardwaw*,

QUALITYWith porcelain interior,

u MO«E ROOD SPACE ^ i r t r ^ :PrtgUie the dwice of a mil-

|k» matt UiyeM ***» **V. -it- S«« the vfhtt ctoctOCfood tt»r*M «»P"c"y- 3 M ^ ^

' JMW< Prl'gfahlM* at ;<"

SUNNYDALE ^ pi

COFFEElDcIb

SHEFFIELD

MILKTALL CAN 4 Vzc

FANCY ROASTING'"

ChickensEYE and BOTTOM

ROUND ROAST

Legs and Rump of

I L K FED VEALJERSEY FRESH

Extra Special! ^onr Choice

P E A S _TOMATOES

HAMS8 tu \2 Ib. Average

BOILED ANDSPICED

BEANS

HAM OP- BACON 9ONE-HALF LB. %j %J

STRIPS OF SUGAR

CURED

LOVELY, PURE 1 Ib. can A / \

COCOA 10VELMO

CHOCOLATE DESSERT

PURE

Chopped t\ BEEF J F 0 R

KK)% PUREP O R K

SAUSAGELoose or Link

ST.,FRESH * g\{

ASPARAGUS 1 1 )BUNCH ••• X • /

TENDER, JUICY

CHUCK^OASTMILK - FEP

RoastingJEALSHOULDERS OF GENUINE

SPRING LAMBS P I N A C H " ^ "

C A R R O T S BUNCH

B E E T S BUNCH

Page 10: more CARTERET PRES - digifind-it.com · Conric Section The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRES16J>igesT«laSy Two Section VOL. XI, No. 28 . CARTERET,

PAGE TEN

Wom»rt CaHrd Wnrtt SmtiffUr. \

l;tiL'l''-ti f'liMnin** ntllriTf* HII\ (hnt IWitt i ' n »tv tin* w u M iiiiiith'iir s(ini(»-( l r rw hrcsMiHi' I I IPV I n fn P''l silk K"*1

nu>n(<i in In I In- < i.itntM (i It In nit pay-ing «luf\

CLASSIFIED ADSF A R M S - Be long ing Tn

K K P h K A I . I - A M I HANK OFR P K I N U K I E M ) , nniuircd l>v fun- -eliwtire, KOR SA1.K. ( i | { liKN'f. Willbe K»l(i for pint caili , niiil l iabincef inanced by l o n g lorm firM .riH<l '-t»r-e n d TrmrtirHiri'ii l'""r |I»I tii-uitii-^. inquire (if IJc'ivpi1 -I. I'lccliiii'r. \ : i t i i>nnl Hnnk of New .lorii'y l!n>l<luur, Nowi ir i imwirh . N .1.

Junior Daughter* Of St. Mark*

To Hold Curd Party

Thi> Junior Dnuuhterfl "f St.Marks will hold a fnrrt party onTuomlay night in the pnn.ili tinll ofSt. Murk's Epiarnpnl rhiirch.

A f f h a n l i l t n N e r d i

AHIIKIIKII ilicrc nre 1 3 1 qniM of

ruiiilx In Afuhnnlntnn "tily s few mllPilnrc hiinl pttrfni'fil. Almut 050 mnlnrv.'WclrB lire renlnlprwl In the coontrj,

f

Ancient VinUf* .A nidi dnW1' '":w n"i trw-rllwHi

-fiiiiritlin II. lt''V reroiHly wn»fiiimil In Kni>iTllln. l.n.

AT PERTH AMBOY'5

BUSIEST MARKET"

Wonder258 SMITH ST.PERTH AMBOY MARKET CORNER SMITH

AND ELM STS.

OPPOSITE FARMER'S OPEN AIR MARKET —

HERE ARE BUT A FEW SPECIALS OF THE HUN-DREDS BEING OFFERED BY "PERTH AMBOY'SGREATEST PRICE WRECKER" THIS WEEK. GETHERE EARLY AND GET Y0UR5.

Skinback ^k \

Hams 1 (JLH.

FRESH ARRIVAL

EGGS Doz.

