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four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET PRESS 20 Pages Today Four Sections School Board Mantes In Dispute Question Raised Or«r Motions Omitted President Say» Th«y Wer« Out Of Order. Ths minute* of several meetings 0 { the Board of Educstion were read Wednesday night by Lewis N. Brad- ford functioning as district clerk. The reading took more than half an hour. When it wsa completed, Wil- liam V, Csughlin, also functioning aH district clsrk protested that the minutes as presented by Bradford * ere illegal because several motions made by Commissioner Heil, had ™e» omltUd. Coughlin and Heil vot- ed against the sdoption of the min- utes on sccount of these omissions. President Theodore A. Bishop aaid that the motions In question were ightly left out because Mr. Hell made them s t a time when the board was considering some other matter than that contained in the motion, and so, the motions were irrelevant and out of order. There were some other tiffs between ths Democratic and Republican wings of the board. An invitation wsa received from the Board of Health for the mem- bers of the school bosrd to attend the baby parade tomorrow. AH mem- bers oi ths school board who can will attend. . . . , Notice wss received of a ju Greenwald wants any money du« Schwaits from ths schaol board to be paid evsr to Mm to satisfy the judgment. Application for a position as jan- itor wss rectHrtd from Stephen Toth, of Lewis street. Miss Lillian A. Gamble sent in her resignation ss a teacher and it w u accepted. Commissioner Edward J. Heil call td attention to a resolution adopted by the board some years ago not to employ married teachers who are not under tenure of office. He said that soem married teachers now em- ployed by ths board srs not under tenure of office. Commiuioner Mit- tuch wss saked to investigate. A report on enrollment showed that there are ninety-ievsn teachers employed and2,785 pupils enrolled. Many Guests Attend Port Reading Party A surprise party was given in honor of Miss Anns Magera, who nan been vacationing at the home of Mr. and Mn. Emro Kohler, Sr., of Fifth street, Port Reading, on Saturday. The rooms were decorated in s color scheme of pink and blue. Dane ing and games were plsysd. A buffet supper was lervtd at midnight. James Vernilla ssng a number of popular song hits. John Bsranyak impersonated Al Jolson and sang 'Mammy". Andrew Truba Corbett played "Picolo Pete". The guests were: Miss Anna Ma- kers of PitUburg, Va., Stephen Yed- nak and Bob Brewer of Elisabeth. The Misses Marls Detrick, Anns De- trick, Margaret Feraer, of East New Brunswick; Anna Moakovick, Paul- ine Horvanick, Anna Norko, Mary Askere and Bob O'Hara, of Perth Amboy; Artie Jorden, John Beyer, Joseph Murths, John Brtnnan, Her- bert Kithner, Rolland Cnristensen, Dotty Chriatensen, of Woodbridge. Peter Machinck, Joseph Peatrice, Michael Fsdak, of Avenel; Mary H. Karnay, Julia A. Karnsy ,Msry Par- locoski, Koia Parlocoiki, Anna On- dsr, Frances Yarchssky, Helen Ben- sulak, Mildred Stanback, Alice Stan- back, Charles Yavorskt, John Psrlo- cosk, Andrew Kondas, Joseph Troskl of Carteret. Ths Misses Bertha Kahlsr, Mary J. Kutchyak, Mary F. Kutchyak, Ju- lia Baranyak, Helen Slkara, Mary Postsk and Mrs. AUsn Moon. The Messrs. John Don Harris, Paul Don Harris, Frank Palto, Alfred Sl- mione, Andrew Tmbs Corbett, An- drew 8uperlor, Mkbael Superior, Michsel Tsckocs, Andrew Kutchyak. James Verlllo, Joseph Ansinvae,' Jo- seph Minucd, Stephen Hutnlk, Sam Corral, Edward Serpassi, Benny Martlno, Sahatore Martino, John Baranyak, Nick Baranyak, Joseph Rstnak, Michael Rsmak, Allen Moors, Emro Kohler, Jr., Edward Kohler, Bob Kohler, John Teremon- te, Joseph Konler, Julius Kohler and Benny Covino, of Port Reading. Eliiabeth Man Starts Court Action For Money Msndsmus proceedings have been instituted by Mas Greenwald, an Eliiabeth merchant, formerly of Carteret, to make Charles A. Brady, as custodian of school funds, show cause why he did not pay certain money "due to Samuel Schwartz" to the courts to satisfy a judgment obtained by Greenwald against Schwartc, two years ago. Greenwald evidently knew that some months ago Schwartz wan giv- en a job to repair the roof of the Washington school. Apparently he does not know that Schwartz never completed the job and never pre- sented a bill to the board for pay- ment. "Outlook Bright" Declares McCarthy Carteret High School Coach Predicts Successful For Grid Team. Season "The outlook for a successful season ig very bright," said Coach McCarthy, Carteret high school ath- letic mentor, in an interview with the writer this week. "And what's more," he added. "I'm thoroughly pleated with the work of the candi- dt t h h h i fi p t dates through practice." MC e candi their first week of Many Guests At Family Reunion Descendant* Of Newark Fam- ily Have Meeting At I. Zim- < AKTKUKT, N. J., FRIDAY. SUITEMBEK 12, 1930 merman Home. The descendants of the cob and Hannah Weil, of late J.- Newark, Hagaman Height* Store Robbed Twice in 3 Week* John Ltartha, of Henry street, Hairaman Heights, doe» nut mind be- ing robbed occasionally but when it happens too often he object*. Three weeks ago his place was robbed kid he made no complaint. But when the place was entered again in the same manner and the same kind of goods was taken he raised a protect with the police. Bart ha said the last Woodhuli's Pitching Defeats Manville George Allows But Four Hits A* Falcons Slam 7-1 Tri- umph Bylecki'* Two Home Run* Feature*. PRICE THREE CENTS held a family reunion Sunday after-1 robbery was on Sunday night and . , . .. . Mthat cigars, cigarettes and noon and evening in the home of- were uken ' frwn h i g a t o H ^ and Mrs. Isador 7.i«im«™.« \ .. ... •• •"• wr money •« i * i w i m I nciii iKRva irvm ms BIOre. lift M - ",» Y^Jn* I f (l0r » Zimmerman, timatea hie lose at *50. The police 118 Longfellow street. There was a , , rB lnVM n Mt w « po « McCarthy's foat difficult problem this year is to build a new line around Mitchell Csrlyle, ths only lineman left from last year's var- sity. That is, except Mike Poll, whom McCarthy expects to convert into a backneld player. Building a whole new line ia by no means an easy task, but McCarthy is confident that by ths time ths first game roll* arouad hs will have one whipped to- gether. McCarthy, it might be add- ed, lost five towering linemen thru graduation last Juns. As far as the bsckfleld is con- cerned, McCarthy has little to worry about. Bsbe Coughlln, Charles Sie- lag, Harold Huber, snd Theodore Kleban, in addition to Mike Poll, all ssw service on the vanity in 1929 and are all back this year. When asked what teams he fear- ed-•» most, McCarthy answered that Woodbridge and Rahway would be Tk« Flrtt Shop In CarUrvl To Repair Shoe* For Leu WE LEAD OTHERS FOLLOW CARTERET ELECTRIC SHOE REPAIR SHOP 590 Roosevelt Ave., Carteret Next door to Majestic Theatre Sewed or N>il«l Men's % soles and heels *I-25 Udlss Soles «B« Udlss Heels —. «0o Men's Rubber Heels (any brand ' . 40e hiMia« Baala..:.-^.!........ - ftfe wt »- Tetetan team reporting for practice this year, while Rahway has the reputa- tion of building a strong team each year. When McCarthy sent out a call for candidates a week ago today, about fifty responded. But due to ths fsct that there were only thirty- suits available, thirty candidates ap- peared at the first practice of the season on Monday. The rest were in- structed to wait until an order for twenty suits is filled. Aa soon ss thU is .done, the other twenty may re- port. Among the thirty that appeared al the first drill were aix lettermen. dinner and a social time. After the I dinner the gueats went to Bonnie I Green (Dalton's) miniature golf course and engaged in golf games. | Among those present wers: Mr. snd Mrs. David Weil and family, Mr. snd Mn. Sol Weil, Mr. and Mrs. Ja- cob Millman and family, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Millman and family, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Millman, Mr. and Mrs, Simon Millman andfamily. At- torney Emanuel Millman, Harry Millman, Miss Sylvia Millman, Mr. and Mrs. Max Granick and family, Miss Jessie Grsnick, Otto Granick, Mr. andMn. Paul Granick and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Dubow, all of Newark. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Seitelblum and family, Herman R. Seitelblum, •re investigating. A Williard battery was stolen Sat- of W. T. Sewsren. e . 0U Santa Knocks Out Jack Shaw In 2nd 266 Pound Portuguese Heavy- weight Stops South Orange Rival At Newark Velodrome Before 1O.0O0. ily, Mr. and Mrs. Sol Edelman snd family, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Reimers and family, snd Mr. and Mrs. Thom- as Levinson, all of Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. Sol Edelman, and et his fiatic headquarters " in this country, scored a knockout victory over Jack Shaw of South Orange in one minute and thirty-one second* of the second' round of a scheduled Parish Dinner Is More Than 100 Guests At Board In Presbyterian Sun- day School. The get-together Parish dinner given last night in the Sunday school room of the First Presbyterian ) Church was a distinct success about! attended. The dinner was That good old right arm of George Woodhull gave the Liberty Falcon* a 7 to 1 victory ov«r the Manvdle A. R. S. Sunday afternoon at Manville and enabled them to avenge a recent defeat at the hands of the Manville club. George Woodhull evidently w«s too strong for the Manville batters. He turned them back with lea* than a handful of hits, four in number. The most delightful part of Wood hull'* neat performance was that all the enemy hits were one base blows, In other words, singles. Another outstanding feature of the Falcon triumph was Bylecki's two monstrous circuit smashes. After hitting the second one in the sixth, he (battered several local rec- ord* and perhaps a lot of others. Bylecki's Ant four bagger came In the first with Hart on. The Falcons piled up an early 6-1 lead, scoring four in the first and one in the second. After being sup- pressed by Woodhuli's puzzling curve* for four frame*, Manville bunched two hit* to score its only run of the game in the fifth. After that Woodhull started all over again itched four more scoreless in Many New Books At Local Library Fiction li»t Include* Several Leading Mystery Stories Important Non-Fiction Vol- umes Also Added To Shelves Several new books are on the helve* of the Carteret Free Public Library according to an announce- ment of the librarian. The list con- sist* of both fiction andnon-Action. In th* former group are several of the popular mystery and detective toriea. The list follows: FICTION NORTH OF SUEZ by William Me Fee. Port Said and Egypt during iay night Santa, tipping the scale at 266, had a 70-pound advantage over Shaw who weighed 196. It was Santa's fourth knockout victory on thia aid* of the Atlantic. A crowd estimated at 10,000 includ- ing many of his ardent admirers from thi. borough saw the bout. first drill were six lettermen. They include Charles Szelag, Mike 10 ° k Poll, Babe Coughlin, Theodoe Kle- K ive « under the auspices of the Mo- ban. Harold Huber and Mitchell' ther-Teaeher Association of the Carlyle. | church. The first drill consisted of calis-' Ur H L- Strandberg waa the thenlcs, kicking, passing, blocking, toastmaster. The pincipal speaker charging, tackling, running with the wa » Rcv Joseph L. Ewing, of Rah- ball, and talks on the f undamenUls! *f V- who 9 P ok e on "Church Work", of the ame. It was concluded witn Tnere was a religious debate in several laps around the field. During!*"":" lhlce men took P art - The the latter part of the week, McCar- > heads o f t h e several organizations thy put hit (quad through a number' connected with the church made - • ' • • 'short add of' Ifght scrimmages. A light scrimmage each day with ibl ri ih g g y pouibly a scrimmage game with . , „ ,, some other high school on Friday is i o f f a l 1 flowe "' in etore for the aspirants next week. ] tlCenhtt^wTetf' Coughlln, "caSylet Sielag, Poll, O'Brien, Kleban, Hu- ber, Baku Colton, Dos%van, Grut- za, Kubicka, Easig, Schein, Dym- triaw, G. Grutxa, Collins, Mikics, Sherchek, Malkus, MarkwfU, Szu- limonski and Hila. short addresses. An excellent menu waa served and the Sunday school room was attractive in decorations Hearts Lose Hound Duel To So. Amboy Out hit, S to 4, Sacred Hearts Are Beaten, 5-2, By Morgan A. C—Fifth Inning Rally Decides Contest. Arrangements Complete For Baby Parade HEARTS LOSE MOUND The Sacred Hearts dropped a great pitchers' battle to the Morgan A, C. of South Amboy, 6 to 2, Sun- day afternoon on Leibig's Orchard. Dennen and Opiola, of South Amboy, had a close edge over Frank Pell, Sacred Hearts speed ball wiiard. They allowed four hits as compared to five made off Poll. Roman's batting waa the only live wire in the Hearts attack. He pro- pelled two hits icluding a double to drive in both of Carteret's runs. South Amboy settled the issue by scoring four counters on one hit in the fifth. A pair of bases on balls added to a fielder's choice play helped South Amboy win. The box score: MORGAN A. C. AB R H E Jtnkowski, rf 4 1 0 0 Roberts, 3b 4 1 0 1 Neraeth, 2b 4 1 0 0 K»t«, c 5 0 2 0 Letts, cf 8 0 0 0 Opiola, lb-p 6 0 10 Dennen, p-Sb 8 1' 1 0 Buckalew, as 2 1 0 0 Grace, If ....: 8 0 10 88 8 5 1 SACRED HEARTS AB R H E C. Poll, 2b 4 0 1 0 Mayorek, c 8 1 0 0 F. Poll, p 4 0 0 0 M. Poll, sa 2 1 0 0 Roman, 8b 4 0 2 0 Galvanek, If 4 0 0 - 0 Baksa, lb 8 0 0 0 Ciko, cf - 8 0 10 Kubala, rf 2 0 0 0 Zachlk, rf 10 0 0 80 2 4 0 The score by Innings: Morgan 000 040 010—5 Hearts 100 O00 001—2 The nummary: Two base hits, Ro- man and Opiola. Struck out, by F. Poll, 8; by Opiola, 7. Bases on balls, olT F. Poll, 5; off Dennen, 2; off OpioU 2. Winning pitcher, Dennen. Runs batted in, Roman (2), Grace, Katz (2). Hit by pitched ball, Rob- erts, Dennen and Nemeth. Time, 1:46. Umpire, Resko. Scorer, Novo- bllitky. Jean Shapiro Become* Bride Of Ontario, Canada Man Miss Jean Shapiro, daughter of Thomas Shapiro of 79 iRoosevelt •venue, CarUret, and I>«ac Slskind, eon of Morris Slsklnd, of London, Ontario, ware married Supday af ter- la Newark. Following t & t c w * *felB Many Cash Prizes Will Be Dis- tributed; Free Milk and Ice Cream. Everything is in readiness for the annual baby parade to be held to- morrow afternoon under the auspices of the Board of Health. It is expect- ed that the parade will be the big- gest in th« a«ri«a to date. All the principal prises this year will be in cash and the larger ones in gold. The parade will start about 1:45 and go over a route already announced. The prizes will be award- ed by Mayor Thomas J. Mulvihill. After a meeting of the Board of Health last night it was announced that an additional price had been decided upon for the carriage divi- sion. There will be three prises for the division, $7.50, $5 and $2.50. Milk snd ice cream will be pro- vided for the children after the par- ade at the garage at the side of the Borough Hall. Hold Carteret Man On Serious Charge John Menue, 23, of Randolph street, was arrested last night by Of- ficer Dan Kasher on a warrant charg- ing a statutory offense. The com- plaint was made by the parents of a 14-year-old girl. Menue, police say, admitted the charge. He was taken to New Brunswick to be held and to have bail fixed. To Open M3k Station Here In October Sanitary Inspector Of Health Board Announces Plan For Benefit Of Children, A milk station for free distribu- tion of milk is to be established in Carteret on October 2, according to an announcement made this week by Inspector Prank Born of the Board of Health. Much »f the detail re- mains to be worked out, Mr. Born said, but the milk station is assured. The station will be opened at the Board of Health room, according to present plans but some other loca- tion may be found, or, two stations may be opened, one in the Chrome aection and the other on the hill. Several local business men are backing the project, according to Born, and he is assured of at least 412 i-pint bottles for daily distri- bution. The milk is to be distributed for the use of children according to need rather than age; that is, the distri- bution will not be confined to in- fants entirely if older children are found who are in serious need of milk and are not able to obtain it. CARD OF THANKS We wish to extend our sincere thanks to the neighbors, friends and relatives of the late Andrew J. Kel- ly, for their kind expressions of sympathy. (signed Cousins— MARY T. CASEY, WILLIAM D. CASEY. D'Zurilla Beats Pro At Miniature Golf Carteret Councilman Defeat. Linden Star, 156 to 160, Foi 72 Holes—Shaves Par by 20 Strokes. William "b'Zurilla, Carteret coun cilman, who has been meeting wit! unusual success in miniature gol course play, scored another spectac ular victory on Wednesday evenin when he defeated Ben Pa re In, pr at the Sunnyfletd Golf Course, il.n den, in 72 holes at the state ivirea tion indoor golf course in Perth Am boy. D'Zurilla with 156 finished fou strokes ahead of Parola who hai lfiO. In running up his fine seme o 156, D'Zurilla sliced twenty stroke; from par which was 176. When he beat the Linden pro, D Zurilla never went higher than 2! although par is 22. He completed th first 36 holes with a remarkable 7U At the end of this time, D'Zurill: led by nine strokes. The Cartere star sunk fourteen of his first shot: while Parola made fifteen. To date D'Zurilla has won Severn tournaments on the baby golf cours es in Perth Amboy. Local Sportsmen Praise Game Warden Joseph Eggert Wins Popular ity With Carteret Fishermen and Hunters. Lovers of hunting andfishing in and around Carteret are enthusias tic in their praise of Joseph Eggert one of the game wardens in charg< of Middlesex County. Previous t Mr. Eggert's coming to thia district; hunters and fishermen say, little wa done for the Carteret section in thi way of distribution of game. Egger recently released 126 pheasants in covers within the boundary of Car- teret, mostly in the vicinity of Blair road. Last spring Mr. Eggert distribut- ed 360 pheasant eggs among local sportsmen who placed them under Betting hens. Many pheasants were raised and then liberated in local covers. It is understood that Mr. Eg- gert intends to release some quail in Carteret covers this fall. During his term as game warden in this county Mr. Eggert has also stocked Middlesex streams with more than 4,000 trout, another circum- . stance that has won the good will of I the Ashing fraternity. Local Democrats Have Big Meeting Candidate* and Others Make Addresses— Taxation cussed. Dis- war thia time are novel In the background for intrigue. Lieutenant A largely attended meeting of the Men's Democratic Club wa* held last night in Plrehouae No. 2. Fred Oeb- hardt and Peter Kroeger, freeholder candidate*, were present a&d spoke a* did local candlate* and leader*. Resolutions of sympathy were adopt- ed on th* death* of two member*, Andrew J. Kelly andThoma* Seal- ley. The club appointed Edward J. Heil chalman of the finance commit- tee and John E. Donahue chairman of the publicity committee. There Waa speaking by Joieph A. Hermann, William J. "Uwlor, Charles A. Conrad, _ . ~ . . , ^u, William D. Casey, William D'Zurilla Edward Dotes, Maxwell Soein, Rumford Is th* English naval exami- nation officer in charge of all neu- tral merchant vessels and his efforts to keep order sccording to the strict . ., Engli»h code, hi. love affair with An-, n l ottl t ^»; # T . k astaiia, his scheming wife 1 * various I *»• ulk °' Jowph A. Hermann flirtation*, the tangle of spies du- w t s t h * keynote speech of th* eve- plicity and cunning constantly sur-' nin * H * d U w ' tn taxation and rounding htm. make a thrilling and "'i ln f* rt: , t t dramatic story. A* written by Mr I Mounting sky-high, the tax prob- McFee it i* also a distinguished one l<m *<*••* u °««"PrMg th * atten- GUE9TS OF SUMMER by Paul Mil- tion of * vwv tax-payer, rent-payer ton Fulch J k A ' an(1citll » n of oar Vrough Earnest S OF SUMMER by Paul Mil- py, py ton Fulcher. Jack Amory's mother an(1citll » n of oar Vrough. Earnest had been a rebel against the harsh-' thought should be given to change ness and bigotry of the small town tnil condition. No thoughtful person of her girlhood; she was an "alien d u b t t h t h i h t tht to responsibility and her son too seemed inclined to drift thro nl condition g p doubts that high taxes threaten new enterprise*. No thoughtful person d l * * • * C tt' hih p g pon doul> * 1 *•»* Carteret's high taxes en- ff 1 ^ 1^* * •*K«*eir»et tWgW^wteswitaat oiiss-itui.es, ed in childhood? Then while drlv- ••"* ««*unly «U will agree, thai ng an ambulance in France, he met' nl * n t * Te * resu lt in industrial *tag- his parents and realized the waste notion with consequent unemploy- their lives had been. A carefully ment - written novel, notable for its deli-' ™° " v e t he borough from chaos, cate perception of emotional values ' taxes must be put back on a reason- and it iiht i t th id ' " u '" '"'"' "~" ' " ' "* pp f emotional value and its insight into the mind of sensitive child. able basis. One cannot estimate the direct loss of business due to the THE "PAINTED MINX by Robert burdens of high taxation. We are all William* Chsmbers. New York dur- tax-payers o rent-payer* We have ; " built up our home through years of hard work. We want to go our way ing the year 1777 to 1781 in posses aion of the British and besieged by . t . - - - Continental troops, provides the ' unhampered by excessive taxes, background for a lively, light n> ' Carteret is no mere, happy aeci- mance. The heroine'Is a gay little <*«"}• What we possess has been Tory actress at the theatre Royal achieved through hard work. and there is a Continental soldier t Through high taxation the present lover. The, character* are largely I borough administration takes away drawn from life with the ill fated an unreasonable share of our small Andre the real hero of thi- story. earnings and kills the Incentive to DOWN INTHE VALLKY by Har- build new homea » nd P IM for *•• old Webber Freeman. Evmard Mul- j future. , liver's mother had hem dead ft I Certainly there is nothing better month when the thought that he was' calculated to promote the well-being free at last finally pierced his con-'!"" 1 happiness of the people of thi* nciousnen. He d l y p He deciclcil drunk. In grim mood hi the Stour, thru tin towns, until he cum suddenly upon the valley. Charmed by the (|uiet beauty of the little village, he stop- ped, but not to got drunk. That was, the beginning of an adventure in, contentment, an adventure which led to marriage and a permanent home down in the vnl!ey. | THE SELBYS by Anne Green. A first novel by tho sister of Julian Notice to the Public of Carteret Due to the condition of the times and the many men who are out of work,or work- ing only part time. The Coal Dealers of Carteret will continue the summer prices until October instead of putting into effect the usual fall rise on September 1. On and after October there will be the usual increase on all grades of coal. The Carteret Coal Dealers y ster of Julian Green. Pictues the well-bred lives of the Selbys, Americans who live per- manently in Paris. They befriend their American niece whom they ed- ucate in the French manner. Her so- cial triumphs and love affairs make the story, Amiably entertaining, re- lying on brisk conversation and a penial tone for atmosphere. Detective and Myitery Stories The Mysterious Mr. Quin by Mrs. Agatha Christie. Ladies' Man by Rupert Hughes. Marked "Cancelled" by Natalie Sumner Lincoln. The Noose, by Philip MacDonsld. The Green Complex, by Harold MaeGrath. What Happened to Forester by, EoWrd Phillips Oppenhcim. | The Ticket-tape Murder by Milton Propper. The Scarab Murder Case by S. S. Van Dine. Mammon, a mystery novel, by R. C. Wren. NON-FICTION BUYING AN HONEST HOOSE by Milton Tucker. A guide that tells what a prospective buyer ought to know about materials and construc- tion of a house. Illustrated with pho- tographs and drawings. THE INVINCIBLE JEW by Har- ford Powel, Jr. A modern biography of Paul of Tarsus. But it ia more, it is a challenge to unthinking preju- dice. It in the story- of a rich, highly educated young Jewish judge who took the words of Jesus literally when he said: "Sell whatsoever thou hast, and give to the poor, and fol- low me." While this book is a story of the life of Paul it is more. The author, who is an American, loathes to get verv borough than to lift, in some degree, drove along tne burden of heavy taxation that little Suffolk nowwe 'ghs so heavily upon us. High taxes limit the purchasing power of those who would buy from our local merchants and shops. People can- not buy if they are stripped by high taxes. In 1921 the tax rate of the bor- ough was $3.46 per hundred. Today, in 1930, the tax rate has risen to $E.'J7 per hundred, an increase of almost one hundred per cent not s one hundred per cent not withstanding the fact that the val- uations have come up from $10,000,- 000 in 1921 to $12,877,903 thi* year, an increase of approximately $3,000,000. This high tax evil is only one of the many things that will be discuss- ed during the campaign. From time to time other important issues will be brought forward. A.O.H. Outing Is Pleasing 1 Affair Large Number At Atlantic Beach About 80 Mem- ber* Present. The most successful outing of Di- vision No. 7, A. O. H. was held Sun- day at Atlantic Beach. There were about eighty members of the divi- sion present. They made the trip In autos. Rev. Father Charles McCar- thy, pastor of St. Joseph's church was the honor guest He spoke on "The Irish and Their History". Joseph A. Hermann spoke on the work accomplished by the local di- vision. There was speaking by Jerry Donaghue president of the local di- vision, and by Dennis FiUgerald, head of the county organisation. Men Are Fined For Taking False Teeth Dauson Randell and Harry Brown, .. ... ., . . . . . . . , uuth colored, were fined $10 each ^JlT d £ S&XJiEPlfJg- !-t night in' police court for ate.l- ing a white mans false teeth. David Reicker, of Hudson street, had left the teeth in a lavatory and the col- norance. He believes that America is old enough to outgrow racial ta- boos. I MODERN SCULPTURE by Joseph 0 " r ed"men took them,'according to Hudnut. Contents: On the nature of tne police sculpture—Rodin-France, aince Ro-| — •• din-Central Europ*-EnglandJAm«rl T ca. HERE'S FOR A GOOD TIME by | Beatrice Plumb. A collection of par- ties for holidays and all kinda of miscellaneous social occasions for young people and adults. Contents y g pep arranged chronologically by months. SWIMMING AND DIVING by Ann Avery Smith. The director of •hysical education for women at the Jniversity of Illinois has prepared this handbook as a teacher's manual. It is a clear exposition of the tech- nique of teaching swimming; tho various methods are thoroughly ex- p oai l jjgyg were p u t o n p aro i e f or damaging the traps at the range of the Carteret Gun Club. plained and illustrated with photo- graphs. INSOMNIA; how to combat it. A readable book with many helpful suggestions that wilt be welcomed by sufferers from insomnia. Discus- ses the nature of sleep, the various kinds of insomnia, its bodily and mental causes, and treatment There iu a chapter on the use and dangers of drugs, and one on reading as a soporific. 80% OF THE LADIES OF CARTERET Will Give Evidence of the Fact That The Pure Silk Full- Fashioned CANNONETTE HOSE la the Very Best Qual- ity Hose in the UNITED STATES. You can get this Make in Thirty Leading Shades Here, Sheer or Service Weight. PRICE ONLY $1.25 Also a Fine Line of Underwear, Hosiery, Sweaters, Gloves, Blankets, Sheets, Pillow Cases, Bed Spreads, Curtains, Ladies' and Gents' Furnishings. SHOES of the finest quality for the Whole Family. Cheap John's General Store Hudson and Union Streets CARTERET, N. J.