NONE HIGHER ~t ALL ONE PRICE

ALL YOU WANT—WE DO NOT LIMIT QUANTITIES

iXHNSof , J * .... -trim vr SnCfCBS.' T ft** - flBF ^ ^ A

PORK M LB.

FRESH PREMIUMS

Legs and Rumpof Milk-Fed

VEAL

SECRET OF HOTLS IS BARED

CHUCK, POT

ROAST

HAMS

BACONVisit Our New Bakery Dept.

Yeast Dough Munt Have Plenty

'of Shortening.

By EDITH M. BARBER |Hnt roll* I How good that sound*,

doein't It? W<> menn ywiit rolls, ofcourse. ID moat • hou«ptml<1s yenstcnkM are used nnwndnyi more forthla purpone thnn thej are for milkingthe supply of bread. With the good

•commercial bnkprlen furnishing ourfrpiiti brwirt dnlly, Mime, of H of prac-,llcnlly the mime texture us 'he homeriinde qunllty, few 'lioujekoeiipr* make jthe regular nupply of l W bread >|

Once In a while * womnn may Jwrt ;

CPt Inmcry for n Innf of her own" mak-ing nml will mnke up n hutch of breaddoiiph, hut slip In prptty sure to makea guild ilenl of It Into rolls bPcsUKmiiHt «f us do net ci\re for bread,honipniadi! or otherwise, Hint hns beennut']A more Ihnn n (lny or two.

Thorp »rp, of course, certain fancyhrcinls which ore inmle at home, t,myself, mnke up a rich fweat trendami use It htittprofi for tea and, as ItKcts older, for a dellcloiiB sweet toast.Thin bread Is "painted" with emr yolkhffore It la bnked nnr] has a rich ma

olored crust when baked.dough for foils of any wrt

must hnve plenty of shortening in Itiinil sometimes egg yolks or wholePKRK. There are foundation recipesfnr which rolls of different shapes,from whirl! they take their name, arelinked. It 18 strange what « differ

. moo In flavor the. shaping, plus thelinking Deems to give the sabe dough.A clover-lenf roll, for Instance, feerasquite different from a finger or a cres-cent roll, prohnhly on account of theadditional crust.

The addition of more Sugar andshortening will make a sweeter, rich-er roll of the same general mixture.Hulslnn' or nuts may also be added.The favorite cinnamon roll U madefrom a regular dough, but, of course,the spreading of the rolled doughw|th much/butter, sugar and cinnamongives a vg|;y different air to the bakedroll.

We haVe found that comparativelylarger amounts of yeast can be used tomake rolls rise quickly and to, there-fore, reduce trie tine between risingand Bervlng. There will be no "yearty"flavor If the rolls are baked, longenough. Another modern conveniencefor producing hot rolls In a magi-cally short time Is the use of the re-frigerator /or storing the dough afterIt has been mlxeil and allowed to rise.It can be covered, put away and tak€nout again to be shaped, allowed torise and baked before mealtime.

In making any kind of yeast mix-ture, there ace a few special points.Rread flour must he used; yeast mustbe fresh. Of course, yeast cakes willremain fresh ID a refrigerator Indefi-nitely. The water to which the yeastIs added must be lukewarm. Thedough must be kept warm while It Isrising. I find a moist heat best forthis, and I usually place* It on a cakecooler 'over a pau of hot water anil,of course, keep It covAed. I like tobake rolls lo a moderately hot oven asthe crust Is more tender. When loaresare baked It swins to uinke. little dif-

FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1933

Cretno Cleaners RankHigh In Industry

Concern Built Enviable Repu-

tation In Carteret »nd Suc-

ce«« Mftdf Expansion Neces-

sary.

WAIT!D O N ' T

BUY THAT

NEW CAR

UNTIL YOU

HAVE SEEN THE

PontiacECONOMY STRAIGHT 8

SOONER or Inter you'll buy aStiiiijjht Kitfht—wliy not buy itiiiiw, whi'ii .you oun feet a PontiacKniiiumy Straight 8 for only $68uami up, f. <>. b. Pontiac? But that'snot all. It isn't only easy to buy—it's easy to own. For this StraightKitfhl'is KO finely enifilicert;^ andbuilt that it gives you the per-formance and pow.er fur whichStraight Eights are famous, withthe operating economy that -makes,il a truly economical tar to own.