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Page 1: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

four Page ColoredComic Section

VOL. VIII, No. 52

The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more

CARTERET PRESS 20 Pages TodayFour Sections

School BoardMantes In Dispute

Question Raised Or«r MotionsOmitted — President Say»Th«y Wer« Out Of Order.

Ths minute* of several meetings0{ the Board of Educstion were readWednesday night by Lewis N. Brad-ford functioning as district clerk.The reading took more than half anhour. When it wsa completed, Wil-liam V, Csughlin, also functioningaH district clsrk protested that theminutes as presented by Bradford* e r e illegal because several motionsmade by Commissioner Heil, had™e» omltUd. Coughlin and Heil vot-ed against the sdoption of the min-utes on sccount of these omissions.

President Theodore A. Bishop aaidthat the motions In question wereightly left out because Mr. Hell

made them s t a time when the boardwas considering some other matterthan that contained in the motion,and so, the motions were irrelevantand out of order. There were someother tiffs between ths Democraticand Republican wings of the board.

An invitation wsa received fromthe Board of Health for the mem-bers of the school bosrd to attendthe baby parade tomorrow. AH mem-bers oi ths school board who canwill attend. . . . ,

Notice wss received of a ju

Greenwald wants any money du«Schwaits from ths schaol board tobe paid evsr to Mm to satisfy thejudgment.

Application for a position as jan-itor wss rectHrtd from StephenToth, of Lewis street. Miss Lillian A.Gamble sent in her resignation ss ateacher and it w u accepted.

Commissioner Edward J. Heil calltd attention to a resolution adoptedby the board some years ago not toemploy married teachers who arenot under tenure of office. He saidthat soem married teachers now em-ployed by ths board srs not undertenure of office. Commiuioner Mit-tuch wss saked to investigate.

A report on enrollment showedthat there are ninety-ievsn teachersemployed and 2,785 pupils enrolled.

Many Guests AttendPort Reading Party

A surprise party was given inhonor of Miss Anns Magera, who nanbeen vacationing at the home of Mr.and Mn. Emro Kohler, Sr., of Fifthstreet, Port Reading, on Saturday.The rooms were decorated in scolor scheme of pink and blue. Daneing and games were plsysd. A buffetsupper was lervtd at midnight.James Vernilla ssng a number ofpopular song hits. John Bsranyakimpersonated Al Jolson and sang'Mammy". Andrew Truba Corbettplayed "Picolo Pete".

The guests were: Miss Anna Ma-kers of PitUburg, Va., Stephen Yed-nak and Bob Brewer of Elisabeth.The Misses Marls Detrick, Anns De-trick, Margaret Feraer, of East NewBrunswick; Anna Moakovick, Paul-ine Horvanick, Anna Norko, MaryAskere and Bob O'Hara, of PerthAmboy; Artie Jorden, John Beyer,Joseph Murths, John Brtnnan, Her-bert Kithner, Rolland Cnristensen,Dotty Chriatensen, of Woodbridge.

Peter Machinck, Joseph Peatrice,Michael Fsdak, of Avenel; Mary H.Karnay, Julia A. Karnsy ,Msry Par-locoski, Koia Parlocoiki, Anna On-dsr, Frances Yarchssky, Helen Ben-sulak, Mildred Stanback, Alice Stan-back, Charles Yavorskt, John Psrlo-cosk, Andrew Kondas, Joseph Trosklof Carteret.

Ths Misses Bertha Kahlsr, MaryJ. Kutchyak, Mary F. Kutchyak, Ju-lia Baranyak, Helen Slkara, MaryPostsk and Mrs. AUsn Moon. TheMessrs. John Don Harris, Paul DonHarris, Frank D« Palto, Alfred Sl-mione, Andrew Tmbs Corbett, An-drew 8uperlor, Mkbael Superior,Michsel Tsckocs, Andrew Kutchyak.James Verlllo, Joseph Ansinvae,' Jo-seph Minucd, Stephen Hutnlk, SamCorral, Edward Serpassi, BennyMartlno, Sahatore Martino, JohnBaranyak, Nick Baranyak, JosephRstnak, Michael Rsmak, A l l e nMoors, Emro Kohler, Jr., EdwardKohler, Bob Kohler, John Teremon-te, Joseph Konler, Julius Kohlerand Benny Covino, of Port Reading.

Eli iabeth Man Starts

Court Action For Money

Msndsmus proceedings have beeninstituted by Mas Greenwald, anEliiabeth merchant, formerly ofCarteret, to make Charles A. Brady,as custodian of school funds, showcause why he did not pay certainmoney "due to Samuel Schwartz"to the courts to satisfy a judgmentobtained by Greenwald againstSchwartc, two years ago.

Greenwald evidently knew thatsome months ago Schwartz wan giv-en a job to repair the roof of theWashington school. Apparently hedoes not know that Schwartz nevercompleted the job and never pre-sented a bill to the board for pay-ment.

"Outlook Bright"Declares McCarthy

Carteret High School CoachPredicts SuccessfulFor Grid Team.

Season

"The outlook for a successfulseason ig very bright," said CoachMcCarthy, Carteret high school ath-letic mentor, in an interview withthe writer this week. "And what'smore," he added. "I'm thoroughlypleated with the work of the candi-d t t h h h i fip tdates throughpractice."

M C

e canditheir first week of

Many Guests AtFamily Reunion

Descendant* Of Newark Fam-ily Have Meeting At I. Zim-

< AKTKUKT, N. J., FRIDAY. SUITEMBEK 12, 1930

merman Home.

The descendants of thecob and Hannah Weil, of

late J .-Newark,

Hagaman Height* StoreRobbed Twice in 3 Week*

John Ltartha, of Henry street,Hairaman Heights, doe» nut mind be-ing robbed occasionally but when ithappens too often he object*. Threeweeks ago his place was robbed kidhe made no complaint. But whenthe place was entered again in thesame manner and the same kind ofgoods was taken he raised a protectwith the police. Bart ha said the last

Woodhuli's PitchingDefeats Manville

George Allows But Four HitsA* Falcons Slam 7-1 Tri-umph — Bylecki'* T w oHome Run* Feature*.

PRICE THREE CENTS

held a family reunion Sunday after-1 robbery was on Sunday night and. , . .. . M that cigars, cigarettes and

noon and evening in the home of-w e r e u k e n ' f r w n h i g a t o H ^and Mrs. Isador 7.i«im«™.« \ .. . . . •• •"• wr

money•« i * i w — i m I nciii iKRva irvm ms BIO re. lift M-",» Y^Jn* If ( l0r» Zimmerman, timatea hie lose at *50. The police118 Longfellow street. There was a , , r B l n V M n M t w « po «

McCarthy's foat difficult problemthis year is to build a new linearound Mitchell Csrlyle, ths onlylineman left from last year's var-sity. That is, except Mike Poll, whomMcCarthy expects to convert into abackneld player. Building a wholenew line ia by no means an easytask, but McCarthy is confident thatby ths time ths first game roll*arouad hs will have one whipped to-gether. McCarthy, it might be add-ed, lost five towering linemen thrugraduation last Juns.

As far as the bsckfleld is con-cerned, McCarthy has little to worryabout. Bsbe Coughlln, Charles Sie-lag, Harold Huber, snd TheodoreKleban, in addition to Mike Poll, allssw service on the vanity in 1929and are all back this year.

When asked what teams he fear-ed -•» most, McCarthy answered thatWoodbridge and Rahway would be

Tk« Flrtt Shop In CarUrvlTo Repair Shoe* For Leu

WE LEAD — OTHERS FOLLOW

CARTERET ELECTRICSHOE REPAIR SHOP

590 Roosevelt Ave., CarteretNext door to Majestic Theatre

Sewed or N>il«lMen's % soles and heels *I-25Udlss Soles «B«Udlss Heels —. «0oMen's Rubber Heels (any

brand ' . 40ehiMia« Baala..:.-^.!........ - ftfe

w t »- Tetetanteam reporting for practice thisyear, while Rahway has the reputa-tion of building a strong team eachyear.

When McCarthy sent out a callfor candidates a week ago today,about fifty responded. But due toths fsct that there were only thirty-suits available, thirty candidates ap-peared at the first practice of theseason on Monday. The rest were in-structed to wait until an order fortwenty suits is filled. Aa soon ss thUis .done, the other twenty may re-port.

Among the thirty that appearedal the first drill were aix lettermen.

dinner and a social time. After the Idinner the gueats went to Bonnie IGreen (Dalton's) miniature golfcourse and engaged in golf games. |

Among those present wers: Mr.snd Mrs. David Weil and family, Mr.snd Mn. Sol Weil, Mr. and Mrs. Ja-cob Millman and family, Mr. andMrs. Sam Millman and family, Mr.and Mrs. Louis Millman, Mr. andMrs, Simon Millman and family. At-torney Emanuel Millman, HarryMillman, Miss Sylvia Millman, Mr.and Mrs. Max Granick and family,Miss Jessie Grsnick, Otto Granick,Mr. and Mn. Paul Granick and Mr.and Mrs. Benjamin Dubow, all ofNewark.

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Seitelblumand family, Herman R. Seitelblum,

•re investigating.A Williard battery was stolen Sat-

of W. T.Sewsren.

e.0UP«

Santa Knocks OutJack Shaw In 2nd

266 Pound Portuguese Heavy-weight Stops South OrangeRival At Newark VelodromeBefore 1O.0O0.

ily, Mr. and Mrs. Sol Edelman sndfamily, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Reimersand family, snd Mr. and Mrs. Thom-as Levinson, all of Brooklyn.

Mr. and Mrs. Sol Edelman, and

et his fiatic headquarters " in thiscountry, scored a knockout victoryover Jack Shaw of South Orange inone minute and thirty-one second*of the second' round of a scheduled

Parish DinnerIs

More Than 100 Guests AtBoard In Presbyterian Sun-day School.

The get-together Parish dinnergiven last night in the Sunday schoolroom of the First Presbyterian)Church was a distinct success about!

attended. The dinner was

That good old right arm ofGeorge Woodhull gave the LibertyFalcon* a 7 to 1 victory ov«r theManvdle A. R. S. Sunday afternoonat Manville and enabled them toavenge a recent defeat at the handsof the Manville club.

George Woodhull evidently w«stoo strong for the Manville batters.He turned them back with lea* thana handful of hits, four in number.The most delightful part of Woodhull'* neat performance was that allthe enemy hits were one base blows,In other words, singles.

Another outstanding feature ofthe Falcon triumph was Bylecki'stwo monstrous circuit smashes.After hitting the second one in thesixth, he (battered several local rec-ord* and perhaps a lot of others.Bylecki's Ant four bagger came Inthe first with Hart on.

The Falcons piled up an early 6-1lead, scoring four in the first andone in the second. After being sup-pressed by Woodhuli's puzzlingcurve* for four frame*, Manvillebunched two hit* to score its onlyrun of the game in the fifth. Afterthat Woodhull started all over again

itched four more scoreless in

Many New BooksAt Local Library

Fiction li»t Include* SeveralLeading Mystery Stories —Important Non-Fiction Vol-umes Also Added To Shelves

Several new books are on thehelve* of the Carteret Free Public

Library according to an announce-ment of the librarian. The list con-sist* of both fiction and non-Action.In th* former group are several ofthe popular mystery and detectivetoriea. The list follows:

FICTIONNORTH OF SUEZ by William

Me Fee. Port Said and Egypt during

iay nightSanta, tipping the scale at 266, hada 70-pound advantage over Shawwho weighed 196.

It was Santa's fourth knockoutvictory on thia aid* of the Atlantic.A crowd estimated at 10,000 includ-ing many of his ardent admirersfrom thi. borough saw the bout.

first drill were six lettermen.They include Charles Szelag, Mike 1 0 ° kPoll, Babe Coughlin, Theodoe Kle- K ive« under the auspices of the Mo-ban. Harold Huber and Mitchell' ther-Teaeher Association of theCarlyle. | church.

The first drill consisted of calis-' U r H L- Strandberg waa thethenlcs, kicking, passing, blocking, toastmaster. The pincipal speakercharging, tackling, running with the w a » R c v Joseph L. Ewing, of Rah-ball, and talks on the f undamenUls! * f V- w h o 9Po ke o n "Church Work",of the ame. It was concluded witn Tnere was a religious debate inseveral laps around the field. During!*"":" l h l c e m e n t o o k Pa r t- Thethe latter part of the week, McCar- >heads o f t h e several organizationsthy put hit (quad through a number' connected with the church made

- • ' • • • 'short addof' Ifght scrimmages.A light scrimmage each day with

ibl ri ihg g y

pouibly a scrimmage game with . , „ , ,some other high school on Friday is i o f f a l 1 f l o w e " 'in etore for the aspirants next week. ]

tlCenhtt^wTetf' Coughlln, "caSyletSielag, Poll, O'Brien, Kleban, Hu-ber, Baku Colton, Dos%van, Grut-za, Kubicka, Easig, Schein, Dym-triaw, G. Grutxa, Collins, Mikics,Sherchek, Malkus, MarkwfU, Szu-limonski and Hila.

short addresses. An excellent menuwaa served and the Sunday schoolroom was attractive in decorations

Hearts Lose HoundDuel To So. Amboy

Out hit, S to 4, Sacred HeartsAre Beaten, 5-2, By MorganA. C—Fifth Inning RallyDecides Contest.

Arrangements CompleteFor Baby Parade

HEARTS LOSE MOUNDThe Sacred Hearts dropped a

great pitchers' battle to the MorganA, C. of South Amboy, 6 to 2, Sun-day afternoon on Leibig's Orchard.Dennen and Opiola, of South Amboy,had a close edge over Frank Pell,Sacred Hearts speed ball wiiard.They allowed four hits as comparedto five made off Poll.

Roman's batting waa the only livewire in the Hearts attack. He pro-pelled two hits icluding a double todrive in both of Carteret's runs.South Amboy settled the issue byscoring four counters on one hit inthe fifth. A pair of bases on ballsadded to a fielder's choice playhelped South Amboy win.

The box score:MORGAN A. C.

AB R H EJtnkowski, rf 4 1 0 0Roberts, 3b 4 1 0 1Neraeth, 2b 4 1 0 0K»t«, c 5 0 2 0Letts, cf 8 0 0 0Opiola, lb-p 6 0 1 0Dennen, p-Sb 8 1' 1 0Buckalew, as 2 1 0 0Grace, If ....: 8 0 1 0

88 8 5 1SACRED HEARTS

AB R H EC. Poll, 2b 4 0 1 0Mayorek, c 8 1 0 0F. Poll, p 4 0 0 0M. Poll, sa 2 1 0 0Roman, 8b 4 0 2 0Galvanek, If 4 0 0 - 0Baksa, lb 8 0 0 0Ciko, cf - 8 0 1 0Kubala, rf 2 0 0 0Zachlk, rf 1 0 0 0

80 2 4 0

The score by Innings:Morgan 000 040 010—5Hearts „ 100 O00 001—2

The nummary: Two base hits, Ro-man and Opiola. Struck out, by F.Poll, 8; by Opiola, 7. Bases on balls,olT F. Poll, 5; off Dennen, 2; offOpioU 2. Winning pitcher, Dennen.Runs batted in, Roman (2) , Grace,Katz (2) . Hit by pitched ball, Rob-erts, Dennen and Nemeth. Time,1:46. Umpire, Resko. Scorer, Novo-bllitky.

Jean Shapiro Become* BrideOf Ontario, Canada Man

Miss Jean Shapiro, daughter ofThomas Shapiro of 79 iRoosevelt•venue, CarUret, and I>«ac Slskind,eon of Morris Slsklnd, of London,Ontario, ware married Supday af ter-

la Newark. Following t & t c w *

*felB

Many Cash Prizes Will Be Dis-tributed; Free Milk and IceCream.

Everything is in readiness for theannual baby parade to be held to-morrow afternoon under the auspicesof the Board of Health. It is expect-ed that the parade will be the big-gest in th« a«ri«a to date.

All the principal prises this yearwill be in cash and the larger onesin gold. The parade will start about1:45 and go over a route alreadyannounced. The prizes will be award-ed by Mayor Thomas J. Mulvihill.

After a meeting of the Board ofHealth last night it was announcedthat an additional price had beendecided upon for the carriage divi-sion. There will be three prises forthe division, $7.50, $5 and $2.50.

Milk snd ice cream will be pro-vided for the children after the par-ade at the garage at the side of theBorough Hall.

Hold Carteret Man

On Serious Charge

John Menue, 23, of Randolphstreet, was arrested last night by Of-ficer Dan Kasher on a warrant charg-ing a statutory offense. The com-plaint was made by the parents of a14-year-old girl. Menue, police say,admitted the charge.

He was taken to New Brunswickto be held and to have bail fixed.

To Open M3k StationHere In October

Sanitary Inspector Of HealthBoard Announces Plan ForBenefit Of Children,

A milk station for free distribu-tion of milk is to be established inCarteret on October 2, according toan announcement made this week byInspector Prank Born of the Boardof Health. Much »f the detail re-mains to be worked out, Mr. Bornsaid, but the milk station is assured.The station will be opened at theBoard of Health room, according topresent plans but some other loca-tion may be found, or, two stationsmay be opened, one in the Chromeaection and the other on the hill.

Several local business men arebacking the project, according toBorn, and he is assured of at least412 i-pint bottles for daily distri-bution.

The milk is to be distributed forthe use of children according to needrather than age; that is, the distri-bution will not be confined to in-fants entirely if older children arefound who are in serious need ofmilk and are not able to obtain it.

CARD OF THANKSWe wish to extend our sincere

thanks to the neighbors, friends andrelatives of the late Andrew J. Kel-ly, for their kind expressions ofsympathy.

(signed Cousins—MARY T. CASEY,WILLIAM D. CASEY.

D'Zurilla Beats ProAt Miniature Golf

Carteret Councilman Defeat.Linden Star, 156 to 160, Foi72 Holes—Shaves Par by 20Strokes.

William "b'Zurilla, Carteret councilman, who has been meeting wit!unusual success in miniature golcourse play, scored another spectacular victory on Wednesday eveninwhen he defeated Ben Pa re In, prat the Sunnyfletd Golf Course, il.nden, in 72 holes at the state ivireation indoor golf course in Perth Amboy. D'Zurilla with 156 finished foustrokes ahead of Parola who hailfiO. In running up his fine seme o156, D'Zurilla sliced twenty stroke;from par which was 176.

When he beat the Linden pro, DZurilla never went higher than 2!although par is 22. He completed thfirst 36 holes with a remarkable 7UAt the end of this time, D'Zurill:led by nine strokes. The Carterestar sunk fourteen of his first shot:while Parola made fifteen.

To date D'Zurilla has won Severntournaments on the baby golf courses in Perth Amboy.

Local SportsmenPraise Game Warden

Joseph Eggert Wins Popularity With Carteret Fishermenand Hunters.

Lovers of hunting and fishing inand around Carteret are enthusiastic in their praise of Joseph Eggertone of the game wardens in charg<of Middlesex County. Previous tMr. Eggert's coming to thia district;hunters and fishermen say, little wadone for the Carteret section in thiway of distribution of game. Eggerrecently released 126 pheasants incovers within the boundary of Car-teret, mostly in the vicinity of Blairroad.

Last spring Mr. Eggert distribut-ed 360 pheasant eggs among localsportsmen who placed them underBetting hens. Many pheasants wereraised and then liberated in localcovers. It is understood that Mr. Eg-gert intends to release some quailin Carteret covers this fall.

During his term as game wardenin this county • Mr. Eggert has alsostocked Middlesex streams with morethan 4,000 trout, another circum-

. stance that has won the good will ofI the Ashing fraternity.

Local DemocratsHave Big Meeting

Candidate* and Others MakeAddresses— Taxationcussed.

Dis-

warthia

time arenovel In

the background forintrigue. Lieutenant

A largely attended meeting of theMen's Democratic Club wa* held lastnight in Plrehouae No. 2. Fred Oeb-hardt and Peter Kroeger, freeholdercandidate*, were present a&d spokea* did local candlate* and leader*.Resolutions of sympathy were adopt-ed on th* death* of two member*,Andrew J. Kelly and Thoma* Seal-ley.