Ill' TO now there wasn't any suchcar in the low price field. Butthere is one there .now — andyuu don't have to pay n premiumto own and run it. A big PontiacEconomy Straight 8 — 115-inchwlieelbase; 3285* pounds of realweight; a 77-horsepower motorthat gives you 7S actual miles perli'Hir ut a cost that makes this carreally low price.

ALL CARS may he jjood as far asthey go, but only weight and sin tlk! car can give you wal bitcar comfort. If the weight ajidsize aren't there, it is really un-reasonable U> expect their resultsAnd if your car'hasn't got the, en-gine, you rluii't get the perform-ance.

WOMEN are delighted with Pouti-ae'ii roomy, comfortable interiorsbeautiful new Pfther bodies andnew FuWor No Druft Ventilation(individually controlled) — theiirat .real development in closedcar comfort and safety since fclotied bodies were first designed.

BOLAND BROS.TRADES ACCEPTED

.St. tieorge & West Milton Ave.

KAHWAY flume iUkwa} 7-0477

Cremo Cleaners nml Dyers, a .newconcern.located at, 2VZ Smith street,should intercut persons who are de-sirous of having their clothing prop-erly and thoroughly clcanwl, or wishto dye Bome garment so that it willloSk like a new garment) This «on-cern in new at the Perth Amboy lo-cation but the proprietors have beenin business in Middlesex County formany years ntid haw* built up an en-viable reputation in the {leaning anddying trade^

The proprietors nre I!enjnminKlein and Ralph Weiss. More thantwelve years ago they began businessin Carteret as tho Roosevelt Clean-ers and Dyers. The first establish-ment was in Koosevelt avenue in theChrome section, Honent, satisfactoryservice soon brought prosperity tothe venture. In time it had to be en-larged, A new establishment 'wasopened in the Hill or Carterct sec-tion of the borough, as the "CarterotCleaners and Dyers". The «old placein the Chrome section was continued.

Both prospered and it was not longuntil the capacity of the two Carter-et establishments was taxed, and fur-ther expansion was necessary even indepression years. -The Perth Amboyplace wa«, opened at 232 Smithstreet. The two Carteret establish-ments are still open-and will bo con-tinued.

Th# firm does its own cleahing anddying and assumes full responsibilityfor all work. A reliable service ofcalling for and delivering work ontime is one of the secrets of thegrowth of thp concern. But the character of the actual work done incleaning garments, leaving them freeof the slightest odor and looking likebrand new garments has been thebig factor. Cremo Cleaners and Dy-ersi is built around a reputation thathas never varied from the higheststandard in twelve years.

—Please mention this paper whenbuying from .. advertiser*.^

Mice Eat Man'* Fortune;Shock of Lost Is Fatal

Hi'lgrado. N'MlIng mire in in nttirrobhwl a fnnnrr In Velrkl K till rein ofhis fortune nml Mia life nt one ntrokc.Without telllnR his wife, he hml beenrnvlnn fnr yenrs In 20<llnnr notes tobuy a lnr(te fnrm for himself, hidingthe money In n pncklnc ense In the attie over n grannry.

Mecemlj he derided to buy a farmwhU-h hnd been offered to him for200,000 rtlnnrn When' he (old his' fe, she aflkiMl him with astonishmentwhere he expected to find the moneyfor the purpose. For answer he tookher arm and led her to the packingcase. When he opened if, he foundthe mice had left nothing for hla fortune but a litter of paper, riorror-struck,,he was seized with s heart attack and dropped dead.

Thieves Steal ConcreteWalk Weighing 9 Tom

San liedro. Calif..— Police wereamnsed when Nick Chapelle reportedthat some one had stolen his concretesidewalk.

But It proved to be Irne when theyfound a no foot stretch of sectionalconcrete walk that had adorned Chapelle's property- had vanished.