The club appointed Edward J.Heil chalman of the finance commit-tee and John E. Donahue chairmanof the publicity committee. ThereWaa speaking by Joieph A. Hermann,William J. "Uwlor,Charles A. Conrad, _ . ~ . . , ^ u ,William D. Casey, William D'Zurilla

Edward Dotes,Maxwell Soein,

Rumford Is th* English naval exami-nation officer in charge of all neu-tral merchant vessels and his effortsto keep order sccording to the strict . .,Engli»h code, hi. love affair with An-, • n l o t t l

t ^ » ; # T . k „astaiia, his scheming wife1* various I * » • u l k ° ' Jowph A. Hermannflirtation*, the tangle of spies du- w t s t h * keynote speech of th* eve-plicity and cunning constantly sur-' n i n * H * d *» U w ' t n taxation androunding htm. make a thrilling and " ' i l n f*rt: , t tdramatic story. A* written by Mr I Mounting sky-high, the tax prob-McFee it i* also a distinguished one l < m *<*••* u °««"PrMg th* atten-GUE9TS OF SUMMER by Paul Mil- t i o n o f * v w v tax-payer, rent-payerton Fulch J k A ' a n ( 1 c i t l l » n of o a r Vrough Earnest

S OF SUMMER by Paul Mil- p y , p yton Fulcher. Jack Amory's mother a n ( 1 c i t l l » n of o a r Vrough. Earnesthad been a rebel against the harsh-' thought should be given to changeness and bigotry of the small town t n i l condition. No thoughtful personof her girlhood; she was an "alien dubt t h t h i h t t h tto responsibility and her son tooseemed inclined to drift thro

n l condition g pdoubts that high taxes threaten newenterprise*. No thoughtful persond l * * • * C t t ' h i h

p g p o nd o u l >*1 *•»* Carteret's high taxes en-

f f 1 ^ 1 ^ * * •*K«*eir»et &» t W g W ^ w t e s w i t a a t oiiss-itui.es,ed in childhood? Then while drlv- ••"* ««*unly «U will agree, thai

ng an ambulance in France, he m e t ' n l * n t*Te* r e s u l t in industrial *tag-his parents and realized the waste notion with consequent unemploy-their lives had been. A carefully m e n t -written novel, notable for its deli-' ™° " v e t h e borough from chaos,cate perception of emotional values ' taxes must be put back on a reason-and it i i h t i t th i d ' "u'" '"'"' "~" ' " ' "*

pp f emotional valueand its insight into the mind ofsensitive child.

able basis. One cannot estimate thedirect loss of business due to the

THE "PAINTED MINX by Robert burdens of high taxation. We are allWilliam* Chsmbers. New York dur- tax-payers o rent-payer* We have; " built up our home through years of

hard work. We want to go our waying the year 1777 to 1781 in possesaion of the British and besieged by . t . - - -Continental troops, provides the ' unhampered by excessive taxes,background for a lively, light n> ' Carteret is no mere, happy aeci-mance. The heroine'Is a gay little <*«"}• What we possess has beenTory actress at the theatre Royal achieved through hard w o r k .and there is a Continental soldier t Through high taxation the presentlover. The, character* are largely I borough administration takes awaydrawn from life with the ill fated a n unreasonable share of our smallAndre the real hero of thi- story. earnings and kills the Incentive to

DOWN IN THE VALLKY by Har- b u i l d n e w h o m e a » n d P I M f o r *••old Webber Freeman. Evmard Mul- j future. ,liver's mother had hem dead ft I Certainly there is nothing bettermonth when the thought that he was' calculated to promote the well-beingfree at last finally pierced his con-'!""1 happiness of the people of thi*nciousnen. He d l

y pHe deciclcil

drunk. In grim mood hithe Stour, thru tintowns, until he cum suddenly uponthe valley. Charmed by the (|uietbeauty of the little village, he stop-ped, but not to got drunk. That was,the beginning of an adventure in,contentment, an adventure whichled to marriage and a permanenthome down in the vnl!ey. |

THE SELBYS by Anne Green. Afirst novel by tho sister of Julian

Notice to the Public of CarteretDue to the condition of the times and themany men who are out of work,or work-ing only part time.

The Coal Dealers of Carteret will continuethe summer prices until October insteadof putting into effect the usual fall rise onSeptember 1.

On and after October there will be theusual increase on all grades of coal.

The Carteret Coal Dealers

y s t e r of JulianGreen. Pictues the well-bred lives ofthe Selbys, Americans who live per-manently in Paris. They befriendtheir American niece whom they ed-ucate in the French manner. Her so-cial triumphs and love affairs makethe story, Amiably entertaining, re-lying on brisk conversation and apenial tone for atmosphere.

Detective and Myitery StoriesThe Mysterious Mr. Quin by Mrs.

Agatha Christie.Ladies' Man by Rupert Hughes.Marked "Cancelled" by Natalie

Sumner Lincoln.The Noose, by Philip MacDonsld.The Green Complex, by Harold

MaeGrath.What Happened to Forester by,

EoWrd Phillips Oppenhcim. |The Ticket-tape Murder by Milton

Propper.The Scarab Murder Case by S. S.

Van Dine.Mammon, a mystery novel, by R.

C. Wren.NON-FICTION

BUYING AN HONEST HOOSEby Milton Tucker. A guide that tellswhat a prospective buyer ought toknow about materials and construc-tion of a house. Illustrated with pho-tographs and drawings.

THE INVINCIBLE JEW by Har-ford Powel, Jr. A modern biographyof Paul of Tarsus. But it ia more, itis a challenge to unthinking preju-dice. It in the story- of a rich, highlyeducated young Jewish judge whotook the words of Jesus literallywhen he said: "Sell whatsoever thouhast, and give to the poor, and fol-low me." While this book is a storyof the life of Paul it is more. Theauthor, who is an American, loathes

to get verv borough than to lift, in some degree,drove along t n e burden of heavy taxation that

little Suffolk n o w w e'ghs so heavily upon us. Hightaxes limit the purchasing power ofthose who would buy from our localmerchants and shops. People can-not buy if they are stripped by hightaxes.

In 1921 the tax rate of the bor-ough was $3.46 per hundred. Today,in 1930, the tax rate has risen to$E.'J7 per hundred, an increase ofalmost one hundred per cent nots one hundred per cent notwithstanding the fact that the val-uations have come up from $10,000,-000 in 1921 to $12,877,903 thi*year, an increase of approximately$3,000,000.

This high tax evil is only one ofthe many things that will be discuss-ed during the campaign. From timeto time other important issues willbe brought forward.

A.O.H. Outing IsPleasing1Affair

Large Number At AtlanticBeach — About 80 Mem-ber* Present.

The most successful outing of Di-vision No. 7, A. O. H. was held Sun-day at Atlantic Beach. There wereabout eighty members of the divi-sion present. They made the trip Inautos. Rev. Father Charles McCar-thy, pastor of St. Joseph's churchwas the honor guest He spoke on"The Irish and Their History".

Joseph A. Hermann spoke on thework accomplished by the local di-vision. There was speaking by JerryDonaghue president of the local di-vision, and by Dennis FiUgerald,head of the county organisation.

Men Are Fined ForTaking False Teeth

Dauson Randell and Harry Brown,.. . . . ., . . . . . . . , uuth colored, were fined $10 each^JlTd£ S&XJiEPlfJg- !-t night in' police court for ate.l-

ing a white man s false teeth. DavidReicker, of Hudson street, had leftthe teeth in a lavatory and the col-

norance. He believes that Americais old enough to outgrow racial ta-boos. I

MODERN SCULPTURE by Joseph 0"red"men took them,'according toHudnut. Contents: On the nature of t n e policesculpture—Rodin-France, aince Ro-| — ••din-Central Europ*-EnglandJAm«rlTca.

HERE'S FOR A GOOD TIME by |Beatrice Plumb. A collection of par-ties for holidays and all kinda ofmiscellaneous social occasions foryoung people and adults. Contentsy g p e parranged chronologically by months.

SWIMMING AND DIVING byAnn Avery Smith. The director of•hysical education for women at theJniversity of Illinois has preparedthis handbook as a teacher's manual.It is a clear exposition of the tech-nique of teaching swimming; thovarious methods are thoroughly ex-

poail jjgyg w e r e p u t o n pa r o ie for

damaging the traps at the range ofthe Carteret Gun Club.

plained and illustrated with photo-graphs.

INSOMNIA; how to combat it. Areadable book with many helpfulsuggestions that wilt be welcomedby sufferers from insomnia. Discus-ses the nature of sleep, the variouskinds of insomnia, its bodily andmental causes, and treatment Thereiu a chapter on the use and dangersof drugs, and one on reading as asoporific.

80% OF THE LADIES OF CARTERETWill Give Evidence of the Fact That The Pure Silk Full-Fashioned CANNONETTE HOSE la the Very Best Qual-ity Hose in the UNITED STATES. You can get thisMake in Thirty Leading Shades Here, Sheer or ServiceWeight.

PRICE ONLY $1.25

Also a Fine Line ofUnderwear, Hosiery, Sweaters, Gloves, Blankets, Sheets,Pillow Cases, Bed Spreads, Curtains, Ladies' and Gents'Furnishings.

SHOES of the finest quality for the Whole Family.

Cheap John's General StoreHudson and Union Streets CARTERET, N. J.

Page 2: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

PAGE TWO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930

SmfttterertThere ar« some Morlos of which

eTfrjImily scfiim tn know the flrathalf, mid very few know the remain-der. Country Home.

\V..i*d EffortYnnkws, .\ V.—'lhr hurKlHr who

tore ilnwn the side or the IlliclilandDairy el ore tn n>h rhe place, gruiilo the diirlmess lo«ide the building,found only • half dollar tn (he cashregister. He departed with It. Th*coin was oounterfelt according to th*•tore malinger.

Hook* Two at OaaaSelma, Ala.—Two Mali on the satua

book with tha aame minnow at (begame time '« the feat eta lined by FredHammon, who produced wltneaaeaThe two trout weighed five and twopounds, reapectlvely,

666

• * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * + ]

Old Rip, theMule

Br CHARLES SLOAN REID

**************************

30 MJBHIM, stock* m C*U tka Aral4m j , >aJ c W l u Malaria la tkrw

6«6 alt* ia Tablato

Molcl-w

FALSE TEETHTiaM in tlio Monlii

D M U I MlMM* kMft VO*4l " '

uonvIBBtfctt

•Itu* (l«kI la Ui awaU.Too o»« *tt tat talk Mw*ll u fM M With

l t k O npr*TMt* k*4 bnath aaXl u M ruuaj tr aaatrtaau. II in i » i mil «T>rtoU Wtetli *

in i » i mil T>rtomUmSm. Wsitetolir •*•fMtln • • loww k

It ham kfa «rd*r It hrm D*«t wuu WMT• • aaMttatMJ O* te

ihrUtmSntljr attaaUi. H^4 M ifi.

CE.NTRAL PltARMACYRoosevelt £ Pershing Avenues

Chrome SectionCARTERET, N. J.

.iOOMETUIN'8. not to b* dona,"*3 Sim Duckett was saying. "We're

same thing as out o' rttluns; an' ain'tgot a cent o' money, 'cept that dollaryoo got for choppln' at Logan's lastweek."

81m wss isanlDf against tha wallbox, while bit wlf< sat on tha kitchensteps, shelling * ftw-green pats.

I reckon, 81m,f scrawl Sarah, witha sigh, "t-it rm wonderta' what Wlber

"I c u t borrow another nickel onthis crop, what wl' the drought an'the low prica, which spine aaj Is gittin' wuss; an' w« already got the moltan' every row o" this crop mortgaged.Bf I could win th«t twenty-Are dol-lars; bnt cant nobody enter bnt thenas owns their twn sans."

Sim sat a long while, with bla headin hla hinds. Present]; ha arose andhurried to tha ban lot iDslde stoodan old, thin mole. 81m pat the bridleon him, then barked him Into a doesfence corner, climbed the fenceone aide, and 1st himself down astrideof the mule.

"Back In about three honra, Rarey 1"be shouted.'

When 8Im returned, late In the aft-ernoon, he was af-iot, and be carrieda rifle over his shoulder. Sarahgasped.

"Lord, Sim; what juh gotr sheasked.

"I got this rifle olTn John Maxey—traded ol' Rip for tin gun, even."

"Too traded the mole for the gon.Sim?" she aoked In a weak voice.

"Yeah.""Lord, Sim; I see chain gang for

jou; an' that'll become o' meV"Ynh got to eat, ain't yuhT""Ypah; but—"

^^HHT wrr wiiffi tfwy WIBT Be 'fs)*tlons, can yuh?"

"Ko; of onurM not.""Well, then, w« got to take chances.

But don't jou worry—everything1!!come out 111 right."

'How rnn It? Yuh got t« have a

(Top | ii n

DELIGHTFULENTERTAINMENT

THREE THINGS MAKE DINING

ENJOYABLE. AN ATMOSPHERE

RESTFUL AND PLEASING . . . .

FOOD DELICIOUSLY PREPARED

. . . . AND SERVICE THAT ANTI-

CIPATES YOUR EVERY WISH.

ALL ARE TO BE ENJOYED AT

Steak and Chop House757 St. George Ave.

Woodbridge, N. J.

AFTED NE

5 RACESERE

SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENTWE CATER TO WEDDINGS,

BANQUETS A N D SPECIAL

P A R T I E S . TELEPHONE

WOODBRIDGE 8-2391 FOR AR-

RANGEMENTS.

MINIATURE GOLFPlans and LayoutCovering Specifications

COMPLETE FOR

$100.00If you plan to erect, layout or locate a miniature golfcourts, it will be well worth to purchase a aet of theseplans and specifications prior any work on aame what-so-ever. It will probably save you many hundreds of dollar*.Nearly any contractor can make you a price from sameui the same manner aa you would ask for a contract priceon the erection of a new home. It is an 18 hole course;72 par shot; a regular golf course.

FREDERICKS ARCHITECT URAL SERVICE

10» Hi t* Street, Woodbridge, N. J.

milk' In in11Hijgfiln' to Kil II?"

"There'll' he n mule." Sim had b#-gun to C'II'HU the rifle.

Sim went over the KUn careful!;,pulling It in good aliape. He was adend shot, and had DO fear of theontconia

Sim ramp In at dusk. Snrnh hadbeen husjr wlili her thnuiihti. "Yahcan trndc a mule for a gun, Sim." *h»began; "hut ynh can't trade no ranfor a mule arter th* shnnttn'."

"Haybt I can trad* back wl'Maiej."

"Hm 1 not a»oeh, juh won't I I nerarhear! o' John Maitr fJvIn1 hack nobargains."

"An/how, we trot to eat, ain't weTTtia repetition of rh* antmea si

laoceO 8«rah. Bat aha dM not sleepdarloi the alfhL Mind plctnres ofSim I D strlpea harassed h*r riafnD.

The prlaa) •hnnttng at Monk's croaavroads was an event There were threestranfere prawnt, and 81m Duckeilbegaj to entertalD Imbta. One of thestrangers, s nan named Seaborn.•cored heavily In the first round. Bnthe kept hla place manni the threeolfhett In stnnrflnn. until the lastround. There was rieaperatlon In hismovement! when he took his turn forthe las) live ahnta.

81m caraaaed bla gun barrel witbhis huad. "Pat em In the boll's eye,ok) «lst«rr he coaxed.

OtMdlently, all five ahnta Ml withinthe coveted circle. There waa nolonger any doubt about Slnfa chainplontbip; *nS later, the price moneywas p>M over to him. Be lost no timeIn covering the three mllee home.

"Barey. I reckon we can eat awhilelonger," be declared.

"Yeah, Sim; It's food to aee thatmoney, but I ain't happj. 1 seem toawe atrlpM ever which way I turn, an'they're on yon." ,

"WbRt'd I tell yub 'boat crosstn*them bridges?"

at It's shore enough bridges now,Sim r

'1 danno. What's thet 1 aee. comln

Sarah looked throunh an open win-dow.

"Ain't tbet ol1 Rip comin' back, wl'John Maxey leadln' blm?" asked Sim.with a peculiar chuckle In his voice.

Doea 'pear to be ol' Rip." Sarahslgbed. "1 reckon Matey's found outabout the mortgiie."

John Mazey was a hard man, andhe had an overbearing way. When he

alked Into Pucketl's jard, leadlnc:he mule he had traded for, there was

portentous scowl ID his face. "Comehere. Dnrkett!" he shouted.

81m tver.1 tn the doorstep. "Hello.Mr. Mixey." he grefled; "won't yubcome In?"

'No. I didn't come hpre for no vls-tln.' Tl.l* here mule you traded me

Is the outklrkln-pst varmint I eversaw In my life—an' rou knowed It!He's kicked every bonrd ofTn one nldeu' my barn. I wouldn't itlve a chew o'tobacco for Mm an' two mnre like Im."

"All right, Mr. llaiey." giild duckett In hurt lonps; "yuh can hnve yutgun. «n' I'll f»l<e the mule hn<-kYnh'll allers 1D(1 81m Pui'ketr a fairBJHD I"

81m brought the rifle from thehouse; and a nvirneni Inter led oldRip back to the barn lot. When hereturned to the house, there was abourn of joy on Surah's race.

•Yuh see, Snrey?" Sim winked.Tli"-e ain't a man In Milt county asknows how to hnndle them lalga ofol' Rip's hut me."

— Please mention t^li paper to ad-vertisers; it helps you, it helps them,It helpa four paper, —

TWOcylinders . . .

TWICE theconveniencePTMOWAX GAS SSSVICI ia thaerigiaal beyond-tht-gas-inainaemce—the oldeat and thalargest. Its two-cylinder sys-tem is sapplying gas to thon-aawb of homes from coast tocoaat with unfailing certainty.

The reaerve cylinder it whatmada Prrofas umoua. Therela no substitute for it One cyl-inder ia UMd-4he other ia Inreserve. Qetting freih gaa re-qniras absolutely no attention*from you—we bring Jou thafoil cylinder and remove the•nqrty ona. Bach cylinder holdatwo to three montht' snppljr.Weight ia triple-checked—you get what you pay for.

If you want relitbU gis a»r-viee, we are moat eagar to •op-ply it. Let ua tell you moreabout tha new low-price offer.Call, write or telephone.

$H3T5 *INSTALLED WITHPYROFAX OUTFIT

\ f i>o» ('Vjif wptr./*(/r# ttrvict to Pynftx

l"»i i Lot Min Ktfulitor•< >'/(A( tdditlontl irtrt.

PrrotMZ two-cyHain tymtrm U timfiti . ABC. Dltftm « t o a Him* pi*

tag tnm cytimdmn f nmf.YROFAX GAS SALES A SERVICE

N. E. Corner Church * E. Second Stij

Solve Slaying Mysteryby Motor Car's Squeak

St. Anthony, liliihn-~A peculiarsqueak In an automnlilK1 resulted Inone suicide aod tlie arrrxl of a mnnand wiianiii In cuiiiHM'tlini with amurder.

When David R. Jenkins disappearedthe night of November 18 no trace ofhis movements was discovered. Ul»body, bullet-riddled, was round In anIrrigation ditch nearly a month later,On the night of hit disappearance hitautomobile had been mysteriously re-turned to Its garage.

During the course of Investigationseveral persons reported that theyheard a car wltta a peculiar squeakpass down toward the river the nightof November 18- Officers combedgaragea and naed car markets of thissection, hunting for a "car with •peculiar squeak."

They finally found It In a Pocatellogarage. It had been owned by GlenJenklna, a nephew of the murderednan.

John Jenklna, brother of the slainnan, was questioned. He committedanleide the following day.

Qlen Jenkins wai arrested and 1MImplicated Jennie Bishop, a spinster,and the two art being held for trial.

Official Take* Law inFist, Man Take. Count

Monntalnalde. N. J.—I'ollce RecorderWilliam F. Wlnklar took the taw lahit own bands—«r flsta-bere. whena man arraigned for disturbing thepeace spat la the official's face. Winkler's right landed flush on the chin ofthe expectorator and the usual countof "ten" was annecesaui-y.

Equity (MailingDoubtless that machine made to

record a man's lisa Is something liketh* score card used by golfers.—Buf-falo Evening News.

=CARTERET PRESS

Dog, in Sha.c 3 Weeks,Saved in Spite of Self

Wcllaton, Ohio.—Efforts continuedfor three weeks to rescue s dot; th:ithad fallen Into an aliandnned mint) shuf1

failed, the dog retreating Into the luittorn tunnel each time, would-be rescuerg defended. At lust aoiuelmilythought of taking another dog down.The trapped animal came out to meeiIts kind and was hauled to the sur-face.

Wheelbarrow* and Toeifor Endurance Tests

Paris.—The freak endurance erasehas crossed the Atlantic and aet ayoung Frenchman, Rtynaud, of Havre,trundling around tht country poshinga wheelbarrow-, while tha dancer, Mile.Adrleone Tlaurla of Vienna claims the

rMY record for remaining poised onher toes. She claim*) the remainedthus poised for fourteen and a quarterhonra.

I THE PERTH AMBOYj GAS LIGHT COMPANYi

Ii

I

206 SMITH STREET

, Heating and Cooking Appliances

Ruud Automatic and StorageWater Heaters

I•

I•

I

New Process Gas Ranges

•STIlf

Old Jefferson ClockAgain Performs Duty

Richmond, Va.—The famousclock over the entrance to Montlcetto, the home of ThomasJefferson, It running again, aft-er being out of order for manyyears.

The clock hat a double fHce,the hour being read both fromthe ball and from the terrace.Far out of the grounds, strik-ing of the hour enn now heheard as It waa In Jefferson'stime.

Among the recent sightseer*was a Jeweler who offered topnt the clock In condition at hisown expense. Because of his In-terest and labor this ancienttimepiece once agafa performsIts aJlotted duty.

Con-Den-Rit Radiant LogsOdorlet^Effident—Inexpensive

Telephone 8510 Ptfth Anboj

II

II

'frnwHsmftti

HOLOHAN BROS.GARAGE

Dnnlop Tirwf and Tube*Tb* and Tab* Rapairinf -

Pull l ine of Auto Accessories

i';:#iHfcfa .••:.:' mr.v

PERTH AMBOY'S MONSTER SALEThe most terrific underselling ever attempted in this community. Valuesthat will stagger the vision of your eyes. Never, in this town or any town,has merchandise been offered to the public at such stupendously low pricesas the

Lincoln Clothes Shopis offering in this sale. Prices Torn to Smithereens! Only four WallsMust Be Left!

MEN'S SUITSNEW FALL STYLES

Value $35.00

$16.85MEN'S WORK

PANTSValue |1.50

99c

MEN'S and LADIES'

HANDKERCHIEFS

lcMEN'S SUITS

ALL WOOL

KNICKERSGUARANTEED

$1.95MEN'S

UNION SUITS3 for $1

MEN'S SILK

NECKWEARValue |1.00

3(tr$l

MEN'S FANCY

DRESS SHIRTS Q Q..WITH STIFF COLLARS ^W ^MUp-to-the-minute Styles andPatterns. Value $1.96 </</

Men's Top

Coats

MEN'SBroadcloth

THE FAMOUS "MASTER"Guaranteed Fast Colors

In Blue, Tan, Green, WhiteLavender and Peach. Value |1.75

MEN'S SUITSReg. Value $14.75

MEN'S SUITSRegular $25.00

$ 1 SV8510MEN'S SUITS

Regular $30.00

$13.85LINCOLN

115 SMITH STltMCLOTHES SHOD

PERTH

Page 3: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

PRESS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930PAGE

With the purchase of any twu suiUs offurniture.

May Be Purchased For '25?°

r reelWith the purchase of any Living Room

Suite.

$0050For

F r e e ! 9xl2 R««With the purchase of any Dining Room

Suite.

May B« Purchaied For * * I

TRADE INB« up-to-date and refurnish your

hone with the iiewwt 1931 styles.

Talc* advantage of this exceptional

trade-in offer. Your old furniture is

accepted, liberal allowance extend-

Mr. LeibMr. Leib has auumed entire con*

trol of Ludwig's. He it known to

practically every one in Perth Am-

boy. It U his desire to give each cus-

tomer his personal attention.

FV.a.of Boudoir* r e e J Chair

With the purchase of any Bedroom Suit*.

May Be Purchased For

F l o o r

LampWith the purrhanv of Davenport Suite.

$7«

SPLENDID FURNITUREAT

Lowest PricesIN LUDWIC S

FALL OPENING SALEPay $1.50 Weekly

1§ A4CNTHSTC

Sale of

STOVES

Prepare for those long cold winter

day*. Buy your heating and cook-

ing need* now while prices are

lowest.

BLACK COAL RANGE $39.75

GRAY GAS STOVES 38.95

CABINET COAL RANGE 23.89

3 BURNER GAS STOVE 14.75

rax Dimmm n u m JM miifnim. m UTIAI MH IM MT

Big Ml LW ;AI M I mm tm MTiMnMrmrmr Tut mrmi m i

Pay $1.50 Weekly

3 Pc. Velour Living Room Suite

$Beautifully upholstered in handsome velours and features novel

pleated backs. The frames are smartly carved. An exceptional value

at tbi» low price r -

FREE SECRETARY 98

4 Pc. Bedroom SuiteFour generous piece* comprise this magnificent bedroom. Finest

woods are used throughout. The beautiful graining, the genuine

walnut veneers make this suite an outstanding value in this sale.

FREE - BOUDOIR CHAIR 98

$1Delivers

Any Piece

4 Poster Bed

$9.45RaguUrly $19.78—In the smart Colonial style. Attractively finished inmahogany or walnut. All sizes.

Inner SpringMattress

$14.75Regularly $27.75 — ComfortableGuaranteed for satisfactory wear,lovered in u durable tipking.

Coil Spring

$7.95Regularly $14.7S — You are assur-iil of maximum comfort anl luxuri-ous ease. Kustproof finish. Sanitary,May be hail i» all i

10 Pc. Walnut Dining Room Suite

$This wonderful suite was made to sell for $160. Eacli piece is mass-

ively built. Finished in walnut with ornamented panels. Includes a

buffet, extension table, server, china, 5 chairs and host's chair.

FREE-9x12 RUG 98

2 Pc. Kroehler Davenport SuiteThe famous make "Kroehler" has established a reputation for man-ufacturing high-grade Davenport Suites. This suite explains theirrapid Btrldes. 3 pieces, In velour with mahogany frame. Davenportopens to full-size bed.

FREE - FLOOR LAMP

$70-50

OpenSaturday and

Monday NightsL U D W I

175 Smith Street PERTH AMBOY Cor. Madison Ave.

PurchasesWill BejHtldUntil Wanted

Page 4: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

PAGE FOUB FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 19.50 CARTERET

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, f 1.50 Per YearPublished Every Friday By

C. Jl. BYRNE, 130 Jeraey St., CARTERET, N. J.Telephone Carteret 160Q

C. H. BYRNE Editor afld OwnerEntered ai second class matter June 5, 1924, it Carteret, N. J.,

Post Office, under the Act of March S, 1879.

Foreign Advertising RepresentativesNew Jersey Neighborhood Newspapers, Inc.

PUZZLING LAWS

Eleven states have abolished a maximum speed limit forautomobiles, according to a compilation of speed laws madeby the Keystone Automobile Club of New Jersey. The states,in which conscience is the guide of the motorist and in whicihe is permitted to drive at any speed so long as it is "reasonable and proper" considering road and traffic conditions, areConnecticut, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Tennessee, Vermont, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

On the other extreme, the Club finds that Massachusettsclings to a 20-mile an hour maximum, while Missouri worriesalong with a 25-mile limit. Eight states keep pace with Penn-sylvania in making the limit 40 miles an hour. They are Cftlifornia, Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jeraey, South Dakota and Washington.

Eleven states hold that 45 miles an hour is n ™nd drivingspeed. In this category are Alabama, Illinois, Louisiana, Min-nesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, OklahomaSouth Carolina, Texas and Virginia.

States where a 35-Mile maximum is in force are ArizonaArkansas, CotffrStfB,; Delaware, Idaho, New Hampshire, NortrrDakota, Oregon, Rhode Island and West Virginia. A 30-milelimit is imposed by Utah, New York, Mississippi, District ofColumbia.

Only one legalizes the speed most commonly noted on theopen road—Nevada—which thinks 50 miles per hour is aboutright.

All of these findings of the club point to one major reasonfor our mounting toll of death and injury from motor acci-dents. Man is a creature of habit; also he is a homebody forthe most part. Motorists spend the greater part of the yearriding about the sections where they live and become automatically adjusted to their home states. Then, when the vacationtime comes and they venture forth on longer trips, across stateborders, they come into conflict with new regulations contraryto their fixed habits of driving and speed, It is no wonder thatthey become confused and have frequent serious accidents.

The need of uniform speed and other traffic laws becomesmore urgent aa the number of machines on the highways in-creases. And there is need, too, of uniform enforcement withinstates. The recent attack of Commissioner Harold G. Hoffmanupon lenient magistrates with drunken drivers and other trafficlaw violators is justified. We need sane, uniform laws enforceduniformly without favor. "

NATION NEEDS HOME

By MRS. THOMAS ALVA EDlSOBf.

i ECAUSE the art of home making has declined BO niurfi In recent

years, due bo the trend originating in woman Suffrage and the

World war, the country is facing a situation of widespread rest-

lessness. Men no louger find satisfaction in their homes. Unless

, the women of America make a decided effort to return to the business of

home making, the most vital institution of the country ic threatened.

America is essentially a nation of homes. The woman who doesn't want

to make a home is undermining our nation.

An aversion to housekeeping exists on the ground that there is too

, much drudgery connected with it, but every business and everything in

life ia 98 per cent drudgery. •„ •

As a matter of fact, a good home maker most have executive ability

mud be a good purchasing agent, an economist, sotoething of a chemist

to supervise the diet of her family, and a gracious hoett-ss. She also

should be versed ia music, art and literature to have a proper background

and to be able to entertain herself, her husband and her mends,

A college education ia invaluable for such a home maker. If the

family finances make it necessary to choose between sending a boy and »

girl to college, the girl should be the one elected.' The boy can get bis

broadening contacts in business and elsewhere.

The collegt woman, however, must realize that home making is her

highest goal and that it ii a full-time proposition which is as much of a

business as running an office. In flocking into outside business, women

have lost their prestige in their own field without making op for it by

accomplishment on a par with that of men in business.

ADVERSITY AS A BLESSINGBj REV. DR. j . P. UcCOUAS. New York

These are the days of depression and hope of cecoverj In business,

and, in a measure, in political and social life. A year ago onr people

were snared with success, but now we are learning the. uses of adversity

•nd we must recognize it as one of God's dealing with men, sent in love

and wisdom. When God sends success, and we accept it u from Him,

and value the Giver above what is given, using it BB a truBt, then it is

not to be feared.

In 1898 and in 1918 most men boasted "we won the war" and forgot

to sing Te Deum. Now we can be'thankful for partial recovery, and

that we are aware of the ambush and the snare. Let it be a suinmOD) to

sew adventure nud unselfish service.

SHOT

J The School Bell D

Probably WorU'i Olde.t CatSaid to lie the olilent cut In the

worljl^ (he (nutninlfl'*1 remains of onediscovered in a ver,, ancient Egyptian

U*~bMwbt to Uwdoa tot •*>hlhltlon. The chances are this catoftPti In Its day has looked at themight; kings of HIM leal days, ID keep-Ing with tho anripnt privilege of cats.

CLASSIFIED ADSClassified advertisements only on*

cant a. word; minimum charge 25c.

WANTEDLEAN RAGS wanted, size of hand-kerchief or larger, 6c a pound

Middlesex Press. 20 Green street.

FOR RENT

FOR RENT—Bungalow, four rooma,and bath, electric, concrete cel-

lar; with or without garage. Forrent or for sale; inquire Steven'sClub, Rahway avenue, Avenel. Tele-phone Woodbridge 8-1257.

•"OR RENT — Two unfurnishedrooms; all conveniences including

;as, electric and steam heat; $26per month. Apply 40 Remsen ave-nue, Avenel, N. J.W. I. 9-12.

SOME 1940 ANSWERS

The examlnatfbps were on, and theschool ma'am had added these to tier

OR RENT—5 rooma and garage,26 Brookneld avenue.

W. I. 9-12*.

FOR RENT—Two extra large fur-nished rooms with or without

board. Address 643 Linden avenue,telephone Woodbridge 8-0577.W. I. 9-8.

FOR RENT—2 or 4 furnished room...apartments; also furnished rooms

apply Mrs. Little, 144 Main streettelephone 3-M.W. I. 7 4 tf.

ROOMS ANd BOARD611 Barren avenue, Woodbridge,

N. J. '/hone 892. [W. I. 8 -U tf I,

FOR SALE

'OR BALE!—Five room house withbath and all improvements in Row-

land place. Telephone Woodbridge8—1710.

GROWN right here, big variety ofShrubs, Trees, Evergreens, Roses,

'•rentals and Rock plants my special-;y. Prices reasonable. Come and se-lect yoors now while in bloom forPall planting. J. E. JANSA, Sewar-

6?18 to 9-26*.

BUSINESS NOTICES

Henry Jansen, Tining and SheetMetal Work; also furnace work.

Aden street <near White Church)Woodbridge, N. J, Telephone Wood-br idn 8-1246.W. I. 9-12 to 12-12*.

C. LEPPER—Furniture and pianosmoved anywhere with A-l equip-

ment: storage reasonable. 441 Am-boy Ave. ,Tel. Perth Amboy 2318.

HAIRDRESSERFinfwrwave, 60c; manicure, 25c;fssreell, 25c; massage, 60c; oil

treatment, 75c; Henna rinse, 60cCall Mrs. Binder at Woodbrkijt8<i2290 for appointments; also callat your home.W. I. 8-15, 22, 29, 9-5, 12

TRUCKING, local or Ions; distancetwo trucks at your convenience

Phone Woodbndge 198. John ThornOakland avenue, Sewaren.

MODERN YOUTH MORE SERIOUS

J!r I'KOF ALFRED ADLER, Viennese

The hard-boiled parents of today, the men and women who a fewyears back were tho flaming youth of America, ara meetitig retribution.Their children are growing up the best; behaved, mbst eb'oserva'tfve generation of a century. The little girl who poutjnglj aaySj ''Ob, .mother,don't smoke so much," and the small bo; who reproresMi nJotber with:"Hat's y<rar second cocktail this afternoon," are all signVof^e voungrrtint*. • _ • , . . . , , : . . . . ' „ • , . ' / ..•

> * Tha JQUth of ffldaj is more serious, more romantic These growingbojs *D$ ptfr hiTt a gtaiter social conscience than their predecessors

Ag a rssnjt^ th«T dstsat the hardness, the cynicism and materialistswfiook oY U»^ r » r « A ^ pendulum has swung back again. Only

whirh is OD

'Atywhere-AnytiiiM'DRAKE'SSTORAGEMOVING

PACKING— IHirriNQ• • •« • •• t t u a u U i Rate*M l I I I M W H I A T I I H •

P U H I Lladaa 1S1I

A brlicet Is a younger bear.

The poll tax Is paid by parrots.

Mussolini Is a kind of goods furdresses.

False doctrines means giving peopleChe wrong tnedlqlne.

All Babs means being awn; whenthe crime was done.

A chronic disease Is something thematter with the chrone.

The Musalr law orders us to setcolored atone* to our floors.

We know nothing iihoul Jonah's parents because he hod mine, lie wapbrought up by a whale.—SpringfieldUnion.

GettingUp Nights

tf (Jetting- Up Nig-ht* Backache,frequent day call*, Leg Palna, N«rr-oueneee, or Burnltur, due to function-al Bladder Irritation, in Mid condi-tion*. makM TOO (Ml tired, depressedand dlMOUraced, try the Crstex Teat.Works fast, (tart* circulating thruthe system In If minutes. Praised brthousands for rapid and positive ac-tion. Don't give up. Trycyitox (pro-nounoed Bln-tex) today, under theIron-did Guarantee. Must quicklyallay these conditions. Improve r*«t-ful eletp and rtergy, or money back*Only too at

Brown's Reliable Pharmacy576 Roosevelt Ave.CARTERET, N. J.

From Youth to AgeThars are three trying periods! in awoman's life: whan the girl maturesto womanhood, whsa a womangrfsa birth to her tot child, when awoman reaches mlddla afe. AttbSM times Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegstable Compound helps to re-store normal health and vifor.

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GOOD TEACHINGAND EDUCATION

By THOMAS ARKLE CLARKDean of Mea, Uaivertity of

Illi.oU.

# # • • # * # # # » # * * # • • * # # # * # * * •

No one believes more than 1 do Inthe deslr. hlllty of having good teach-

ing In our schoolsand colleges andno one more thanI deplores the fnctthat so man; ufthose engnned Inteaching are notndequntely pre-pared and not es-peciull; InterestwlIn those they teach.And yet T am con-vinced that the In-tellectual progressof a child or ayouth depends fur

innrt- upon his own interest and per-sistence and determination to Improvehis mind thnn It does upon h • sortof lenchers he hns. A poor teachermay even be n stimulus to greater ef-fort upon the part of a Btudent thanotherwise nnd may result ID his great-er self relii.pce and Independence ofthought.

Before I attempted to gain entranceInto college I lint] hut one teacher whohod ever progressed farther tlmn thegrammar school before beginning toteach, and while ID college I was un-der the Instruction of but one manwho had ever earned In course a high-er than the bachelor's degree, andyvt I cannot feel that I was partlcu-lurly handlca i>ed. I might b muchwiser today thn" I now am r 1 hudhad hetter teachers, but perhnps Ishould have weaker powers of Inde-pendent thought.

Brown was In to see me a fewweeks ago concerning the scholasticprogress of his son. The boy Isn'tgettliiK on well and the father thinksthat the cause of his son's mediocreaccomplishment is **ie fact that he Isbeing bailly taught. The intellectuiilroad Is hard for him, and no one Ismaking It as smooth and easy as hewould like, and *a be thinks shouldhe done. The bny wants to be Stvpwn;he wants to be taken by the band andled sympathetlcilly through the con-fused mates of education. He has noinclination to blate bis own trail, toAnd his own way, to climb unassistedover the obstacles which lie In his In-tellectual path. Neither Brown norhis son assume an uousoal point ofview. They hare the general attitudethat education should ba made as sim-ple and easy as possible. Bat that tsnot the way that either the mind orthe body Is trained.

The greatest scientist and the great-est teacher I have ever known—oneof the greatest In this country andone whose name is familiarly knownover tht civil lied world, died s fewmonths ago. He was a specialist In ahair down fields when most men arequite contented' to star In one. Becould read and speak a half dosenlanguages, and though he was par ex-cellence a scientist, he wsa versed inhistory anj philosophy and literature.

"In no one of tb.- various subjectswhich 1 turn taught," he said once."have I ever had one hoar of formalteaching. I have worked things outfor myself."

No one had ever made the road eavqpfor him. He was eager for knowl-edge, m l he blazed his own trail.

As I said, no one stands for goodteaching more tlmn 1 do. It is help-ful, but It Isn't essential If one Isleiilljr eager for an education.

<A lite, Wittwa Nmrepaper Unleeo

HOW IO K^EP A FRIEND

DAFor

AY and NIGHT SERVICE

"SPKTTAXIPHONE

WOODBRIDGE8-OS38

Two Car Service

Count the Cost Now!Insurance is a commodity which cannot bepurchased when it is needed most.Check up before you burn up.

JOHN H. CONCANNONREAL ESTATE - INSURANCE

76 Main St. Woodbridge ETeL 84)290

I t>nd him money.

Give him a tip on the market.

luvlie his wife to luncheon.

Admire his stenographer.

Heiit him at gulf.

How to Los* a Friend-

Lend him money.

Give him a tip on the market.

Invite his wife to luncheon.

Admire his stenographer.

llciii him at golt.

GRANDPA WAYBACK

I ts lots easier to H|>»l<i|flw to sl>lg man than to a little one.

A young Intellectual Is one who Isiilwnys talking about new Ideas buinever has any.

It must he nice to move In the nestsociety and gel your mime In the roostexclusive advertisements.

They net a better flnlih on autoshy spmylng on the iwlrn. and I oftenwonder why the flnppers don't try thaimethod, too.

One thing the mutter with (he worldtoilny Is that too mnny |*<>[>I* thinkIt In more Important to nh»erv» Ihtrules of ell<|iie1 rtitin the Ten J'nm

4 M l

First Church of Christ, Scienti,,Sewaren

A branch of The Mother (The First Church of Christlist, in Boston, Mass. '

Sunday Service—n'00 A MSunday school—9:30 A M

ZtTyTti

Makei F n » d ClaimDe Pavw university, at Greencastle,

naiflis tne ntwor of bdtsp th***first denominational college An Uif

5 : 0 0 p M r 0 0 m ' 3 * 0 to

"SUBSTANCE" will h. tht sub-ject oi tht Lesson-Strmon in «MChurches of Christ, Scientist onSunday, September M, 1930

The Golden Text is: "If we hopefor that we see not, then do wewith patience wait for it" (Romans

Among the citations which com-

finse the Lesson-Sermon ii the foLowing from the Bible: "Now faith

is the substance of things hopedfor, the evidence of things notseen" (Hebrews. 11:1). l

The Usson-Strmon ilio includesthe following passage from theChristian Science textbook, "Scienceand Health with Key to tht Scrip!tures1 by Mary Baker Eddy:" When we come to have more faithin the truth of being than we havein error, more faith in Spirit thanin matter, more faith in living thanin dying, more faith In God than inman, then no material suppositionsc»n prevent us from healing thesick and destroying error" (p. J« )

Go Hobby Rldla (

Get yourself a> nobby or Hn svr<-n-tlon, to keep you from growing staleThen when things snarl up. take vouriself over to your hobby, like steppingfrom a room you are tired of intofresh surroundings.—Woman's n,imeCompanion.

EagHsV .The public school system of r..,s.

land was introduced by the rosiereducation art of 18T0. Before theputitlr trtitiois were tnrrwtttcM intoEnglund the schools were largely <]»Id l t t f j r fh l j t r -•-•• v : ~ ™ « — • * • • ' «*

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76 Main St. WoodbridgeI TeL 84299

VACATION SEASONIS NOW OVER

Your Attention Naturally Turns to Coming SocialActivities and What to Wear

Let Me Solve YourCO A T PROBLEMS

Whether They Be of Cloth or Fur

Your PUR COAT has probably been forgotten. Now isthe time to have it examined. It may only require a slightalteration to make it over to the present-day style.

YOUR CLOTH COAT—A new fur collar or cuffs—orpossibly relined will make it look like new.

If You Contemplate Buying a New Fur Coat Aak UsAbout Our Trade-in Plan.

Every New Style for the New Season—Now on Display

Hare Your Furs Cleaned THE FURRIER'S WAY

It preserves the pelts and restores their natural oils.

A. GREENHOUSE66 SMITH STREET, NEAR HIGH STREET

PERTH AMBOY, N. J. -

Page 5: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

ARTERET PRESSF R I D A Y , S E P T I O M U K K 12, 1 •»!(()

"\T 1 V I 1 •*•*». ~~" — PAGE nv i

XardJearn^PressesOffice For Lead In Factory LoopGreat Array Of Drivers To r I " T H A T I ITTI C O A M C » . .— •_T: » . . . i c-«i-»-«^4.i,.L.rtNiIhiT. a*. u..««vu.«w. A _Cmit Array Of Drivers To

Perform At Speedway SundayFall R«cing Se«on To Open With Galaxy Of Star. Competing

—Expect Bitter Battle Between Billy ArnoJd and Deacon

Litz — Many Old Favorite* Back Again.

The greatest array of drivers ever to ride at the trackincluding the national champion, Billy Arnold, will compete atthe Woodbridge Board Speedway Sunday afternoon, Septem-ber 14, in an extra large program of sprint events that willmurk the opening of the Fall season, at the shore road bowlFive of the "first ten" ranking drivers in America, not to men-tion more than a score of other highly rated speed kings, havelined up for the meet. Included among the entries is theracing brilliant, Deacon Litz, the fastest man in an automo-bile in America, now the holder of the fourth national ranking.

"DEACON" LITZ

Othen entered « • the fifth-rank-ing RUIMII Snowberfer, tht crackPhiladelphia!!, who will be showingfor the flnt tima this Mason at thehalf-mile Mueer. Still othen antoMdarc the ninth-ranking Frank Fannerand the tenth-ranking HermanSchurch, as well as the consistentFred Frame and the daring BillyWinn.

Attract!** ProgramAn unuaual program haa been

carded by Ralph A. Hankinaon, racepromoter. Two 26-rall* event* havebeen listed. One of the two will bea limited event, confined to sevendriven, namely Schurch, Frame,George Wingerter, Tony Soil, Fir-man Lawshe, Jimmy Patterson andHernie Kat».

The card will be opened by thia2.r>-mjler. Than in ontar will followthe time triala, the three 6-mile qual-ifying! heat* and a 10-mile consolstion event, all of which will precedethe final 25-mile race.

Kecorda are expected to be shat-tered with inch a card of event* and"uch • galaxy of big-time drivers en-tered. Moat of the fastest one-seatedcan in the country will also be onhand.

Included among them will be thebrand new demon* in which thefair-haired Billy Winn shattered aworld's record at the Trenton Fairlast week. The coatly Miller in whichthe ill-fated Ray Keech drove to vic-tory in the 1929 Indianapolis classicand two week* later trashed to hisdeath in, )* also entered. It will bedriven by Frank Farmer.

Also entered is Deacon LIU's fastMilter, which ha* accounted formany prises. Fred Frame in anotherconsistent Miller, Herman Seharch'i"88" Fronty, in -which he assaultedthe records with reckless abandon|*st week both at Trenton and atDeer Park, L. I., and Jimmy Glea-son't fact Dusenberg are included•mong the other "speedy"tered.

jobs en-

Gat* H«ge CoaramteeThe appearance of Billy Arnold,

undoubtedly one of the standoutfeatures of the meet, Is costing Han-

kimon a pretty penny. This fellowArnold is no piker. He picked upslightly more than $57,000.00 atIndianapolis in prize and lap moneyalone, also |4,{>00 both times he cop-ped at Altoena and has also sharedother prizes. In addition endorse-ments of various things such as tires,oil, gas, etc., nets him close to a f 1,-000 a week.

Hankinaon dickered with him forseveral weeks, each time jacking uphis origin"! offer until the 23-year-old sensation from Chicago finallysuccumbed and agreed to ride. Theappearance money granted Arnold issaid to be the largest ever to be giv-en by a promoter of such a track toa national champion for a single ap-pearance.

But Hankinson feels it is worthWhile, for this boy Arnold burnsthem up. At Altoona, on Labor Day,for instance, he hit as high as 124miles an hour and over the 116}mites the race went before beingcalled by rain averaged 113 milesper. Which is stepping some.

However, Arnold will have to step,for there will be plenty out with theintention of showing him up. Dea-con Litz Is one of them. The huskyPennsylvanian has been tagging theChicago youth all season but notonce has he succeeded In beating.

Now, though, Liti figures he cando the trick. For one thing, Litzknows the track, having driven theremany times. Arnold on the otherhand will be trying something new,trying to navigate around the steep-ly banked bowl at death-defyinRspeed. • /"

Look. Lik. To.. UpWhile it appears as though there

will be a tiuel for premier honorsbetween Litz and Arnold, chancesare that there will be a wild scram-ble instead. Frame and Schurch, twoof the consistent winners, can bedepended upon to put up • sternbattle to defend the positions whichthey have held at the track andSnowberger and Gleason are out tospeed their way into popularity asis Billy Winn, now that he has a carcapable of knocking off some faatspeed. '

•THAT LITTLE CAME inUr-nal'l Cartoon C<SK.»- B y B . L i n k

OHOf5H« CAN GET

AHtf M<»W OUT OP•<oo T o SPEHb.

Woodbridge WallopsCarteret Krimkos

Herb Nannen's All Stars, Out-

hit 17 to 8, Lose 13-7.

Outhit 17 to 8, Herb Nannen'sCarteret Krimkos were decisivelydefeated, 15-7, by the WoodbridgeA. C. Sunday afternoon on the Cop-per Works field.

The box score:WOODBRIDGE

ABIfAnderson,

Nega, 3bDelaney, KHBodnar, tHunt, lbJ. Anderson, rf 5Yap, 2b 4Mundy, cf . 5Murtugh, p 3Nagy, rf 1

R3310112110

41) 15 17KRIMKOS

AB54

Rubel, 3bMudrak, ssR. Donovan, 2b-lb 6Thatcher, p-c 5Murray, 2b 5Schien, c-p 4O'Donnell, cf _ 4Nannen, If :-. 4E. O'Donnell, rf

H02211010

01

37 7 8 5The score by innings:

Woodbridge 303 100 033—13Carteret 100 003 300— 7

The summary: Two base hits, An-derson (2) , Nega, Delaney. Threebase hit, Nega. Home runs, Mudrak,Murray, Mundy. Struck out, by Ifur-tugh, 10; by thatcher, 3; by Schien,6. Bases on balls, off Murtugh, 3 ; offThatcher, 1; off Schien, 2. Umpire,Lomax. Scorer, J. Rose.

Another Golden RuleThe summitry of good breeding

may be reduced to this rule; De-halve to all others as you wouldthey should behave to you.—Field-ing.

Puakaauat by OstracitsaOstruc|«ni w u l introduced In Ori*oe

hr Clisthenea about 610 B. C. Aellan•ay* that Cllsthenes was the drat tobe ostracised. In 488-487 B. a , Hlp-Parclius was exiled and a few yearsInter Xanthlppu* and Arlsttde* werebnnlBhed In this fashion.

Why Worry Aboat Worry 1A Journalist once Inquired of a Chi-

nese patriarch why It Is that the Chi-nese people do not worry. The Chi-nese philosopher replied that that wassomething he never worried about.

A.eUmt Royal AfceaeWindsor castle, home of English

royalty, 1* the oldest building In theworld that has been permanently In-habited by king*.

COSTA'S FAMOUSICECREAMALL FLAVORS

60c Quart3Oc Pint15c Half Pint

HARDIMAN'<P H A R M A C Y

FACT AND FANCY

Water I* the beat of all drinks, Iftaken In the proper spirit

An elephant can carry on Us backany weight np to three ton*.

Ostrich feathers matt be taken from• bird at least three.year* old.

Some women «re *o *low It take*them 40 y««r* to reach twenty-flye.

Some, men make the ben time whenheaded the wrong way.—SpringfieldUnion.