"Let's see," said one policeman, "«t145 pounds pqr cubic foot, that tidewalk must have weighed nine tons."

Father of Naial Academy(•force linnrroft, (lie historian."orlc

Instil! the Idea of s nnval acndeinj forthe United flutes when he wns secre-fnry of Ilic navy under 1'nlk

Payment for Oil NetsIndians $240,000,000

Pjwhuskn. Okln -More thnn $2#),nnO.ono hns boon collected by (lungeIndlnrm from nil <in their nllotments,recent compilations revealed.

The 2,227 hHidrlghts of the tribehnvp drnwn abnnt $110,000 onrh, andthe Innrls nre fnr from depleted, saidOeorRr itanullfti, ho*d of the oil andRSS department of the Osnfte agency.. The arm, nlrcndy bnvln« fl,480 oilwells nnd 431 Rns wells, wns describedby Beaulleu us "the coming oil fieldof northern Oklahoma." "Hie originalallotment WHS l,147,(10fl acres. Someof It was reserved for townsltes andrallronds. All the rest has beon leasedfor gns purposes nnd 317,702 acre* foroil, he mid.

He predicted that the old naval reserve area would develop Into one ofthe best fteloS of the Osngc, which Blready made this Indian tribe the richest per capita nation In The world.

City People Flockingto Georgia Farmhouses

Valdosta, Ga.—Th«.migration of citypeople to the soil has been In suchnumbers that not a habitable farmhouse In the Valdostn area Is vacant.Every building fit for dwelling sheltersa family. Many have no means offinancing a crop or even feeding them•elves until harvest, but they expressconfidence of eking out a better livingthan In the cities.

In numerous Instances migratorsmoved Into vocnnt houses withouteven troubling to Hnd out who ownedthem. Once domiciled, they set abouttn drive a bargnln with the landlord.

Vitamin A <• 0U*MVlfnmln A. wWch hetp» to protect

tl'p body nitBlnst several twcterlal In-factions, hns been found plentiful Inboth the green nnd ripe olives.

Radiobeaean 9lfna.lt -Rfidlohnncon signals to gnMe mar-

iners were first applied to a practicalwny ofT the entrnnce to New Tork har-hor Ih 1921.

— U»E«'S276 Smith St., PERtk AMBOY

Sport Coats- $4.95Swagger Coats $4.95FINE FUR T R I M M E V '

COATS IN ALL THE $/*»S

LATEST STYLES " a n dAND COLORS up

AGAIN WE ARE OFFER.

ING FINER VALUES ANU

LARGER SELECTIONS.

THE PRICES ARE UNBE-

LIEVABLY LOW

SHOP HERE — SAVE

OPEN EVENINGS

ferenee whether the baking Is ^at a high temperatura and flnlsied *ta lower beat or whether a moderatetemperature Is used throughout thebaking. Bread or rolls are bakedenough when they sound hollow whenknocked at the bottom of the br«ad(not of the pan).

Sundird Rolls1 cup milk1 cake compressed yeast4 tablespoons sugar4 cups flour (about)H4 teaspoons salt /1 egg4 tablespoons fatScald the milk uud cool until luke

warm. Crumble the yeast Into a mix-ing bowl and add the sugar. Add thelukewarm milk to the yeast mliture.Stir well and add about half of theflour which has been measured aftersifting ODce. Then add the salt andthe tgg-

Add the melted fat after one-half ofthe flour has been added. Remove Hto a floured board or clean table topand knead until It Is smooth: and elantic. Let the dough rise In a coveredbowl until it Is double In bulk, keeping It at a lukewarm temperatureForm Into rolls.

Clover Leaf RollsMake sniull-sized rolls of dough by

rolling pieces separately between thepalms, place three rolls In each ex^ntwl

>iy."!u-? {up* b*uiter~well, and let, riseuntil double In bulk, then bake at 40<)degrees, for 18 to 20 minutes.