HAPPY THOUGHTS

Money talk* moat when a man mar-ries It

The trouble with lor* at Brit rightI* second sight.

Be who laugh* llr«t probably toldthe Many Story himself.

gonihln* wouldn't be eo precious athing If we n*?Br saw * cloud.

One unpleasant consequence of theswelled head I* the cold *houlder.

Amartcan ShrineTo the south of Wlllatnsburg, les*

than 10 miles nway, are the patheticruins of Jamestown, the first perma-nent Kngllsh settlement In America,where ('apt. John Smith once ruled,where the first cargo of African slave*are sfilri to have heen landed.

PersonalsThe Women's Demorratic Club

will hold a big public card partyThursday night in Firehimse No. 2.Mrs. Charles Morris is chairman incharge.

Mrs. Sophie Simons hag returnedafter attending the two day conven-tion of Spirella Corsetry Instructoiand designers from the plant werin charge of the meeting which washeld in the Y.W.C.A. in Newak.

:ST1NG ITEMS

Local Men Make Record

Catch On Fishing Trip

Timothy J. Nevill, Henry Staubach and William Walling returnedfrom a fishing trip yesterday withrecord catch. One of the fish was30-pound tuna caught by Mr. Nevil

Copper-works Baseball Leagu

To Have Clam Bake Soon

Plans are complete for the firsiannual clem bake sponsored by theUnited States Metal*'Inter-Department baseball league to be held onSunday, September 28, at Trefinko'iGrove in East Rahway. Michael Tros-ko is general chatrman ond report'that the event will be one of the big-gest of its kind ever staged. Inivtations have already been sent out tthe officials of the plant.

WISE AND OTHERWISE

It tnkes a certain amount of hackfor a man to pVt up a good

front,

Ton never can tell. the hero'sreputation Isn't safe till be Is den it andburled.

A man naturally tins his suspicionsabout the vroman who Isn't afraid ola mouse.

Stand up for your own right*. Ityou dou't somebody else 1* going toalt OD them.

You never can telli"* The fellowwho Is • mere hanger-on may be thehardest to shake.

A woman may linve the' greatestrespect for old age. That I* until llbegins to tell OD her.

It doesn't take footprint* in thesand* of time to prove that some ofa* are going biu-lcward.

THE RITZ THEATREOF CARTERET

Is installing Western Electric Talking

Equipment and Western Electric Projec-

tion, with a much larger and better screen.

•lecfticSYSTEM

Waste*SOUND

THI

I voice I

— PI**** mantion this paper when

This equipment is admittedly the best in*

talking pictures today.A contract for complete Western Electric

Sound System has been signed byj Mau-

rice Spewak and the system will be ready

for use tomorrow, (Saturday).

• • ihe vulue of fl,',".0,000il i>y Uermnny ID 11)20.

, . -, uuinilry machine recentlvII in l.'Hiiliw dried and pressed

..ii HIIIHK ID one hour.

It is eatlnmted that the mvdernliIng "t old buildings during 11)20 costmore than $500,000,000.

B<>me fly spray* now contain aynthetic fragrance which count er in!»other repulsive odors of tlie sprny.

According to the American Bur us•oclotlon, crime custa Hie Uniicd8tntea more than ttiMJOO.ixio.ooo Hyear.

The population of Mexico City l»set at about 1,1UO,IKH) persons, HIM.III2 per cent of which Is foreign impu-tation.

Ao airplane expedition will lourNew Guinea to senrcli for vnrletlen <>tsugar enne thnl cim be ruined In tin-United Slates.

I'.londs Buffer lens frcun senslrknesBthan brmieta. nccurdlng to a aeiigoing doctor who hog niude experi-ments along those lines,

Mexico City, the ui|ilttil of Mexico,dates, tradltlnnnlly. from rhe year 132.%or 1327. when the Aztecs settled onan Island In Lake Texcoro

Ani[illHera have been Inatnlleri Inthe Cologne catbedrul to nniplify thevoice of the prvnrfier »<• that Itreaches every corner of the church

AD army of women In Russia U '•>be trained In handling rlfleK and tonchine guns, and to a d as i>roteri<>ri>for munition factories In time of w»r

EVERYWHERE

From Maine to Porto Illco uenrlv800 lights aid navigation.

The first electric transmission *y«tern In the United State* WHS at K"ltorn, Callt. The power lighted Sacra-mento.

It said that It required 2.O00 menthree years to carry a single stonefrom Elephantine to Bias for asa Inone of Egypt's pyramids. \

Tbe hardest and heaviest wood Inthe world come* from the tropics,while the softest and lightest comei-from the temperate.

New "blae-prlot" paper Invented InGerman J produce* copies of tracing*In black line* on whit* background*Instead of the present reversed result'

A perfect pump will lift water 84feet at sea level, bat the practicallimit Is 22 feet At 8,000 feet elevatlon the water lift la reduced about18 feet.

In connection with • plan to tunneltinder the Strait* of QlbrsltHr a shaftha* been sunk on the Spnnlsh sideand R detailed survey of Hie oceunbed begun.

SIMILES

A* brief a* a tap dancer's pauses.

A* coetly a* tbe Upkeep of * palmbeach suit

Conquer. Office, 4-1,.Last Night To SHc« Le.gu^Le.der1. Ad-

»jmU,e To On«-H«lf Game — Tank Hou« Drop. Pair

Of Games To Drop Farther Into Cellar—Mechanic* In

Third Pl.ce — Loop Wind. Up Next Week.

With the final p m e of the second half just a week away

the race for honors in the last half of the U. S. Metals basebaH

oop "arrowed down to a hot struggle between the pace-sal,

ting Office team and the Yard which holds second place Go-

ng down the home rtretch in the laat half race, the Yard'beal

the Office last night in a crucial contest and thus moved up t .

within one-half game of the Office. Since the Office played om

more game than the Yard, the Yard, if it wins it» postponed

fame with the Mechanics, will rise Into a joint tie for first

place. In the other two skirmishes of the week, the Tank

House, flirt-half champions, was defeated twice, first by tht

Office and then by the Mechanics, and as a result was pushed

farther down into the cellar.

mar school player when he droppeiLmgMGB.

iII

T.un Staadisu U, S.W L Pet

°.ffic" ••- , « » - 2 .715Y«rd : « 2 .664Mechanical , , 8 I ,600Tank House I 5 .143

RMBJU *f Wb*kOffice 6 — Tank House 4

Mechanical 9 - ^ Tank Houae 0 'Yard 4 ,—, Office 1

YftkWinning ball ga'nieslp the last oi

seventh iaWfegi* j*ttla*> to be quite» fad with the Office team in the U.S. Metals circuit One day, severaweeks ago, the Office entered th<seventh session trailing by 3 to 0The biggest eptimiat in the wtfrkwould not have given two eenta foiito chances to win. Yet In spite o"•- tact that e w y t n f n j a

A* tiresome asbrags about It

nice girl who

A* full of bnmps and detours as thfroad to happiness.

A* hard a* dissuading a °hen tbal1 has become set In her way*.

As hopeless a* looking for s compll-In an anonymous letter.

A* insecure looking a* Hit shoulderstrap* of some eYenlnj gowns.

At glum a* a delicate****} owner ata cooking school for young hrtrtt*.

A* unfriendly *s * g(ve«rt manufac-turer and a birth control lecturer.—Pathfinder Magnxlne.

ry to score four runs andwin a ball game that was hopelesslylost a moment ago.

And, what's more, the Office pule<! the same stunt again on last Frl'lay night in a game with the TanlHouse. After sporting a one run leacthrough six innings, the Office watched the Tank House make two in th<seventh and forge ahead 4-3. Antthe Office saw Mickay Miglecx go into the box in that last inning, reI lacing Lomax who pitched througlthe first six. To make the victormure sensational, the Office waiteuntil two were out before it »core<two runs to win, 5-4, In a game thawas apparently lost a Short while before.

It was Carl Morris, who in calk''I.efty' by his friends, who stnrte.the rally that brought victory anjoy to the Office, With two awaMorris singled, then came a crashNo, it wasn't another hit. It was jusan easy grounder hit by ZulloCasey who lined it ifently over t>lirBt. Everyone by this time hacstarted to walk away. Hut Jogansubstituting for AnoVrsnn, droppthe ball, allowing Zullo u> reach firswhile Morris galloped to third. Batok walked up to the place anil line'the second ball to Juxan who relaed it perfectly to Jogan. Again Jgan made himself look like a gram

Choice Of VarsityJob At Brunswick

Head Coach Rockefeller Be

ginning To Weed Out M

terial — GroMinan Look:

Good.

With the completion of the neconiweek of practice, O*t flaws in teamwork and individual play evidence'by the two score of candidates fothe KutgerB University eleven u.rapidly disappearing under t hwatchful eye of Heal Odch Harr;J. Rockafeller. Fium now on thmain effort of the coachingwill be to select thoss who will formthe varsity lineup for the openinggame against Providence on Heptember 27.

Jack Grossman, triple-threat fulback who led the Scarlet attack lasiseason; Eli Fisher, 210-pound guardand Milt Anderson, vanity tacklreported early thin week and completed the group of eighteen lettermen held over from last season.

The first scrimmages were helithis week and found several sophomores, members of l u t seasonfreshman team, giving the veteranpromise of real battles for many othe varsity berths. Bud Wiley, center, and Jack Liddy, quarterback oithe 1983 yearling aggregation, anthe most highly favored to becomiregulars on a team otherwise composed almost entirely « t Juniors anentirely of lettermen.

The change-over which is causnimuch comment among Scarlet followers is the experiment to makeback of Don Coursen, star end oilast year. With almost a doien backfield candidates on hand and Groanman, Les Horton and Jerry Croniexpected to retain three of the posts,the coaches are testing the speedyCoursen in an endeavor to single oi)tthe man for quarterback who canmost capably guide the playing ofthe flnt veteran combination to rep-resent Rutgers in the past sis years.

Swqdiih Flapper BobsHer Hair at 103 Yean

Land. Sweden.—A nn*-hundredthre«-year-old flapper with bohhed hair Is"Mother"_Knma Aim, the widow ofa Swedish n»To>r. who Is enjoyingher life fully, af,'tbe petyrod Home forAged, near* Col. tfiarlea A. Lindbergh'sancestral home.

ID spit* of her years she keepsabreast wilt th* style* of the timesand recently had her silver; Iresam•horn and smartly bobbed.

She can nad without glumes, herb**rlng In unimpaired, and she *nj«»«her rfi'lit walk.

Her Ht Hory' also arrrn her weltand «i c I***,, to ISBI the old l»v»«uil» ill the dan wben her lilt liusband courted her.

"Mother" Karon rerun*. |n considerone hnadratf three as nn «ilvitnrfti nireand expect*.to; Hv* for niuujr uxirvjear*. "

p.! Rich Q.ickHe who••'•viah»Vjj

asrich

the ball, permitting both Morria an*Zullo to wore with tht run* that de-feated the Tank House. If ever any-one played th* role of a 'goat' in aball game, it was Jogan right thenand then. Missing two *ssy throw*just when victory was smiling in histace is inexcusable.

For thrills, this game walked awaywith the prise, For six Innings, L#-max and Bryan, two dusky lads, ea-gaged In a pitchers duel that wasworth while watching. Each had onebad Inning. In th* first the TankHouse fell upon Bryan for a pa'r ofrum. Af Ur waiting through two ina-•nga, the Office opened up in th*third and not only caught up buttook th* l«ad 3-2,

So UM store, remain**) «-» , B th«Office's favor until the seventh wheaHwlwMrifwtls* «ror?fl twTce to ! e a fThen came that famous Jogan craafcwhich resulted in the scoring of tworuns by the Office tossera who as aresult emerged triumphant in factof Impending defeat.

The box score:OFFICE

* . . , AB R H IinaictuT, cRichmond, SbEhrt'nburg, 3I>Patmlui1, 2bKryan, pMorris, IfXullo, ssBartok, lbScoboe, rfBaksa, cf

TANK

Jugan, 3bSiekerka, cfMigleci, 2b, p ....Casey, ss ......Lomax, p, 2bSmith, cClark, IfAranski, IfKostenbader, rfAnderson, 1 bJogan, lbGreen, lb

i. . . .2

1i4

.- 434a3

32HOUSE

ABt343

. 3...... 8

12;|21

. 1

0101021ooo5

R210000000u01

| £t |0 •1 10 •2 •i •0 12 1

10 1

H I2 •2 •2 11 11 I0 I0 I0 I0 I0 •0 t0 f

30 4 8 t

'Dutch' Wilhclm Blank* Tank Hon..'Dutch' Wilhelm, who was one of

the beat pitchers in this vicinity Bev-ernl years aifo, blanked the TankHouse with three hits, all of whichwere singles, iind the Mechanics rodeiiway with an easy 8 to 0 triumph osTuesday.

In winning, the Mechanics hitMickey Miglecz hard. They collects*,an even dozen base hits, including adouble by Wilhelm. They poundeJhim freely at the start, scuring heav-ily in the second, third and fourthsession?. By the time the six rollelaround, the Mechanics were boastingof an N to 0 lead. Besides subjectingthe Tank House to a complete humil-iation, Wilhelm struck out 13 bat-ters. It was also the first time thiayear that the Tank House was blank-ed without a run.

Wilhelm proved more puzzlingthan a Chinese crossword puzzle.Using his famous out-shoot witastartling cleverness, 'Dutch' struckout half of the enemy batters andmade the other half roll weakly t*the infield.

Joe Ginda, who holds down thirlbase for the Mechanics, had a per-fect day with the stick. He ham-mered out three hits in three chano-6B, driving in three runB.

Yard 3topi OfficeBuddy Mullen pitched the Yarl

to a decisive 4 to 1 victory over thaOffice last night and thus enabled itto remain in the fight for the flagin the second half.

It was the best game Mullen pitch-ed since the loop got under warseveral months ago. He stood theOffice on its head with five hits. Al-ways master of the situation, Mulleaallowed one run only after his teamhad piled up three for him. tie out-pitched Scoboe, the Office ace, in astirring mound duel, allowing fivehits as compared to nine made otfScobqe.

The Yard threatened in the sec-ond but a snappy double play cutoff whatever chances it had of scor-ing. The first two men singled andthe third hit into a double killing,Bryan to Bartok.

The Yard went a little further iathe third and scored its first run ofthe game. Bill Coughlin walked,stole second and third, and camehome on Larry Rack's timely sacri-Ice fly to center. The Yard addedanother in the fourth ami still an-other in the fifth, ftieulently theYard scored its' runs one at a tima.

Again Coughlin started somethingWhen he tripled in the xeventh. Amoment later Larry . Rack brought 'him in again with a perfect bu^llowii the first base line. Twice Rack

arose to the situation ami met itwithout faltering.

Burt Mullen and Harrison ouchgot two out of three for the winnersSo did Chap Thatcher for the van-luished team.

HARDIMANSP H A R M A C Y

Ed. L. Hirdiman, formerly ofSeaman's. Perth Amboy

Called For and Delivered

Cor. Rahway Avanutand Green Street

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PAGE SIX FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930 PRESS

News of the World Told in PicturesLatest Smoking Outfit U. S. S. Florida in Heavy Sea Mountain of Ice Cream ?

LONDON—A charming smoking suit displayed ftt the greatfashion show held In Olympia Park here.

A Broadside of Beer

; The unsettled conditions of South America do not Interfere with)the delivery of beer. The streets of some of the cities of Bolivia areBO hilly that merchandise must be delivered with pack mules or'

' burros- T n ' s picture shows a packload of bottled beer.

Three-Time Tennis Champ

This photograph, taken while at the naval maneuvers, shows the U. S. S. Florida bucking a heavyMt. Wttfch to ope reMon why Uwjr '>vlii UM nsvy" 1

Naval Official Visits Mexican President

MEXICO CITY—In the garden of Chtipultepce Castle hern durlnu the visit of Rear Admiral Ed-ward H. Campbell, U. S. N., to President Ortiz Hublu of Mexico. Left to right: Ambassador Morrow,President Rubio, Rear Admiral Campbell and one of his aides. " V

Thousands Flock Beaches in England

' MARGATE. F.NCiLANH The bearh here, showing the thousands who sought relief from thejteatwave enjoying the water nnd cool b rews from the sea.

Not Bobbed Lays Cornerstone

to)da/

PHILADELPHIA Irf-rt. Surah I'ulfrey of Brookllne, only oneVe national Junior girls' tennis cinmpitm three times, shaking handsi•with Helen Murluwc of Liu Angeles, whom she defeated In the titlematch here. |

English Woman a Disciple

; Mlas Madeline filmic Meera itnl, daughter nf the late Admlrnli Bit Bdrnund Hlude, cx-ramnumder of tlie East Indian Bquadron.'

Ebci* HOW * dUrlplc of l tie Miiliatmu Cinndhi.and in charge of carry-. Ing tbnugh lome of Die work of antulhl.

, Kpnln Is one country where

.bobbed hair has not been taken

seriously. Moet of the Spanish

beautle* Insist upon keeping

their unshorn locks. Here U

seen Catollna Barcena, consid-

ered one of the most beautiful

women In Spain and who state*

that (be wlU never bob her hair.

NEW YORK CITY-Former Gov. Alfred E. Smith as he laidthe cornerstone for the new Empire State Building here, looking onare Mr». Alfred E. Smith; John Raskob, close friend of Clov. Smith,and Alfred E. Smith Jr. The building will be the world's largest andtallest; when completed.

Many a kiddie would like to be turned loose In the vicinity wherethis picture was taken if the mountains were actually made of Icecream. However, It is the Pers dialler in the oberongadin. Villey,Switzerland.

Returning to New York with trunks full of rare exhibits of tropi-cal life. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Love, who explored the foothills of theEcuariorean Andes, are shown aboard the Santa Ellsa with this rarebird, the egret.

Makes Ten BullVEyes

Phenomenal shooting wan for 8|{t. Larry C. Centner, QrantiPass, Ore , the hlvUtric Womblcdon Cup, contested for by Americanriflemen since 11(74 itt I lie nntioiml matches. Camp Perry, O. He alsoVIAX awarded the Furr Trophy, two gold medals and a cash prlre.(icnlner hit I lie turret twenty times at 1,000 yards—more than halfa mile iind leu of UICM1 shuts were in the bull's eye.

• Two Arab boys getting their first lesson In oral hyglent on theBahara Desert. They don't fancy the brushes aa much at the pepp«r-mint taste of the toothpaste.

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Sears, Roebuck ToSpend 4 Million In

Newspaper Space44th sanWersary obserr-

tVil' l tS — •

Sears, Roebuck and Co. is us-*n"»dverti«)n? in 6*3 newspaperslr>K

the UniUd States., according to'" l received here today

r ^onnell, manager of thedistrict, in which the Perth

is located.advertising will formof advertlflng for this«tld the word fromto S. A. Jarvia, man-

nf the Perth Amboy stor«.i f /will be other kindi of advar-

has been built

that Sean,

(h'

if /The'C

'ro.uMnJ

uiul ('i>,, will apvnd approximalfly four and one-quarter mil-lion ilnllurs in nrWHpU|i(>i' adviTtisI»K iluiin^ this year," said Mr. ConNell "There will b« other moneyilinphiys, window trimming and"llifi advertising activities hut thenewspapers iilone will «et the fourand one (|Unrter millions. Part of(his will, of course, be spent in tell-ing the world about the anniversaryevent. W« expect to do more ad-vertising than is customary duringour anniversary celebration. Ourcompany has always found news-papers the moat productive form ofadvertising-, per dollar spent, of anyof the media which ha* been tried.We expect to stick with the news-papers and expand our expendituresas the business grows to warrant

It was pointed out that each ofthe eight storea in the Newark dis-trict will share in the increased ad-vertising budget allowed for thisanniversary event of the company.

"This 44th birthday of our com.

t Hexagon StripSLATE SURFACED

ASPHALT SHINGLESIn 5 Attractive Colors

Now U a good time to put on thatnew roofjroo'w been promisingroar home. These asphalt shingleStrips «re attract!™ and "exM a l t a looking/1 They're qualitygood*—priced at • distinct saving.

No trouble to put on. You canaaailT do the work yourself. Theywon't curl, warp or Wow up I n t li ew i a i O » « | o t e e d l 7 yeer j /Bul lcoreS s5 *q. ft. oi roof surface.

ROOFING

SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.275-277 Hobart St

STORE HOURS

Daily St30 to S>90

Sal. 0 to ••SO

TaUpaon*PERTHAMBOY

36SO

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930

pany linda UH larger than ever be-fore," said Mr. Connell. "It in afar cry hack to lHKti, when our com-pany was founded, but our companyhas grown more in number of unit'sin the last four years than in theprevious forty years. We are proudof the strides we have taken in theretail field and we feel that we havein our stores something to offer thepublic that is found in few storesanywhere. We feel that we havegrown large because we have ad-hered to our policy of "satisfactionor your money back." We believethe people generally appreciate thatpolicy.

"For this particular calibrationwe have done everything^posaibUto bring to each city those thingswhich are most wanted. Our buy-ers have been in the markets formonths making special purchase! forthis celebration of nine days dura-tion and we know that in every storein the Newark district we are goingto have surprises which we are suit)will please our customers."

Mystery Man ProvesCottly to Taxpayers

ARIIIIIIII], \VIS.~- J<K>, a "mystery.nun" funnel ln H wmw bank with *fractured leg and skull here last yenr.line proved expensive for hospital aridcounty nuthni-ltles.

Tlie frtirturrs have healed but Joe'smind rpinnlnx a blank, so far as phy-sicians run li'iirn. He speaksinnly twowords of Englletr, "Joe" and "ciga-rette."

Maintenance nf the stranger hy thecounty hug made heavy Inroads on Itspoor relief fund. The hospital hasbeen forced to hire an extra stenog-rapher to answer letters concerninghim.

Dlscolorntlons on his forehead andscars on his legs lead physicians tobelieve that he has been a coal minerIn Pennsylvania, where they "ay timepigmentations are peculiar to the In-dustry,

K SEVEN

Opportunities For JoblessOffered By S u n , Roebuck

Another big opportunity for near-ly one thousand New Jersey joblesswill be given by Sears, Roebuck andCompany's department store in New-ark and their chain ol one doiensmaller stores throughout northernNew Jersey beginning within thenext two weeks according to A. A.Kaplan, superintendent of the New-ark store.

Mr. Kaplan stated he is anxiousto secure wide awake merchandisingand sales people at once as regularsand contingents in preparation forSears, Roebuck and Company's 44thAnniversary Sale which begins Sep-tember 18th. He will immediatelyengage 150 persons within the nextweek or ten days and promisee realopportunities and permanent posi-tions to those who can qualify.

By December 1, the Newark De-partment Store alone will have In-creased Its |JefB6nnet by nearly fofl*hundred people and throughout theentire territory the Sears, Roebuck& Company's personnel will numbernearly 1,000 more employees thanarc now on their payroll.

PoitugUM* Bi«cuv«fyCataltna Inland, off the coast of

California, was first mentioned byCapt. Juan Rodriguez Cnbrtllo,Portuguese navigator sailing under theSpanish flag, who anchored his fleetthere ln 1542 and named the IslandLa Vlttorla. Sebastian Vi»-alno, alsoIn the Spanish service, anchored atthe AH me spot In 1002 and renamedthe Islsnd.

Cat Attains Rip* OldAga of Nineteen Years

Rochester, N. T.—Like the hnhbllncbrook. Rough Neck, a cat, goes on andon. Bough Neck, fittingly named, isnineteen years old. It has endearedItself to Joseph Lusardy, Its master.

Bach night the cat Is oa hand tomeet Its master and each morning, ifthe alarm clock falls to function, Itawakes him by purring and clawingat his bedclothes.

ArmiM of Blu* and GrayAt the closi' t.r the Civil war there

were living Uim-T2<> Union soldiersand approxliirai<"ij 711,000 Confederatesoldiers.

Animal Track*Animal tracks ran be collected by

pouring plaster of parls ID them andletting It harden into a mold, saysRoys' l.lfe.

Makes Sure His MailWill Reacli Destination

Rochester, N. Y.—A letter writtenby a local unifier and addressed "Toiienter of Routs on Canadke. Lake(B. by N. E. shore) near Hemlock, N.V.," was delivered the following day.

To aid the mall carrier the writerdrew a map on the envelope, NIHUVIHEEiemlork, Canadlceand Honeoye Inkes,wtttrtih nfrOW pointing to a spot luheled "Here it Is."

<>0<>0<><KK>00<H><>000©0<><>0<>0<><>0

Too Many Bachelorsin Town* of Alaska

Junetiu, Alaska.—There, nrcnine single men to one singlewoman in various towns inAlaska, the 1930 census revrals.Numerous governmental officesopened during the last yearhave Increased the bachelorpopulation and the ratio islarger than In the Statisticsgathered two yearn ago.

Gov. George Parks has beenInterested recently In offers ofyoung women from variouslarge cities to come to Alaskaprovided suitable Jobs might benvnllaUe. Many of Alaska'ssingle men who are permanentlyemployed plan Inter on to sendfor nr to cull for sweetheartswaiting In the state*.

cOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO- Classified Ad*. Bring Result* —

PRODUCES A LIGHTBRIGHT AS SUN'S

Scientist Has Formula ThatUses No Electricity.

Los AngfliMi.—Dr. William Gw.rs*Schnell, youii|| nrltMitl>t. claim* • furmill* to uriKlui e light tin bright n* Hiesun's without the w e of clertrMtvIlls Indention asjerttnlly Is cumpuw i|••f the same otums which com|x>»ethe sun.

Ltoctor Bchaetl, t'ulTetsltv of Colorado and University of Dresden graduutc, wild the formula really was sreproduction of the son Itself.

"For," be said, "the compoundswhich make up my Invention areriiinuosed of the *<*me atoms as thewn. In *mn« ways we even havetliw sun rni>Mied fur we eao producta hot or M cold ray as we desire."

Doctor Bcbnell said the test ofburning wood by s magnifying ginImd been equally successful with thesun and with his invention.

The inventor said he had Illumi-nated entire rooms with hli mysterlout light and has conducted othertests to the entire satisfaction ofnoted scientists.

Doctor 8chnell disclosed that he be-lieves his Invention eventually willeliminate all forms of outdoor elec-trical signs and lights, Illuminatehomes, cook food and assist medicalwork, through Its X-ray qualities.

The formula for his light producerIs very simple, be said, containing cer-tain minerals which are mixed withoils nnd acids.

MILESSUEDE SHOES

for Fall

1 Sure SaveMoney at

N o MM ever guesses I payto little (or my 'classy'Miles shoes. They look atthough they cost a lotmote I've Men the famestyles on Fifth Avenue,and the prices . . . whew I

You tee, I'm not Afraid ofMiles low prices, becauseI know from experiencethat 1 get more value formy money—more goodrtylei—more wear and sat-isfaction. Do you wonderI'm a AMes booster?"

It'i SAFE to PayLESS at Miles

W e buy •hoe* in tremen-dous quantities, Mt bigsavings in cost and wepass these saving* on toour customers.

Models you see on Fifth Avenue,but at Miles LOW prices

yOlTLL WANT TWO PAIR

AO tJi« newest styles:pumps, ties, operas, ox-fords, strap t some witnreptile trim; others self-trimmed. In black, trown

and green. All stylesof Keels.

OVER 5o STORES-5 LARGE FACTORIES

ILES SHOES132 SMITH STRKKT, PKRTH AMBOY

101 HHOAH ST., ELIZABETH

New York Store*ISO W. 34th St. 6 E. 14«h St.w . s u . C W r 701 6th Ave.

h A

ISw 701 6th Ave.

l i e W. lesth St. «82 7th Are.140 East Ifcfi St. I4O8 Rrst Av*.

Also featured at Edgar's, 34 E- 14th St

Bronx Store*8S86 Third Avc 041 & l i a * 5b

95 MARKET ST.,

Brooklyn Storea785 Manhattan Avt. 5516 Filth Ave.1681 Pitkin Ave., near RocUway Ave.

Long ImUnti Store*81-49 Steinway St AstoriaIoU.i*J*»*i«Av«. . . Jamaica

New Jer»*r Store*« 7 Newark Ave. . . J«"«y City7«Berg«J*UaeAv«.. . Union City

New Jermey Storea95 Market St. Newark£1*5 Main St. ;-.Of?nfl?101 Broad St. Elisabeth694 Main Ave. . . . . . PassaicIfiOMainSt P***"0"131 Main St. . . . . HackensadtmSmltflSt Perth Amboy4 South Broad St. . . . J""'". 0

133 E, Front St. . . . . rTalnfleld

Hlfhcit lUllroad D.polBo far us our records go, a little

station lo the Peruvian Andes, Tlello,went of the boundary between I'fruand ttttwH. la at U>« Ugtiaat elava,tion, IS.OTiR feet. From CnHtw f> Tie-Ho. H dlstuiK-e of 106 miles, the traintnkes 8 hours S8 minutes, the Rver-a«e rare <>( rise lining 'J7 feet a min-ute. The cost of construction of thisrHllnmi! |H ..stltrmiw nt Srt'-V'KX) a mil

Ihi u m < ' « t u . i i H I

f r m o r e Ihan , , in- IIM.UMUMI U H K I H - n - . n . I I lrMnjt -ti»-i-t. t .othI lie outii i ir 1- an Hiinuul ntTim .• •,, I i f U u l m u y . ami h U a n l II l: . ,« .r , ;J I

' t t l l l C j r , - f. l . i l t l . - , l i c . r g . - . l i r r l A w m lIII t i l ' Ht t l - l l l l t ' i l l i v

COMINC/S«ptemberl8*

Candidale't Exp«ct>tion>"A candidate,'1 said Uncle lOlien,

"sliakes liamls expectln' rotes foilnothln'. Figgertn' on <le usual priceof votes out dls way he eipetts deequivalent of anywhere from three tofive dollars per shake."—WashingtonStar.

Telephone PioneersPlan Shore Reunion

The men and women who estab-lished the telephone industry in NewJersey are going to meet this week-end at Anbury Park for their annualouting and get-together. They aremembers of the H. C. McCutly Chap-ter, Telephone Pioneers of America.Each of them hag had a minimumof 21 years in the Bervice of com-

tl A T •A Triumphant March of Valuei"

Wh*n...Ameriaan houwwrreMwanted their very besrt•tort* to look Ulnover-grown "whatnots",SceUfj proridejd them.

Now...that store* must be-both beautifully andefficiently modern,•hrewd shoppers stilllook to Sean for them.

—A\m*yt at Letrtr Prictt!

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND Co.

276 Hobart StreetPerth Amboy

Phone 3680

Re-opening Sept 13OF

Perth Amboy's Principal

Ladies' WearEstablishment

AT TEMPORARY LOCATION

73 SMITH STREET

All ladies' gowns, frocks and coats care-fully selected and up to the minute inquality and style.

Formerly located at 89 Smith Street, where we were com-pletely destroyed by fire*

A cordial invitation is extendedto our old friends and the publicin general to inspect the season'sjlatest creations.

$. PINETemporary Lor-ation

73 SMITH STREETPERTH AMBOY, N. J.

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PAGE RIGHT FRIDAY, SKFrEMBER 12, 1930 CARTERET PRESS

Rat Catching Cat ClubOrganized in Havre

Havre.—A Hat Catching Cat Club•us IIIH'H founded here to breed rat-tutrhlng-cats on a large icale on ••tuilel cat farm.

Doctor Loir, who Is a nephew of thern-at scientist, Pasteur, Is the prime»o«r In the campaign for breedingrat catchers, and for the list fouryears he ha* been bos; selectingspecimens he consider* best for breedbig purpose*.

The destruction of rats hm becomein International question of the great-est Importance.

The primitive method! used up Co•ow, poison or gas, are not withoutAuger to humans whereas DoctorLoir (eels s race of robust felineswould be extremely useful especiallyhi ports such as Havre, where so muchte stocked under shed* nml It Is dim-rult to destroy the rodents that de-Tour frrslQ and are disease spreadinganimals.

—Pleas* mention this rnper wh«D•uyinit from advertisers.—

L E G E N D FINDS NEW DATA ONHIT BY A SURGEON

Dr. Baudet Denies That HeHad Epilepsy.

-The Ideal Town-Plato laid down many rules for

his Ideal Republic, but there is

only one rule for the Ideal Town

—the rule of neighborliness.

Regardless of race, rank, orI previous condition of things, weI should all be neighborly, which| moans friendly, helpful, andthoughtful of one another's inter-

lests.

The Ideal Resident of the Ideal

I Town trades with hit neighbor.

He never goes out of town to buy

anything he can get just as well

at home, trading withour neigh-

| bora being the very essence of the

I friendliness, helpfulness, a n d

thoughtfulnesg which makes the

I Ideal Town.

If, therefore, you give me yuur

insurance, instead of giving: it to

agents in Ralrway, Woodbridge,

or Perth Amboy, you are helping

H neighbor always willing to help

you, while at the same time doing

vour bit to make Avenel an Ideal

Town.

D. P. DE YOUNGR«al Ettate & Insurance

| 95 AVENEL ST., AVENEL, N. J.

Phon* Woodbridie 8-2149-J

Paris.—The persistent legend thatthe genius and success of Napoleoware due chiefly to a conditionepilepsy has been vigorously attacked10 a lecture recently delivered by DrRaoul Baudet, eminent French sngeoo. ;

Reviewing the attempts M tafiouphysicians of the palt M prove Bonapsrte the victim of a Malady that Insured tht maintenance of his uncionenergy and i t the same time led binfrequently to adopt th* antic* of a de-general*. Doctor Baudet scores ths onprofessional Iniccuracy of these nedcal historians.

Ha dwell! upon the remarks of twodiagnosticians, particularly Umbrosco,celebrated Italian professor of criminalpathology at the University of Turin,who branded the French emperor aaa epileptic and degenerate, and Dr.Cesar Juarros. a more recent snd de-termined eiponent of Nnpoleonliepilepsy.

Replying to charge* made by bothphysicians that Napoleon"! afflictionwns the natural result of a dlaeawrtancestry, Poclor liaudei pointed outhat no proof exited to sustain locha statement; as for the' vague accoaalions to the effect that the emperor'sfsther was a drunkard, his sisterPauline was a chronic hysteric andhis mother sordidly avaricious, theFrench surgeon takes denote excep-tloo. The father, he affirms, was asingularly temperate man and a stu.lent all his life. The sister's afflic-tion he finds greatly exnggerated andthe mother, forced aa she was, to pro-vide for eight children, only normallyeconomic.

Doctor Baudet parM™11"1* •c o f l»the paradox stated b | C»»»r JuAiffo*that unless Napoleon had been anepileptic he would have died unknown.

Rat Army ReportedMoving on Manchuria

I'plplng, China,—From Harbin comesHie report that an army of rats Ismarching through outer Mongolia ap-parently headed for north Manchuriaon II a way out from Y.lnsk. Siberia.

The report states that millions ofrats are ninrohlng In disciplined fash-ion under the leadership of different"army corps leaders," and that theyseem to know Just where they are go-Ing. They stop only to gather enoughfood to sustiiln tliem.

Ancient Greek CitySought Under Sea

Sevastopol. Crimes. V. S. S. R.~Anexpedition hag been organlted hereto search nnder water near here foran ancient Greek town believed tohave been submerged by the shiftingof -earth strata.

Objects washed up by the Blocksea at this point seem to support thetheory which led to the organisationof such an ex

Hoi.A property owner went to inspect

one of his houses and found that somescamp had stolen the building,leaving only the cellar. This wouldBp?m to leave a wbnle lot to be lookedinto.

Look at Your HatEveryone Else Does!

STETSONS — METRO — DUNHILL

DUNHILL UNION MADE HATS $3.95

FAMOUS METRO UNION MADE HATS $5.00

NEW STETSONS FOR FALL ........ $8.00 - $10.00

FIT WELL!That's Why You Should Wear Taylor Made Clothes

PURE VIRGIN WOOL SUITS & OVERCOATSExpert Work. To Measure Fit Guaranteed$25.00 $30.00 $35.00 $40.00

DOVLE 8CUNNEEN

DOUBLE

SMITHPHOkC

GREEN STAMPS

Englishman Says John theYounger Wrote I t

London. England.—Evidence thatthe fourth gospel was not written byJohn the apostle, but by one of hladisciples, John the younger, hss beenbrought forward by Dr. A. Mlngana,keeper of oriental manuscripts at theJohn Rylandi library, Manchester, sndpas renewed a controversy among NewTestament* scholars which has beengoing on for more than 900 years,

Doctor Mlngana soys the statementswhich bear out hla contention are con.talned In a Syriao manuscript whichIs relatively modem, being dnted Sat-urday, September 23. of I he year2060 of the Oreekn (A. P. 1749), hutIt ta a faithful copy «f a much olderoriginal, which may be ascribed toabout A. f>. TM).

Doctor Mlngann. whn discusses th*manuscript In a recent Issue of theLibrary Rulietin. snya he arrives atthis conclusion from the nature andcharacter of the Mnssoreilc signs thatthe copyist reproduces In his tran-scription. The. manuscript containsthe Pcehlia New Testament of theEasr Syrian or Nestorlsn church,

Challenges Plac* of Writing.The manuscript also challenges the

tradition that the fourth gospel waawritten at Kphesua or Patmoa, theIsland of the apostle's banishment, onthe eve of his return to Kpherosj. Inview of Its stHtemcnts, he says, thepossibility of Iti having been writtenat Blthjnla has to be considered. Atthe beginning of It the followingwords occur:

"The Holy Gospel of Our Lord Je-su« Christ according to the preachingof John the younger."

And at the ead of Uia goand UwUappears the colophon •

Here euds tlie writing of the HolyGospel according to the preaching ofJohn, who spoke In Greek In Blthy-nla."

Doctor Mlncfina adds that, to binknowledge, the above statements donot appear In any other Sjriac iiiunu-script of the Gospels preserved In theBritish museum. In Cambridge, In theVatican, in l'uris. or among those ofhis own collection which have so farbeen catalogued. He feels confidentthat It will be worth while furtherInvestigating them, as they appear torepresent a relic of an ancient tradi-tion.

Expert Know* of Theory.The appendices discovered In his

manuscript are, however, unknownelsewhere, he says. According toJacob Leveen, assistant keeper oforiental manuscripts In the Britishmuseum, he has known for some timeof Doctor Mlnganns theory althoughhe has not yet studied the manuscript.

"From photographs which I haveseen of the pages in question," saysLeveen, "it Is clpnr that the manu-script Is in an Eighteenth centuryhand, and I run nut quite sure as towhat Doctor Mingana Is referring inascribing it to an early original of theEighth century. In the reproductionwhich I have seen the colophon re-ferred to appears In much fainterhand and this may have some signifi-cance. Certainly It will require verystrong evidence to convince scholarsof the Guspel Kits that an Eighteenthcentury manuscript contains valuablenew readings which had escaped thescribe* of preceding centuries."

"I LOVE YOU"—IN 28 WAYS

Robber* Work All YearOn Job and Get $10

Araaonk, N. V.—Twelve times duringthe last year attempts have been madeto rob the l'aruiiunint garage here, ac-cording to police records, but alwaysthe burglar alarm has rung and fright-ened the miscreants away.

The other night the visitors appar-ently became exasperated and stolethe burglar alarm, but after cartingoff the 150-pound apparatus they foundonly $10 in the cash register.

This, the proprietor of the garagesaid, l« considered small pay for ayear's work.

Cat Falls Three Floors;Only Scratches Chin

Ponghkeepsle, N. Y.—Blackie, court-house cat, has only a scratch on hiscoin to show for his three story fallfrom the county courthouse. Blackiewas playfully engaged In watchingpedestrians below when the mishapoccurred. He landed on all fours, butthe Impact was BO great he struckbis dun.

Firemen Now Equippedto Save Com in Well*

Methuen. Mass. —A cow-rescuingoutfit has been added to the equipmentof the local flre department It In-cludes, among other things, an Impro-vised derrick. The annmal equip-ment was obtained because of thelarge number of calls from farmerswhose cows hid fallen Into wells.

H«r Ag*Atlanta, (ia.-I.aun Watton, negro

cook who "dlsfemembera" her age, hascooked tar four generations for thesame family using fireplace, coal-stove,gas stove and electric itove respec-tively. Site was born In slavery.

Saaln T«k*» 3 u Bath*Longmont, Colo.—Snakes have tak-

en to sun bath*. Dorothy and DerisYoung, out on a picnic, ran aero** arattlesnake so busy sunning Itself thatIt refused to badge st their approach.

Job Was Don.A grammar school student wa* aet

a question in an examination paper—"If twenty men reap a field la eighthours, bow long will It take fifteenmen to reap the same fleldT" Thestudent thought long and carefullyMore writing tbe aiiBwer, find whenhe buiii'.<l in tils paper, this Is whatthe exnin ; i read: "The field ha*-Ing l iwi i i . ;ic-rl b y t h e twei i tT m « acou ld ii'.i I jiod by t h e flfteonl"—T o r o n t o <.i

Thert Isn't a language under the•tiu thai hasn't the phrase "I loveyou" or Its equivalent. The in mewords In other languages than Kng-I>sii follow (save them fur possiblefuture reference):

Italian—"VI amo."

French—*Je t'alme,"

ar«ek--8as Agbspo."

Arabian—"Bshabbes.-

Pollsb—"KochUm de."

Dutcb-"Ik Bemln 0."

Bgyptlan--N'achqeb.-

Ilddlah—"Ich lleb dlr."

Spanlah—Te Qulero."

. Rumanian—-Ve lubesc."

Chinese—"Ono Ngal Ni."

Oennan—*icb Hebe dlch."

Hebrew—"Anl ohe? osocb."

Portngoeae— "Ku Vos Amo."

Roaslao—*lr Vas Lioabllon."

Danish—"Jeg holder af dem."

Malay—"Okas! Cleh Hamba-

Bnngarlan—"Kn On! Sseretem."

BwedJah—"Jag Tycker om Bder."

Armenian—"Yes Kee Seerem Kes."

TurkUn—"Ben Seoee Sevsejoroom."

Annamlte—"Tol Thu'o'ng be Lam."

Blnflo—"Main Tynt Ropijar Ksryn."

STRAND FEATURING RICHARD ARLEN IN "THE SEA COD',COMMON CLAY' HAS WEEK'S RUN AT MAJESTIC THEATRED i m Cheats Tradition

Of Normal TollProfessional Tricks

ScreenBenefi

Hawaiian—"Nu IOe."

Kouoo Aloba No

Persian— "Chouma ra Doust Da

Cambodian—"Khnhom Nearkb Sro-Isnh."

Japan see "Watakuslwa Anata anklUaso.-

SCRAPS

Political advertising along Georgiahighway* tl barred by law.

Tezaa officials, have ordered a waror cougars which cross from Mexico

A large rattlesnake attacked dryagents who raided a still In Bathcounty, Kentucky The agents killed It

China will Increase postal chargesletters and parcelsUnited States and

.V) per cent onmailed to theEurope.

At Savannah, Ga., a bald eagleperched and rode in tbe ramble seatof Judge Henry Malhews' motor car.Be raptured It with a blanket

Madame Chiang Kai-shek, the "firstlady of china," has taken the lead Inan attempt to encourage women touse only Chinese grown products.

Automobile license plates have beentested in a "weather machine" to findout whether glossy or dull coats wearbest, with the result that tbe dull finlah proved more durable.

Tbe name* Smith, Jones, Johnson.Brown and Black went unrepresented on graduation of 119 students fromthe El Dorado (Neb.) nigh school thisyear, for tbe flrtt time In yeanthose name* failed to appear m tbe•color roster.

ALL OFF

"I have • remarkable story." beganthe traveling Ban.

"SpUl It," Mid tlie waiter.

"Cut It." MM the editor.

-Be brief,* Mid tbe lawyer.

"Shoot," M M toe poUcenun.

"Just a Moment" Mid the photog-rapher.

"Forget It," Mid the spendthrift

"What of i t r Mid the cym&

"Ye*, dear," Mid fte absent-mindedchap.

"End of the line,"doctor.

uld tbe COD-

SUMMED UP

OreatneM Is not to Oil the worldbnt to contain It

lien ibonld marry their dreamrather than their ambition.

Bnt for tbt Imagnted audience Inanother's mind bow could we play ourpart in life?

Nothing un-ea an Impression—M»ean Idee; nor any one an Impress—Mve only personality.

Every O H roll of bis own Uttleday's occupation—no one with over

A M and co-ordination.

VaWbU pThe United 8ta.tea Department of

Agriculture In an airplane expedi-tion Into New Guinea, "land of thehead hunters," fourid 171 distinct vari-etlet of sugar cane, including 20 wildkinds and one species entirely new toscience.

t:.Ul

A W H t v lOat In Onto'* rabber city, tin Akrom

Beacon-Journal n i asked to deflM aprotwctuidlst The x'llinr stretched •point ID bit reply, A propagandlat,"Ml4 he. "Jls f rxvvnn <>o can Ukt a

DANGER EVER PRESENT

For twenty-two years, Tbm Owenhas been cheating the ocean of itstoll.

Owen is a deep sea diver. Be-cause of the under-water pressurwhich usually strains the heart amweakens the human system, thaverage working life of the diver ifive years. Owen has been followinghis profession for twenty-sevenconsecutive years.

Now the man who refused to heedthe law of average is bringing hiikjll to the aid of the audible screenacting as technical adviser fOr thunder-ocean sequences of Para-mount's new feature, "The SeaGod," opening Saturday at thStrand Theatre.

Owen, who makes his headquar-ters at Los Angeles harbor, hadcharge of the diving equipment usedin the production. He also is per-sonal instructor to Richard Aden,who plays the scenes that were filmedon the floor on the Pacific,

The veteran diver passed on thelocations selected for the under-ocean action. His judgment on thesafety of weather conditions wasfinal and it was his responsibility toinspect all equipment and okay itbefore Arlen and the photographerwho operated the submarine camerawent under water.

Owen nas been 240 feet below theocean's surface and for a numberof years held the diving depth recordwith that figure. His average work-ing depth for the twenty-seven yearshe has been a diver is 125 feet.

Fourteen hours is the longestperiod he has been under water. Onthat occasion, wreckage of a sub-merged vessel fell across his life-line, and he was forced to work forhours extricating himself.

When he was brought to the sur-face he was more dead than alive.After a long period in decompres-sion chambers, where his body grad-ually adjusted itself to the normalair pressure, he was taken to thehospital. For two weeks, he was par-tially paralyzed.

He had an equally narrow escapefrom death years later when the belton the motor-operated air pump onhis tender vessel slipped off, elimi-nating hia supply of oxygen. Thepump motor chugged on and noneon the tender noticed the mishap im-mediately!

Owen signalled frantically with hislife-line and was dragged up to safe-ty. He was far away from the tenderwhen the accident happened and bythe time his helmet was removed, hewas unconscious.

Danger U the constant companionof the diver at work and mentalstrain adds its toll to the physicalharm caused by the water pressure,says Owen. Men often come up fromparticularly haurdous underseasjobs so weakened that they neverfully recover.

BABY SAVESFINAL SCENE

Takes Important P a r t In"Common Clay" at FewMinute*' Notice.

Any assistant director will tell youthat babies cause more grief thanany other feature of picture making.

In proof of this, William Tummel,Victor Fleming's assistant on thefilming of "Common Clay" for Foxmovietone, can point to a flock ofgray hairs bordering bis auburnlocks.

In many of the later scene* of thepicture, the script calls for the lead-ing lady, Constance Bennett, to becarrying a young infant. But, sincefilm companies work at irregularhours whereas state laws are rigidconcerning tht length of timV as-sorted children of various ages canwork in the movies, it was neces-sary for Tummel to secure two babiesand keep one "in reserve," subjectto call whenever the other's time-limit expired.

By adroit juggling of shootingschedules and the two youngsters,everything went serenly until thefinal day. Various unavoidable delaystook place and by the middle of the

Richard Arlen and Fay Wray in"The Sea God", a Paramount Picture

Scene from "Common Clay", which opens ut the Majestow for a week's run. Constance Hennett is starred.

ic theatre toninr-

fternoon it was obvious that re-lacement troops of babies wouMe needed. Tummel leaned on theelephone but apparently every otherivailable infant in Hollywood of theorrect age end coloring was worth-

ing elsewhere or was out of town.There, was only one solution: the

ride ' of the Tummel household,Katherine Anne, aged six months,would have to become a dJ>ub|».

Another Mil brought Katherineust in the nick of time, and, accord-

ing to the critical father, the gaveremarkable performance In the

role.Lew Ayres plays the masculine

ead in "Common Clay" oppositeMiss Bennett aaaifta supporting castincludes Tully Marshall, HattyKemp and Beryl Mercer. The picturewill open tomorrow at the Majestic"""heatre.

How One Woman Lost.20 Pounds of Fat

Lost Her Doable Chin—Lost Her Prominent HipsLost Her Sluggishness

Gafased Physical Vigor — Vlvaclouineu — a Shapely Figure

If yon'w fat—remove the cause fKRUSCHEN SALTS contain the

all mineral salt* your body orsant,glands and nerve* must have to func-tion properly.