Cinnliuon Rollt

Spread the dough after It has risenInto a thin sheet about one-fourth Inchthick. Spread with one-fourth cupfulbutter, and sprinkle with one-haif cupful brown sugar mixed with oue tenspoonful cinnamon. Iloll tightly likea jelly roll nud cut in pieces one anda half Inches wide, I'luce close togetlier with the cut side down In »pun In which has been spread anotherone-fourth cupful of butter, and oneInilf cupful of brown sugar sprinkledover the buttom. After they have ri.ii>n until double In bulk bake them at•IW) degrees for L!0 to 25 inluutes. Onehalf cupful of pecan* meats may beadded before rolling and a few sprinkled on the bottom of each cup.

<B. 19SI, Bell Byndlca**.— WNU Servlco.

ALBERT LEON & SONHAVE CONFIDENCE IN THE

T O W N S H I P O F W O O D B R I D G E

BABY BONDSAccepted At Full Value

IN THE PURCHASE OF FURNITURE - FLOOR COVERINGS

AND RADIOS

ALSO ACCEPTED AS DEPOSITS AND IN PAYMENT

ON OPEN AQC0UNTS . .

ALBERT LEON & SON\93 Smith St. cor. King St Perth Amboy, N. J.

SPRING NEWS!

Save Soap ScrapsUse all scraps of soup. 1MI om

piut with four quarts of wutei. Tlii^makes a soft Jellied soup for al1

cleansing purposes.

• ; •?*- . <*v

COMMON FERTILIZER 'TZ.::^±:$tM'<§* «»tt>».

BONE MEAL FERTILIZER 1.75 per 100 lb».

SHEEP MANURE . . . . . .

PEAT MOSS

(featured in 1933 Flower Show)

LIME

VIGORO (Complete Plant Food fortrees, flowers, lawns, plants andvegetables)

2.00 per 100 lb».

2.00 per Bale

' . 5 0 per Bag

4.00 100 lb. bag

JOSEPH KLEIN CO.Dealer in Feed and Coal

34 MAIN ST., Opp. P. R. R. Track. WOODBRIDGE, \S . J«Free De l ivery CALL WOODBRIDGE 8-0021

COLCORDS 32 CHERRY ST.

RAHWAY GOING OUT OF BUSINESSThis Is Not An Ordinary Sale, But an Opportunity to Buy at prices Unheard of in Jewelry-HHtory

After 30 Years of Faithful Service to the People of Rahway and Neighboring Town*

We Are Retiring from Business. This Gives You

A Marvelous Opportunity To Buy Jewelry At Less Than WholesaleCost As We Are Selling Our Complete Stock

Regardless Of Cost Or ValueArticles Being Sacrificed Include

' HAMILTON, GRUEN, ELGIN and WALTHAM WRIST and POCKET WATCHES

Complete Line of Sheaffer and Waterman Fountain*Pens , ' -

Blue White Perfect Diamonds Set in White Gold and Platinum Mountings

14K Men'. Watch Chain»f K n f r *Complete

Sets of Silverware and Sterling SilverArticles

14K Gold Men's and Ladies' Birth-stone Rings

Menls Platinum and Diamond ScarfPin*

Ladies! Djamond Pendants and Brace-lets

Complete Line'Dianwrad Brooches and• Pins

ATTENTION

ALL LODGE MEMBERS

Complete Line of Emblem

Rings,' Pin., Cuff Buttons and

Charms to be Sacrificed Far

Below Wholesale Cost.

Charms, etc.

Sterling Silver and Gold Filled Ci|U«ette Cases, Watch Band* «nd T bClips. :

14K Collar Buttons and CigaretteLighters.

H K Cuff Button* and Gold EarrinfS.

Mesh Bags and many other uiMfiil air*

tide* included in this sale.

• ' CLOCKS — LEATHER GOODS —GLASSWARECome Early — A Small Deposit Wili Secure Any Article Until Wanted

SALE NOW GOING ON Signed M. V. CObttMOPEN EVENINGS — SALE CONTINUES TILL EVERYTHING IS SOU)

j Entire Fixtures; Watch Makers Tools and Watch Crystals For SaleWE WILL ACCEPT WOODBRIDGE BABY BONDS FOR MERCHANDISE PURCHASED

•-U'; • .f/vu^^'ttift