When your vital organs fall to per-form Iheb work correctly—your bowel*and kidneys can't throw off that wtstematerial—before you rtaliie ii—you'regrowing hideeusly fat I

Try half a tesspoonfut ofKRUSCHEN SALTS inwater every morning

i in a EtaI—in thr

tan of hotre weeks

get on the acalea and note huw manyround* of fat have vanished.

Nollrs ilio that you hsve gslnedin energy—your ikin ii clearer—youreye* ipsrkle with glurioui health—you(eel yitunger in body—keener in mind.KRUSCHEN will ,in , n y f.» ££„s joyuui turprtM.

Get an 85o bottle of KRUSCHENSALTS Haiti four weeks). If even thisnr*t bottle dor*n't convince you thisia the easiest, aafrtt and surett war toIon. f a t l f | ' fi

CREDITS HISLUOCY STAR

Lew Ayre* Say* Break Determined Start Of HollywoodCarter.

CREDITS HIS LUCKY STAKIs he lucky, or '» h e winn'"k' ''

well-deserved reward?Opinion *eem* divided about i.e»

Ayrea, th* *Hm youngster wh.'jumped from th* obscurity of I"part*" in Hollywood to brilliant smCOM In "All Quiet on the WeMd"Front" , ., .

Moat acreen eritics, and film fan.-.b*lt*v« his succes* ia deserved. Timencomiums and lavtdi praue the h«-yreceived on the release of KO-marque's «tory of the war wouldhave turned many a head, »nd they

I compare his meteoric ris* with thatof the unknown Betty Bronaon whenshe was given "Peter Pan."

But Ayres, himself, thinksjust luck. ,

"I I tut happened to g»tb r e a W he maintains modestlyyear ago I was strumming a banjoin a l a n c e orcheatra, doing extrapart* now and then, but not settU*the world afire so you could noticeit. I liked picture work and I hopedto reach success In the films wm*day, but it was only a hope.

There certainly was n» luckabout the way Ayres plsyod the rotehowever—it wa* sheer *i-ting talentand it has made him ""<• <>f the mo*

, aftt anIon. fat-lf y,,u ,|on'|I i l

y u , | o n | f^i » |1 |peTbImprovement in health—*o g!oriou»lT•nsictilc—vlgornuily slive—yourmoney gladly return")

Sell the OomdhU Mint qfJohns -Maitville Shingles

4 cAtpkalt mm* Utb44t9S )»

C. E. BOIN COMPANY597 RooMvelt Aw. CARTRRET, N. J.

Tel. Carteret 8-185V

it's

the'A

sought after youngst.-rsl H l f d

m Hie flitcolony. Half a dozen producers brfor his services <>n tIi•- release <the war picture, Imt K«x movwtoisecured the first ••hoi.'c to play oposiU Constance Dennett in (,ormon Clay," a pictm-izution of tHarvard prize state nuecessCleves Klnkead.

"Common Clay" will have its fiShowing here tomorrow at the M'jestlc Theatre and nerording to ••[vance reports, it i» <'nP "' the ndramatic offerings of the »eawith both Miss Bennett and A •giving remarkable pcrformarTully Marshall, Beryl MercerMatty Kemp head the supportcant and Victor Fleming directed !;r

production.

Th* Greatest GreatMany people are at eminent ''l(11

thay do not eqottdtr It

Page 9: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

This Weekby ARTHUR BRISHANB

', Ugly Word, Revolution.Viatic Words, Gold, Treasure.To Help Business, Spend.Miss Hurst's Marmoset.

It was simple tor our Government of"best mlndi" to snub the Ruaslau Gov-ernment because it wouldn't repaymillions that American bankerB lent tothe Cfar and Kerensky. But thereare other "red" things outside of Rus-sia to worry those best minds.

There ts threat ot rerolutlon In theArgentine. The President of thatSouth American republic, living In hisdwelling ai In a fortified castle, sum-mons warships to his display of mili-tary strength.

Brazil sends news of threateningrevolution.

The President of Peru has been kid-naped.

India and B«ypt worry the British.China worries the whole world.Lower prices for stocks, lack ot em-

ployment, diminished output, worry us.The world bad Its war. Its assorted

prosperity boons, and now It has thepleasure of peyint for both.

Most serious for the fifty-nine or all-ty four that govern by the power otorganised money, according to ex-Am-bassador Oeran), Is the worldwidethreat of revolution.

It la hard to believe, but just con-ceivable that the number of humanbeings on earth might become moreImportant than the number of organ-ized dollars.

SLAT'S DIARYHY HOSS l''AKyiJHA!l

Fri.la.vplayed p Oitn

tin- iiHity tonite1 witch is a K»meWi'ai you kiss sumliinldy sum timesit Uu-y uri' in al?i>o<t yunu-r likeJam- wus when I•ullcci her in toI"1 room for aiook of 2c stamps.

not to thinking;it Ixiut it and it isii f u nny thinguliout a KIBB. YOUcant have it without giveing it tosum 1 else.

Saterday — Itress 1 made a misstuke tonite whenI was at Blister-aes house for supp—when L was atBlistersea h o usefor dinner. It waa

a ham and egg- sup—dinner and hisma ast me how I wood like to have

and I sed, AH rite, and sun

1 snickered,Sunday -Ant Emmy nil ways thot

Mum tung was some kind of picketedmeet and then after pa had Xplanedtn her whut it was he sed he wander-ed when the senses man wood get toare houae and Ant Emmy got en»ult-ed pecuz she thot pa was Slamming

Munday—well we have dissided to(tet ^ cupple Bees so we can havenunny to spred on are bread the yr.round and tonite pa »gt Ant Emmywood she like to go long to the api-ary and she replyed and sed she seenall the apes she wanted to gee toweeks ago at the Zoologickel garden.

Teusday—I seen Jake erly this a.m. and he wanted me to go long tothe crick with him he sed he was»u posed to wirk today and I sed. Areyou supposed to wirk at the crick*nd he sed No I am supposed to wirkat home, then I seen the point andwe had a very good time all day.

Wensdny—I tuk my new Harmo-nicka to Janea houae and played itfor her this evening and she sed 1reminded her of Daniel Webster.and I sed why Daniel Webster did-dent play a Harmonicka did he andshe replyed and sed. No I no heHiddent, she to offily dents sum times.

Thirsday—p* has got into trubbleat the noose paper oflice wear hewirks agen. they was a (ire at themayers house and \>a rote the headline for the story like this. Mayerahouse Burns. Fleas in his Pajamas,and I gess pa is lucky to have a jobto wirk at sence that brake.

Two Saved a» AutoLands in Tre«top

I'ortervtlltt, I'niit — l>r. O. B.Wells and L, P. Kurd were savedfrom death only when un auto-mobile ID which tiuij, were driv-ing perched In a tree after abrief career as a bird.

Doctor Well* wan driving thecar on the Gamp Nelsun roadwhen the machine went oft theroad toward a cully 'J(K) feet be-low. The car landed In a in*anil was lodged uhove the gullybottom. Neither of the meo wasseriously hurt.

— Please uwntton this paper wher.buying from adfertlsers. —

Onlury, dMoriMt Russia s "bold andunfaltering offer of an alternative tothe old order." That means govern-ment for men, Instead ot for profits."

Our heat ml mis would do well tothink about that.

This l« the are of rackets. RacketsIn milk, whlskoy, cleaning and dyeing,la un dry work, labor unions and now,latest, an unemployment racket.

New York's free employment agencyfinds the same' faces returning aftergetting Jobs.

The racket Is to get your job. tellIt to a man out of work, come backhandgot another.

Gold and treasure are words thatexcite nearly all men.

Italian divers, clad In Iron, goingdown 400 feet to- the bottom of theAtlantic, sad up again as rapidly asnwift elevators to our skyscrapers,hove discovered the British treasureFlilp. Egypt, with $5,000,000 of goldmid xllver In her hull, lying On theK-ay sand on the ocean's floor.

No dlfflculty in persuading Italiandlrers to go 400 feet down. TReywould go to the earth's centre If Musso-lini orsWefilTaiMl they coi l? get there.

T. F. Wallace, head of the National ;Association of Savings Banks, sees theend of the stump bsostue ravings de- Iposits hare Increased $225,000,000. ]Saving shows strength of mind, but the 'end of the slump might be still nearer !If those that put the |?25,000.000 extra |Into savings banks had put It Into cir- jculation baying merchandise. I

What people spend makes prosper- IIty. What they save, makes them safe. I

All In one day the Prince of Wale*Is promoted In the army, nary andRoyal Air Force. The wise Britishseparate their air force from tbe othertwo. He U Vlce-Admlral of the fleet.Lieutenant-General In the army, AirMarshal In the flying fleet

The young prince Is made to real-lie that there are advantages In being"bom right"

On the other hand, It Is probablymore satisfactory to work to the topwithout help, like Napoleon or Kelson,

Alexander Hamilton, great-great-graadson of Hamilton, killed in a duel,Is a candidate tor the New York StateBloat*. He left Harvard Ore yearsago, did m wspaper work, tried mov-ing plctnru, then banking, In .poli-tics be "wl 1 work to repeal tbe prohi-bition amendment"

The young mfca, in addition to hav-ing Alexander .iamllton for a great-great-grandfather, ha* tbe late J. Pier-pont Morgan for his grandfather.

Very respectable ancestry.

Tbe literary and intelligent Fan DieHurst returntjtiom Europe with a petmarmoset, sw*stnall It sits In a largepodketbook. , Bhe should write abouthusbands of (be future, who will prob-ably dwindle to about that slse, In tbecourse of evolution.v Tbe giant set crab when you catclione, Is always female of great slxe.She carries the male crab, about as bigas a ten cent piece, under one ot Usflippers, except aft rare occasions. Hus-bands may dwindle down to that, whenmen hav no kelrder work than push-ing a button. 81ie and muscle will nolonger count.

lint woman will reman of full slie,because of be% maternal duties, andfor other reasons.

The female 'pfder Is ten times asMR an her husband, and eats him aftermarriage. Human husbands shouldnot complain.

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For Saturday Only!

of These GuaranteedSpring Filled Mattresses

Genuine Spring Filled MattressT h e | ) c i f i < l m;itlr<>K!t f o r |>«-rf<-<-l n ' l l It y<>" h a v e n e v e rs l e p t o n a npi i n g (ill<'<! nmttri'««, a n e w ( l ir i l l in s l e e p i n gp]ea.Mn<- a w a i t s y o u . M o d e of lunnll r«-»ilipnt co i l s p r i n g sa n d <:()V(>r<'fl «M n r o u n d in h a n d s o m e t i c k i n g . M a y b e h a din a c h o i c e of s e v e r a l c o l o r * . . . .

$13 .75$1 DOWN and $1 WEEKLY DELIVERS

OPEN SATURDAY NICHT UNTIL 10'

ALBERT

93-95 Smith St. Cor. King St. Perth Amboy, N. J.

Page 10: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

PAGE TWO SECTION TWO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, HKK)

Here are the new Packard cars and pictures of some 01 the interesting details. The Standard Eight five pasaenfersedan is atthe top, Standard Eight phaeton center and at the bottom is the Dt luxe Eight club sedan. In the right top corner is an interesting viewof the smoking set. The vanity case as used in the Standard Bigrt enclosed can is in the circle and at the lower left is shown the newnarrow rim, three-apoke steering wheel and the instrument board with the door of one of the instrument board compartments open.

SEARSHousetvare Specials

~VQRE0PEN SATURDAY EVENI NGS UNTIL9RMBamboo Sake

Used like a broom.Will not injure the

in. 30c

Ash ttftorA timely buy. Witt

.V2... $1.98

Garbage CanC o m p l e t e with

eovet. Hade of heavygalvanised <ffIron

Kitoben CanCover op«M by foot

ST..... 79cHandy Ann modal,

68c

Wateriest OookenFood cooked this

way ii h e a l t h f u l .Complete with * Opans O U

Clothes BacketSmooth i n t e r i o r

with strong handle).

ir.y'. 79cI

Waldorf TissueA fine q u a l i t y

tinue. fr-iIS Soil* 9 1

SCOTT TISSUEIt for t l

Window BoxeaGalvsnired. W i t h

two roomyh l

Canaries

$3.65G e n u i n e Hartx

Mountain birds. Allguaranteed ting«rn.

Lnnch KitsA room; kit fitted

with • pint va«- fuum bottle

Canning OutfitStock pot and win

rack. Triple coatedgenamel

Dutch OvenHeavy gaute alum-

inum quality, 6 quartsiae. Complete withraek,at . . . . 98c

HendryxGages, $3.75A good l o o k i n g

home for a good look-ing bird. Completewith stand.

Wall DustersOnU shape with

long polished handle.Gleana K Kthoroughly

Household ScaleA handy 20 pound

•cale (or the kitchen.

98c

BathroomScale, $4.95Weighs up to 250

poiinils. Serviceable.Beg. (7 value.

Electric Bulbs6 for $1

Assorted aizea from25 to HO watts. Frost-ed interior.

Clothes DryerFour arm outdoor

type. Sturdy, with130 ft, of clothes

r. $6.95

WindowVentilatora

« inch high withadjustable O C »width 4 O C

8 inch sise, We

Closet BeataWhite celluloid, for

the unitary bath-ruom, d» A iffat $4.45

Also oak or mahog-any stain polish atSS.6O.

Used Tire Trade-In Allowance EndsSaturday, 9 P. M.-Buy an Allstate Now

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND Co.Laid* Fl«Auto t'Jirk

Bigelour 2 0044

Elizabeth Ave. & Bigelow St.NEWARK, N J.

Dally9 A. M to 5:30 P. M.Sat. 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.

Henry FrahmeSURGICAL APPUANCES

AND SUPPORTERS

Now In Our Own Building

20 West Scott PL Elizabeth, N. J.Mte City Hall

W O O D B R I D G E

NEW YORKCANDY KITCHEN

Manufacturers and Dealers inStrictly Par*

CANDIES AWD ICE CREAM

66 Mam St. Woodbridge. Tel. 48

GUSTAV BLAUMGroceries and Provisions

66 Main St. Tel 8-0041Woodbridge

RATS' COST EQU lo$4 PER CAPITA TAX

Exact ToU of $500,000,000Annually in U. S.

New York.—The rut—man's mostdangerous and expensive charity—ex-acts an annual toll of S500.000.onoyearly in the United States, declaresDr. C. V. Akin, Burgeon, United StatesPublic Health aervlce. In Food Industrles. Of this sum, Doctor Akinadds. $200,000,000 goes to feed thepest and the balance. S3W.000.<»•(>.goes to provide the animal with puckages of produce to deface, bulldlnjmto cut and mar and surplus materialsto font.

Health authorities and economists.Doctor Akin states, regard the rat asthe most dangerous and expensive ofthe animal petti living at man's ex-pense. Strangely enough, the businessinterests that suffer most from thedepredations of these semi-savage"house guest*" seem least aware ofthe price they pay for the privilege ofrunning rat sanctuaries, or, In anyevent, they do the least to rid them-selves of the financial burden of hous-ing and feeding the ever Increasingmillions of rats.

Knormoue Feed Bill.If a conservative estimate of one

rat per capita of human populationbe applied, continues Doctor Akin, theannual meal ticket for rata In theUnited Statea will Just about use upa $200,000,000 bond lame. And to thisthe "cover charge" for wanton de-struction of property consequent ODgnawing and slashing, plus the "tip"for spoiled food products due to foul-ing, and It will be understood thatgiving rats a good time costs theUnited States the best part of one-half billion dollara per annum. Thisoverwhelming figure la better graspedIf we'consider It an unconstitutionalper capita tax of?over tour dollarsper annum for every man, woman andchild living within our borders.

Of all the mammals, the rat is themost cosmopolitan, None other Is sowell represented numerically In thecountries In which be has made him-self at home. Because this animalcan adapt Itself to almost any environ-ment dominated by man, and further,because the rat can oatthlnk. outcllmb,outjump and breed fatter than moatanimals, Including man, It has sur-vived man's spasmodic efforts at con-trol. If all the coverts and hidingplaces were suddenly obliterated, manwould be astounded to find himselfringed about on all sides with rats.The rat wisely chooses to live nearhumans who give him shelter andfood, and no doubt will continue todo so as long as he la permitted orIndirectly encouraged.

Pert* Travel Wldsly.Huts ure strictly nocturnal In their

hnliiis and can tee better at night.When traveling In the daytime, therat seems uncertain of Its movement!,unless running along a wall, whereIts long vlbrlMHne, or whiskers, nppnr-cntlv nre of service In guiding it. TheMuck rnt 1» even more wnry than the•ruwii rat and Is, consequently, moreItflicult to trap. It Is rather exceptlonnl to catcli a black rnt in atrap; snnp traps and dead fallsmore reliable for capturing this ope

Rat« are grent travelers. EitemlveulKrnllon* of rata have frequently

been noted, and a seasonal movementof rats from houses and barns toopen fields In th« spring, In search offresh, green food. Is recognised as aregujar occurrence. The return move-ment takes place In autumn. From anumber of trapped rats released In alarge city, one was recaptured, twodays later, at a point a mile distantfrom the place of liberation; and sev-eral were retaken In the coarse oftwo weeks, two and three miles fromthe place of release. Their travel hadbeen through a thickly populated areaof the city and across city streets,some of which were heavily traveledthoroughfare*.

Back To School!Soon children everywhere will be in school again, stronand well from a summer in the open. Keep them in goodcondition, by feeding them proper foods. Your nearbyASCO Store U well supplied with just the foods your fam-ily needs—at price* which will save you money.

ASCO Raspberry or Strawberry

Preserves jar 45cRea;. 9c Gold SealLeg. Vc liold Seal f\ -fl f* I

Rolled Oats 2 P k < " 1 5 cQuick rook or regular.aaaaaaasaaaaai

Mother's or QuakerRe*. 25c ASCO f% •"•/» I Mother's or Quaker f% - *

Oieaurgariiie 2 ' " 3 9 c Rolled Oats 2 " 1 9 cAbaolutely pure- for cooking and table use. Specially priced.

ASCO Whit. Meat f^a*

niNAHSH 2 5 cHawaiian Broken Slice*

New Pack 1930 Crop Canned Food!Vino Ripened Tomatoee 3 med cans 28cCut Stringlese Bean 2 cans 19cFanndale Tender Peaa 2 cam 2BcASCO Crashed Sugar Corn - 2 cana 29cASCO Coutry Gentle. Con 2 cana 29c

ASCO Finest Gold. Ban. Com 2 cans 29cChoice Cruahed Sugar Corn 2 cans 23cDelicious Yellow Bant. Cora 2 cans 23cASCO Fancy Sweet Peas can l £ASCO Finest Tiny June Peas .... can 23c

Yon never tasted batter 1

BUTTIgThe Finest Butter in America!

Each pound made from the sweet cream often quarts of pestueriied milk from tubercu-lin tested cows.

r •TU Pick of th. Nuul

47cStrictly Fresh Eggs doz 39c

Prim Flour.?79c: r40c

, BREAD O <SUPREMEX

BEST Granulated Sugarlb. . . . 5c

. Large'wrapped Loaf

Victor Bread, BigPan Loaf 5c

5c Pkf. Orange Slices 3 pkgs 10cPuritan Marshmallows pkg 10cN. B. C. Sugar Top Ban lb 24cN. B. C. Jingles - 2 pkgs 9c

Gold Seal

Macaroni or

3 _*- 17cPrim " _

Blue Rose pkg K p

RICE oc

Chips* Granule. big pkg 1* j4SC0 C<>ffee b 29CHerb-Ox Beef or Chicken Cubes jar 23c

ASCO Tomato Catsup big bot 15c

Selox or Ivory Snow 2 pkgs 25c*.

3:r25':2r.25€

Fancy Michigan

ASCO Home Style

NOODLES3*- 17c

Mueller's Macaroni

39c 29c 10c Sared!

Victor Coffee Ib25cAcme Coffee lb*»• 35c

Reg. 12>/.c California

Big ovalSARDINES 2 cana

PEA BEANS 2 - 1 9 'Log Cabin

Syrup can

Kan-L-Ration orCalo

DOGFOOD 2 - 2 5 CMay Pole Pancak*

Syrup ** 19cFinest Freih Produce!

YORK STATE CABBAGE 2 lbs BeOREGON PLUMS 2 lb* 16cBARTLETT PEARS '. do-. 23cGREEN STRINGLESS BEANS 3 lbs 25cBANANAS doi. 25cHEARTS OF CELERY 2 for 19c

Home from the Seashore or Mountains, you will find just theneed at the usual modest prices, in your nearest ASCO Store.

<• Ow

—Please mention this paper to advertisers; it helps you, it nelpt themit helpe your paper.—

Here's Instant ReliefFrom Bunion Pains

and Soft Cornsr nrcw lb« Swelling—Soft

Corn* Dry Rifhl Up and CanBe Pitted Off

Get a two-ounce bottle of Moone'sEmerald Oil (full strength) today. ETCTTwell-Mocked druggist (>•• this, and it willreduce the inflammation, toTeneu, andpain much quicker this anr remedy yonever med.

Your bunion* may bo so swollen andinflamed that TOU think you can'l goanother itep. Your shoe* may feel a* ifthey are cutting right into the fleth. Youfeel tkk all onr with the pain snd tor-ture sad pray for quick relief. What'* tobedoaeT

Two or three spplicitiom of Moone'aEmerald Oil and in fifteen minutei allIke pain and wrene*. diiappetr*. A fewmore application* al regular intern!* andtoe sweflina reduce*.

And a* for toft conn, a few applica-tions each night at bed time and thevjuatseem to shrivel right up and aesle of.

Draaajets ananatee Moone's EmeraldOil to sod r«r loot tmUsxt

Hassified Ads Bring Results

THE

Paulus DairyMain Office; 189-195 New St., New Brunswick, N. J

Phone 2400 Established 1890

USE PAULUS'OSITIVELYERFECTLY MILK.ASTEURIZEO

-*; WalkeHJordon Certified MilkWendmere Farms Raw Golden Guernsey Milk

Suydam's and Rutger's Special Raw TuberculinTested Milk

DISTRIBUTION COVERSNew Brunswick, Highland Park, South Mnr, SayrerUle,

Parib, S«rth Awboy, Perth Amhoy, Weodbridg*Carteret, Fords and Metuckeo, N 7 J .

Page 11: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1980SECTION TWO PAGE T H B A

PARAMOUNT PUBLIX PERTH AMBOY THEATRESMAJESTIC - STRAND - CRESCENT

DOORS OPENltOOP. M. IN THE HEART

OF THE CITY

YOURVIS1T TO PERTH AMBOY Wil l . NOT BE COMPLETE WITH-OUT ATTENDING ONE OF THE PARAMOUNT PUBLIX

THEATRES. COME — GET ACQUAINTEDWITH PUBLIX COURTESIES AND SERVICE!

One Week, Starting Saturday

A Publix T

Horn* of Paramount Picture*Smith St. Phone 1593

TROPIC NIGHTS OF ROMANCE!TROPIC DAYS OF TERROR!

•v

OU T OF THE SEA HE COMES TO SAVE HER FROM A SAVAGE FATE —THE MAN SHE HAS SWORN TO HATE! CARRIES H E R INTO THE

TROPIC WILDERNESS! FIGHTS FOR HER! SACRIFICES A FORTUNE TO WINHER! A N D OFFERS HER FREEDOM! BUT DOES S H E W A N T FREEDOMTHEN? SEE

RICHARD ARLENFAY WRAY

EUGENE PALLETTE1

—AlFor your further enjoyment the STRAND

THEATRE offer* a surrounding program of care-fully selected short subjects.

NEWS FOR OUR PATRONSThe Strand takes just pride in announcing- the New

Fall Season of Greater Paramount New Show World HiUtNever in th* history of this theatre has there eyer beensuch a lineup of outstanding screen productions. Here theyare:

RONALD COLMAN in "Raffles"Buddy Robers - Nancy Carroll in "Follow Thru"Rex Beach's "The Spoilers* with Gary Cooper

Ernest Lubitsch's "Monte Carlo" withJeanette MacDonald and Jack Buchanan

All coming to this theatre in the near future.

A Publix Theatre

Horn* of Paramount PicturesMadison Ave., Phone 106

ONE WHOLE WEEKCommencing Saturday

• » i t i , In ».i t i In t'tiii liV'kYv t w i n I'• l>

WHY ARE SOME MEN FASHIONEDFROM STEEL AND OTHERS CASTFROM DROSS? . . . WHY IS ONE HU-MAN BEING GOLD AND ANOTHERTINSEL? . . . WHY DO WE CALL ONEWOMAN FINE AND ANOTHER

COMMONCLAY

THE MOST FORCEFUL ANSWER YOUR MIND CAN

CONCEIVE WILL NOT POSSESS THE DRAMATIC,

BLOOD QUICKENING, THROAT TIGHTENING SUS-

PENSE THAT YOU WILL FIND IN "COMMON CLAY".

"SWING YOU SINNERS"(A Paramount Cartoon)

"VACATION LOVERS"(Educational All-Talking Comedy)

PARAMOUNT SOUND NEWS

A Publix Theatre

Home of Paramount Picture!Smith St., Phone 255

SUN,, MON., TUES.

Brought BackBy Popular Demand!

"MANSLAUGHTER"A Paramount Talking Picture with

CJaudette ColbertFrederic March

Wednesday - Thursday

The Greatest WarPicture Ever Screened!

"INSIDETHE

LINES"with

An All Star Cast

Friday - Saturday

WHATAMAN/

starring

REGINALD DENNYA refreshing talkie cocktail of I tig"Hilarity . . . Rags, Riches ami Ro-mance in a captivating Story of aSociety Tramp and an Heiress WhoDared Him to Love Her.

The Screen's Fun Sensationwith

MIRIAM SEEGARANITA LOUISE

HARVEY CLARK

Page 12: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

PAGE POUR SECTION TWO 1 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930

News of the World Told in PicturesTown of Few Cellars German Navy Holds Maneuvers Modernistic German Architecture

KIEL, QERMANY—The Zaehrlngen's guns booming during the maneuvers of the Oerman Navy,near here. Admiral in Chief Roeder and Vice Admiral Oldekoji directed the battle practioe.

New Football Practice

Skyscrapers on a busy street In Amsterdam, Holland. The water-

way "back yards" of the dwellings here shown Is suggestive of Venice.

Salute to New Princess

A salute ol tuns being fired In honor of the new baby princess

who was born to the Duke and Duchess of York at Olamls Castle.

Shatters Own Record

MIAMI BEACH—Sixteen-year-old Eleanor Holm of the New"York Women's Swimming: Association, who smashed her own world'a 'record for the 300-yard medley swim in the first day of competition'

, tn the women's National A. A. U. swimming and diving champion- <ahlps here by negotiating the distance in 4 minute* 16 second*. I

Progress in Phonography , \

• WEST POINT, N. Y.—A novel limbering up and marksmanship stunt during the flrst day'ij workout of the Army football teams. Here Cadet Richard B. Bh«ridan Is diving through an auto tire.'a as he tackles the dummy. Lieut. Harry Wilson, former all-America back, and Lieut, Charles Bom'\ are holding the tire. '

First Game Victors in Polo Match

WE8TBURY, L. I—The United States HIM-- up before the ILrst match with England, which the

Americans won, 10-5, Left to right: Eric L. Pedley, No. 1; Barln A B. Hopping, No 2; Thomas Hitch-

. cock .Jr., No, 3, and W. P. C. Quest, back

Famous Scientist Speaks

BERLIN-Right, Anil Berliner's first phonograph, made In 18T7,1 as compared with the film-sound device used in projecting talkie*

on the screen.

TO* (footer and » view of the wtrrtyird or the flaw fit.

Hospital. Notice the trend of Qermtn architecture, which has gone

decidedly modernistic.

Landskiff Racer

LONDON-An odd view of a racer In the landaklff competition

at Heine HU1 track. LandsUffi are becoming quite popular hen.

Stumped by New Alphabet

ANOORA, TURKEY A TinkMi iwmiint i>u«>d as he views the

new alphabet for the first tim>- n h m :,- unive.1 at the capital here

from Uie country.

With Adopted Daughters

' Prof. Albert Bnstein, famous scientist of Cternuuay, addressing an audience at the seventh an-nual radio (how held In Berlin.

1 Miss Jenny Dolly, one of the famous Dolly sisters, with her

adopted girls, Klarie, left, and Maud. Jenny recently was reported

as having won large sums at the casino* on the Continent

Page 13: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

LAST CALL!THE NEXTTELEPHONEDIRECTORYIS GOING TOPRESS SOON I

To arrange (or a telephoneIn time to get your numberin the new directory, tohave your preicnt liltingchanged, or additional list-bigs Included, gel in touchwith our business officeImmediately. « «. The classi-fied telephone directoryproduces results for adver-tisers. Arrange now to haveyour business messagereach the thousands of tele-phone users in this district« « Telephone, write or caH

AUTOMOBILE NOTES* " ' I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I l - i -4

KriKiiira which Imrn a Bolid fuel nreimt unHki'ly before liqaid fuel suppHps

l t l

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYA NtW JtHIY INSTITUTION SACHB IV NATIONAL 4HOUICM

If one cell of the hattery always re-i|Hires more water than the others, ItI ml I ciiteg a leak.

• • •When bandits "flee In a high pow-

ered cKr" these days It may be almostany make of car,

• • •"Fading" Is tbe term that describes

the lowered efficiency of the brakesafter they hare been "on" sotn« time.Heat causes It

• • •Does the annual production of

pickles In America—fireo ae threebillion—Include those times when thedriver's license was left In the othersuit?

• * * 'Paris has adopted a half hour park-

Ing limit. Increased registrations ofautomobllei led to the role, whichapplies to the entire downtown dis-trict.

• • *There should be no mystery wby

the Jack, placed on soft earth, sinks.The base of the derlce Is small andthe concentration of tbe weight ofone side of the CM upon It is boundto drlT« It Into the ground.

Expression ta Byron'sA quotation which departs as far as

any from the original version Is our:"No man la a hero to his own valet"Byron, writing nore than a centuryago. expressed It: "In ahort he wasa perfect eavalJero, and to his veryvalet seemed a hero."—Golden Boe*Magazine.

Bullet . L e « , . T r . i lr l!p!l^''tla'ile1r WMteT pvttlrffifi fff ftJacket with a core of smokeiiroduclngmaterial. When flred the cor© burnsand the bullet in flight can be tracedby the stream of smoke. The materialof which the core la constructed losespractlcnlly no weight in burning, sothat the trurer bullet takespath as the regular bullet.

All the world respects

A GOOD COOK• Cookery... one of the

greatest civilized crafts.

• A good cook... one of

mankind's solidest bless-

ings, • Flour . . . a basic

food which varies widely

in quality.

Heckers' Flour (that super-

lative flbur) does not vary in

1 quality. • In the grocery

trade there is a word

which means "out of the

"ordinary run" or "extra good"

"or the "best obtainable". The grocery

word for special excellence is "fancy". Heckers' Flour

is "fancy". • It is milled from the world's verybest

wheats. It is fine, dry and satin-y in texture, lending

itself to the dimble artistry of the expert cook.

Heckers' Floui has been on the market,,ninety years. oA supreme testimonial!

TuxedoSuits

Rented

S. FISHKIN

CLOTHING

187 Smith St.Partk Ambof

N. J.

Ttl. MSI

StabU Cropi'Hils miirli 1'iin l«> suit] about corn

anil »• limit itml other farm products:Their style doesn't clinnge each yoar.

-WorcPKlcr Unll.v T

FN»» and FleasA court luifl Knively dt'fidi'd that fleas

ninnut he trained. I'linne we hove n e tiiccdcil no IrillnliiK.—Florence (Alfl.)Hornlt!.

For QualityWALL PAPER

' PAINTS and VARNISHESTRY THE

New York Wall Paper Co.3M STATE STREET PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

(How Ulllj Cm run Aiuwrr?)

Q. When a cur li blit^Uh,loses power on hills and IIHI •Blow pick-Dp, what ihuulil bedone?

Ana. f in t Inspect the aparkplugs. Bi replacing worn plugsnew life Is glren an enflne andoften expensive repairs areavoided.

Q Why la it particularly adTlsable to shift tbe ear intosecond (ear when driving on agrade In heaij traffic)

ABB. JTha euflne mtke* a bet-ter brake that taking some ortbe strain of the regular brake,stream. It also penult* quickerplck-ap.

Q. How many gasoline finingstatlona are in the UnitedStatesT

ADS. Approximately 320.000.Q. Bow many service sta-

tions and repair shops are Inthis country?

Ana. Some 00,900.Q. At what temperature will

a battery showing a reading of1260-1300 fraent

ADS. Approximately 80 de-grees below iero Fahrenheit.

Girl Own* and OperatesGwoline Filling Stand

Pretty Loretta Babhltt, eighteen, of8 t lioois, Ho., la probably the young-eat of ber sex to own and operate agasoline station In the Unltei! States.Since her father's death sli years ago

-1

Mlaa Rabbltt Filling a Customer'sGasoline Tank.

she has -been operating ber stntlon luthe Mound city and Is kept BO busy byher work that she "can't seem to findenough tine to go out with ber boyfriend*."

Telephone for aHOOVER

and House-cleanwith Ease!

WE'LL lend you a Hoover for a week duringfall house cleaning time. We want you to

learn for yourself how easy it is to put your homein perfect order without sacrifice of time or energy.

The Hoover and its attachments clean rugs andcarpets, walls, mattresses, pillows, upholstery andmany other things with speed and efficiency im-possible with any other cleaner or cleaningmethod.

The Hoover performs the three essentials of rugand carpet cleaning—namely, beating, sweeping,cleaning.'all in one easy operation.

Hoover deluxe $79.50Popular priced model 63.50

Prices slightly higher if purchased on terms of$5 down and $5 a month.

PVBLIC®SERVICE

A New 6-cylinderChevrolet Truck

with Dual Wheels

6-CYUNDf*50-HORSEPOWER INOINtFOUR-SPEED

TRANSMISSION

NEW LARGERTRUCK CLUTCH

WHEELS

U«M Mh«r a—h '363

.......**™*440

»595Ton CbosiltwMi Cob '625

UTILITY Itt-TON CHASSIS

cab iAdu6m front ™d.r, and opro«..board$ row^ doih and com-

i/.v,ipp«* i»«rv«.*nt POM/. *«»«<,

DUAL WHEELS $ « EXTRA

n m-tcn mod*U Including ipara wn*>l.

A raw shc-cyHiMtor 1'4-ton Ch«vrol«t truck—with dualwh««h—1» new available at Cmvrotet doal«n wry-wrwr*. It Is big and powerful, rugged and dependable.It offer* many new features of outftanding value to the

•"•«*«•" »™elt uf#r* Af ld nO Oth*r trUck ** 0qMa' e aP°e l fyeostf leis to operate and maintain. Your nearestC h e v r o | e t dealer will gladly give you a trial loaddemonstration—any time.

FEATURES OF THE NEW CHEVROLET TRUCK

^^ wheels at slight additional cost, with six truck-typ*cord tires—bigger, heavier rear axle—completelyenclosed four-wheel brakes—new heavy-duty truck-type clutch—new, stronger steel channel frame—** t ran,m , , . lon-30-hor.epower valve-ln-head

r

slx-cyllnder engine.pricei f. o. b Flint, Michigan

CHEVROLET M O T O R C O M P A N Y , D E T R O I T , M I C H I G A NDlrl.)*n .f O.n.rol N.l.f. C.rp.r.tl.n

I T ' S W I S E T O C H O O S E

Page 14: The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more ......four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. VIII, No. 52 The Price of This Paper is 3 cents everywhere-Pay no more CARTERET

PAGE SIX SECTION TWO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930

News of the World Told in PicturesWell Protected A Novel Rest House in Italy Planet Rescue Dummies

Lord Howe, very well protected from the rain, watching the

trial* for the great Irish road race.

Keeping the Tail Still

This young milkmaid »l Zetland, Holland, h u adotfsd tbli

method of keeping bouie's tall still while milking.

For World Series Rodeo

PHILADELPHIA—Some of the 200 steers from Mexico and Texas

being unloaded on the siding near the sesqulcentennlal grounds for,

the world series rodeo.

New Sun Beacon

! OHIOAaO—Mlsa PatdcU Hughes examining the huge sun-fl««h

beaooo on top the La, BaUe-Wacker Building. The huge mlrron

reflect tlw lun'i rayi during tlie day.

A novel rest house, formerly a railroad c*r. erected by the Italian Government 2,200 meters high In

the Alps for the benefit of Jurists after their long climb.

_ WHer6 Tropical Hurricane Killed Many

SANTO DOMINOO-A Tlew of the Christopher Oolumbui Monument In front of tb* oathedrsl la

Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic, when • treat tropic*! hanton* kM kUM • « »

Deople.

Greets German Ocean Flyers

P r e s i d e n t Herb«r ( Hoover rece ived ( h e c r ew of Dm t i n m a n l ^ :c e n t l y c o m p l e t e d a n elKlit -day lli/!ht fnmi C e r m a n y U'f l in ilt:hi A:.A v i a t i o n C l a r e n c e M. YI I I JUK; K<twnrd / I I I H I W T , <•<> p i l o t , I ' l i - . l t lent l l ^ i

• p i lo t , a n d D r . O t t o V. K l e p . i -hiunc d f a l l a l i c s of t in 1 < lei m a n y Kmlmv

u p n w u l Hymn b o a t wlvi r e -.mi . '^•crr lnry or Cummerc* 1 for,

d i p t . WulfKiing von O r o n a u ,

BERLIN—Perdlnand achrey, eighty yean old, who U called the Inventor of preeent-day atenog-jrtphy and a pioneer in the building of typewriting machlne«, showing some youngsters how shorthand'flgurat a n made.

IWL.—A new sport at the air races In the form or (iT M JHITIM took off «na iptunwt mto tMTstreef

Beach, where they reicued dummies that were floating around thelate. Left to right: Art Caperton and Lou Oordon, wlnnera in theno*.

Model of Old Swedish Schooner

iTOCKHOLM—A new model of the Swedish schooner Brexlge,

,wolen competed for the famous America's Cup off the Isle of Wight

'wnntgr-elght r»ari aga

Miniature Golf in England

Miniature golf In England It quU«- dlfTeretit from the courses W*see In America. The English game Is railed ladder golf, and scoresare registered according to where the ball sUips on Uie rungs of th*ladder, at seen painted here on the

Return From South America

NXW rORK-Left to right: Mr. Frank AydeMU, president ofewurthmore OoUege, and H. N. Simpson on the B. 8. 8WU M»ri»when they returned from • two-months' tour of South America fortoe Guggenheim Foundation. They witnessed the overthrow of theLegula gorernment in Peru.

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(jABTEBET PRESSFRIDAY, SEPTEMBKR 12, 1080

SECTION TWO PAGE SEVEN

UBERAL TERMS!

One Week Exchange Policy

Many Makes and Modelsfor you to choose from!

w CXCEDTICNAL VALIE/When you look for exceptional values in used, cars, you will save time and worry by visiting us firstA number of used car dealers ask us why we sell our cars at such low prices. Our answer is-VOLUME*We cannot afford to hold cars for high prices^ Quick turnover with small profits is our method.

HERE'S A FEW SAMPLES:$525.Q0la niet) condition and appearance

1808 OAKLAND ALL AMERICAN SIX TUDOR SEDANExceptional Value ..•

IMS NASH SEDAN : . . . wooIMS CHRYSLER SEDAN |M!OOIMS ESSEX COUPES (2) ZZZ 28S 00IMS ESSEX COACH — Still Look. New 285 00

l«t» CHEVROLET *V* COOPt — Like New1926 BUICK COUPE192

418.60

1928 WHIPPET COACH , M1929 FORD V, TON PANEL DELIVERY raOO1929 FORD TUDOR SEDAN1929 FORD COUPE1930 FORD SPORT ROADSTER — Plenty Extras J Good As New"1930 FORD TUDOR — Practically New

Many others inmakes and models rang-ing in price from $50 up.

TMB TRAOfr MARKTHAT GUARANTEES

A "

USED CAR MARTtt*76 FAYBTfl «TDEET ~ PHONff £7Q5 PEITTH AK

Our one week exchangepolicy guards you againstloss - It is the safest guar-antee obtainable.

NEAR HIGH ST., PERTH AMBOY

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00

t t k 1 » i I t » » I 4 t I t . t , . !•'; I. . t . i k u »V', »VI *V/»VC»Vi »\'V 117 li , I . ; I I i, , I, , 1 1/ IYYJYV|V/>vv tWj r ; > n tv / tv />Vi t r i IVY t \ i »r/ »v ivv ». /1 < I n »vv»\ /

Gary Cooper** Lateet

"A man From Wyoming", star-ring Gary Cooper at the RahwayTheatre today. It 1# the story of thefortunes and adventures of a youngWesterner who joint the EngineerCorn and becomes a gaUant soldierin the war. Jane Collyer It the lead*\ng woman. She was ieta and heardin "River of Romance", "Million"and "The Love Doctor".

Rowland V. Lee, who directed thegreat war picture, "Barbed Wire",made "A Man From Wyoming".

Pep in "The Arizona Kid"

Swaying, rattling ttage coaches,the din and confution of a dance-hall crowd, the deadly cracking ofiix-gutu, and a whirlwind story ofromance and action with WarnerBaxter again in the colorful role ofa devil-may-care caballero, all con-tribute to the entertainment qual-ities of "The Aritona Kid", the FoxMovietone sensation which comes tthe Rahway Theatre tomorrow.

Filmed against the brilliant b»cground of Zion Canyon In south

western Utah, the locale of thestory, directed by Alfred Santell.

Al.oMETROTONE NEWS

COMEDY *AUDIO REVIEW

SATURDAY ONLY2 —Special Attractio

ARIZONAKID*

MOMAIrCA«Cl LOMBARD!nUOOOBWONOIZf

ASSOCIATE FEATURE —FOX

STARTING SATURDAY & continuing for twelve week*RIN TIN TIN in "THE LONE DEFENDER" withWalter Miller, June Marlowe and Buzz Barton

Episode No. 1, Sat. Sept. 13th, "Myotery of the Desert"will be shown only at matinee performances. ^ ^ ^

SUN. , MON. , 1 4 , 15 Din-fl froniitn N. Y. Showing

LETS coNATIVE'WISE CRACKING HIS

WAY TO ANOTHERSUCCESS

Special Engagement TUES., WED., Only

TENSE DRAMAOf Ronunu

Advcntnr*

COMING SOON

"DAWNPATROL"

Sun of"SUBMARINE"

In a Colorful Dram*of th«

FOREIGN LEGION

Colorful FrenchLegion Provides

Subject For Fflm"Hell1. Iiland" Built About

Intereatinf and Novel Ltfeof Famous-Group.

Two Americans, a London Cock-ney, a f«w Germans, Italians andSpaniards and a lot of Frenchmen,•11 wearing the game uniform! Themost heterogeneous and at the sametime one of the most famous rtogt-raents in the world — the FrenchForeign Legion—provides the back*ground for "Hell's Island", Colum-bia Pictures' dramatic feature sched-uled to play at the Rahway Thdatr*on September 16, 17, with JackHol,t, Ralph Graves and Dorothy Sebastian in the leadp.

It do* not take any great stretchof the imagination to suppose whatexceptional possibilities this back-ground offers to the abilities of JackHolt and Ralph Graves. They willbe seen in what is, paradoxically, atypical but entirely different vehiclefrom anything they have ever made.

The screen story, by Jo Swerling,derives its title, "Hell's Island" fromthe dreaded prison colony, in FrenchGuiana, in which the dramatic cli-max of the picture occurs. Leadingup to this, however, are presented aaeries of incidents which cover awide range. The good-natured tom-foolery between the rough-and-readysoldiers of the Legion in their pur-suit of each other's "dames", theexotic atmosphere and entertain-ment presented by a typical Algeriancabaret, the forced marches beneaththe blazing Sahara sun, the whirl-wind attacks of the fierce Riffs, Be-duins and Arabian tribesmen, a mil-itary tribunal and other interestingand novel events comprise the storyand action of "Hell's Island".

| M|)!( Mf I

me aota tenneci-THE NEW PACKARD EIGHT

Breaks Forth

Hola! Hola! Obligato and a fewcrescendos!

William Austin, veteran Eng-lish character-comic of the talk-ing screen has gone musical.

Austin »ings a verse of "Let'sGo Native" peppy hot-step tunewhich is one of a number ofcatchy melodies in the musicalfarce-comedy "Let's Go Native"coming to the Rahway TheatreSunday and Monday.

It is the first time Austin hasbroken out in osng on the screen.He proves to be a very funny vo-calist.

Others who share in the hon-ors of the show with Austin ar«Jack Oakie and Jeanette ICac-Donald, Eugene Pallette, KayFrancis, William Austin andSkeets Gallagher.

TokvUtoaIf there Is no such thing as tel*

patoj, how does the loog dtntence oper-l t « IHWW,

WB MOST cordially Invite 70a to comein and look ore* the new Packard

can now on display at out showrooms.

Yon will find them u fine gold refined—aione of the world's finest can made Kill finer.

A Wide Choke ofBeautiful New Models

The new Packard Eight lfldude» more notableimprovements and refinements than any Pack-ard of recent years. It is available in thirty-twobeautiful models ranging in price from *2385

1 for the ever-popular Standard Bight Five-Pu-•enger Sedan to *6075 for the finest Individual

' Custom creadon. (At the factory.)

Improved carboredon and manifolding haveIncreased the power. With added power, per-formance, especially in traffic and at the "redUfht",ha«beeri bettered. The advantages whichonly a four-speed transmission can give havebeen retained, with the transmission convertedto die "short-shift" type. Longer tad softer'springs and new shock absorbers provide moreriding comfort. An entirely automatic lubri-csdoo system now takes the human dementout of daily chassis care and protects the longfife resulting foam fine engineering and pre-dsioa manufacmreu

Bodies made in Packard's own factories areme finest in every wty that Packard has everoffered. Traditional appearance has been re*oined and beauty of line refined. Interior! havebeen beautified and made more luxurious.New color combinations have been provided.

Thirty years of boilding for the most dbcriml-nating clientele has taught the Packard MotorCar Company what such a clientele demands.And year by year—and again this year-newluxuries, new refinements and new improve*ments have been added.

An Investment inLuxurious Transportation

Today when jiearly everyone is thinking Interdu of investment instead of speculation,and buying more careful!/, we ask you to viewrtfimtd and improved cars —can without ssingle speculative or untried feature. WithPackard the car has shmjs been greater than,any one feature. You could not buy, expectingto keep your car four or five yean if itwere otherwise.

We shall be- delighted to have you visit ourshowrooms and, as our guest, you will not beurged to buy. You will be extended every cour-tesy and desired attention in return for yourown kindness in calling.

GARRETSON COMPANY215 Market St. Perth Amboy, N. J.

Telephone Perth Amboy 1000

A S K T H B M A N W H O O W N 8 O N B

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PAGEEK.IIT SECTION TWO FRIDAY, SEITKMUKR U 19,'tO

JUST HUMANS By OENE CARR YOU KNOW ME, AL

"How Lonf Are Y'join' to Paint?'"About • Week!"'TUCbme Back Then r

Memories!

I9DSTHCNZDAMBW9AC. TO SPRING I I

YDS

He Got The Wrong Answer

THA.M * D0M8

By RING LARDNER

REGULAR FELLERS Patsy Gan Only lick One of Than By GENE BYRNES

GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES In London, Tool By ANITA LOOS

GRASS BUT NOT GREEN

"Let me warn you of tbat grau•Widow."

"What's the necessity?""Well, she's anything but green."

SCANTY AS YET

CkutiouaHouBekeeper— I tiou't usually give

rharity, but you cnn have a raeal Uyou will beat this run.

Traniii—Hut. tiuven't you a smallerone? I'm not us hungry as all that!

Very Scant—UndoubtedlyDoris—When ray husband saw me

.vesterOuy in this new bathing suit, bewent away rouring mud!

Jane—The Idea of making a fussover so little 1

"No, Hardly, Hi"Mull Clork—This letter Is too heavy.

You'll have to put another stamp on It.Hiram Hicks—That ain't join' to

muke It a-nv lighter, am IfT

BUT IT P0E8NT MEAN ANYTHING

UlUim( HtLtO, <T^ s» I J V * \ •-

BL^^rl i . . i n•V-Jf I UOMC3

I Bessie, is

1Jm

By

IVIJSVC* X

S. ATE ,* « "

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RUBE

wV 1 f Ml

1'Jmi

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GOLDBERG

wI Low You &o/

She—Mary's buying that dreif onlnsiallments.

He—Advise her not to wear It againuntil she has all the Installment*.

OH, WELL, NEVER MIND

"You promised me a little kiss, ymifwlrt you would not care."

•'Thin much Ig true, but then younee. my hiiBbunil'B over there."

I

<5REAT XlrNAE

woeooyTO -TAUKTO BUT

RNNEY OF THE FORCE Just Another of Snoop's JokesW U»Ot GOMTA

OP A €P6AK-EA«VHJlNOj

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THE FEATHERHEADS m*h Neither Gives in One Speck

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