bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph...

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and Warriier Today. Freeh bwest Winds. THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP DY-SECOND YEAR. Woodbridge, N. J., Friday, January 16, 1931 , The Woadnrldte .Hlffc News, edited by the itudenti. Will be found on Page 6. TJite .feature win appear In the Leader every school week. * ' THREE CENTS PER COPY bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief [YAN SAYS $7,000 ANNUALLY WASTED IN LIGHT D1STRCTS; ASKS UNIFICATION FOR ECONOMY iquila Starts Drive for Betterment of Bus Service Between Iselin and Woodbridge. Conference Will Be Held Mon day Between Public Service and Transport Body. The dispute over the lighting districts' boundary lines in ; e Township was renewed at the Township Committee meeting »onday afternoon and again brought from Mayor William A. [yan the statement that a great deal of -unnecessary delay and pense could be saved if all districts were put under one head. ie existing lines between District No. 3, of Avenel, and District y. 5, of Iselin, were again discussed. A letter was received by the Township Committee from ie commissioners of both districts, declaring that "at a meet- ig held on December 10 in the office of the Public Service in ahway, in the presence of Mr. Jones, we have both agreed to :cept the boundary line laid down by Township Engineer Mer- II. Therefore there is no disagreement as far as the Commis- oners are concerned." ,. Aciulla HiiKtfi'Ht* 1'iwtlMinoment I i~/wwi ~i\ T. T~n J i j J Anthony Aqiilla newly . seated f,VUU COClOfltOlU Added To Township's Population ST. JAMES CHURCH GETS $1,646 IN COURT ACTION , St. James 1 " Church was given a ter- llot by a Jury In Circuit Court, pre- ided ov*r by Judge 1 Prank L. Clery in New %runswick; Monday", lor | 1 , - N6 against Joseph . Leila of East- Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the coun- er sliit'of Leila against the ohurch. On. December 29, 1929, Leila agreed to lay a floor In the church and make other Alterations at a cost of f 1,950. tt was contended by the church that the contractor did not supply the .materials agreed uporf and therefore the church was forced to nlo considerable expense to complete the work. Andrew D. Desmond, lo- cal attorney, represented the church. limiiitlwinnii from Inelln, tin' ninttcr hp carried qj'er for I t inthrr week ;\s he was sure that a L vorahli' settli'tncnl would be made, j KiiKlnppr CieorRe R. Mer-| •n sntmctrd that a meeting be i ll"il wiln the lighting commission- j F and HIP Hoard of ARgesROrs, but; in-man Jacob. ftrauRam. .watj •tin* siiL'pPHtlon because he j Id iti:it the iiHsi'HKorn had no right| di'i'lil" 1 tli>« matter. | •"I'll.- mattrr should he taken cam' iir<>i>:ily ur not at all," declared! miuiiti'i'in;in (iraiiHam. "There Is! nl\ inn- mrri'H way and that In be-1 i- the iidmlnltttratlon committee of, Tnwnnhlii Committee and .the iiir should thru bo presented at ncvt ni'-f'tlnR." | 'I hcHi've Mr. Oraimam mlnunder-i <id nn 1 ." aohwVrd Mr. Merrill!, "I; •rioted t!r\t the assessors" be pres-j bcraiiH« tlii'y crfii point out which 1 tlimi hnv<- liwn nssessed." I I It was then that Mayor Ryan again j ^(•::<-sti<l the abolition of the Hjsht-! : districts, ! "Tin' |ir(i|ier and l)Uiiln«Riilike VW '.' to put all tho districts under one Rd. We am junt throwing away nut $7.noO," nald the mayor. \ ! Aftfr a lenuthy discussion It was; pally df-rtdfd that thftUisbtlng com- of both districts, the Hard of .Wppsor* and th,<* ftdmlnt- ratlon conimittpo of the Township Dnimlttrrc" should meet tonight to, tilft the matter, j At the sanw time thf> commlsslon- of l.i'jhtlni: District No. 7 will b«[ Iviltnl to atttivd »s they- have'filed! ' rev their district.! „..,.,. of 'l.lghtlDK Dln-j fin No l also will l»c a$ked to at- \ t<» adjust liny dlffi'renepfl over. It'ir district lines. minltti'4'man Aqulla then asked h.v sldmvalks have not 'been con-i on Oak Tree road, Isflln, | Dm tin' Lincoln Highway, to HL11-. avMiiu 1 .' tt,was explained that j muttir hiis hrfn delayed until the ; •ulties siirrmmdlnn the undpr- pv In ISCMH with the Pennsylvania; jtllroad huvf-In on adjusted. Objec- to tin- HldewalkH hare been evlously made By Alfred D. Hydo, iiperty owner on Oak Tree road, lian hail a dispute, with' the nshlp ruiiardlnis the correct width Itlio road'. .Thi> Board of Freehold- rtie Township.claim that.the id Is no ft'pf wide, while Hyde <IH tbAt K,..,,.,_._ .,_. fact that the rflad Is «nly'4O feet ;intl the . prbpbvd • Hldewalks, buld KO'throuch hla property. \quila CIIPH H * W I I H |Mr. Aquilii pointed out that'the Woodbridge Townshlp'H pop- ulation Jumped 1,000 durtnR tho ^welf. ,•. This nnprfreilentcd In- crease however doesn'.t mean anythlnc; to the bunlneBBtnan for the 1,000 -newnwfdp.nta are wild cottontail rfthbltn. which have, baen freed In the vicinity of Woodbrtdge, AV.enel, Sewaren and Port Readlnp; by Joseph E^ Kert, MlddH'Hes County ijame warddiv. I^arge colonies of -the new jtimpinK iiopulation have taken up residence In the Cutter and! Mutton Hollow clay pits. Their tracks c.rlaB-crossed the short- lived snowfall 6f iaat Monday. Scores bf.tlwm can ^be seen bounflliiK around'' getlltiK ar- quainted with the strange ter, rain. Honhamtown Lake also has been restocked with fish, a lar-ge consignment having been re- leased in the wfcters during the past week, Included ftmong the members of the ftnay tribe who will be the target of anglers next season are 150 large mouth bass, 150,cropper basB and 400 perch, The, fish v ere taken from th« Delaware River and the RaHtan Caul at MUltown. They were placed in large tanks and taken by truck to the lake. ARREST OF TRIO ENDS SERIES OF THEFTS HERE Hagaman Heights Youths Are Charged With Robberies in Carteret, Woodbridge and Amboy. EDISON THANKS COMMITTEE FOR ROAD ACTION Noted Inventor Expresses Ap- preciation of Proposed Ed- ison Memorial Boulevard. Michael Cher- and John. Bat- ,ta by the TO BEFETED I (lfA! AT DINNER FEBRUARY 4. LU '- JU ' $500 TO NATIONAL RED CROSS HEADQUARTERS; PLANS DRIVE Mrs. Asher Fitzgerald, Head of Township Organisation, Makes Preparations to Raise $1,500 Balance of Quota Here. $10,000,000 Needed for Food for Victims. Slntp Senator Artlitjr A. QHinn, of Scwitren, will be feted upon hls'elei-i tlon fo tire LefilB.lnture by more than . 1,200 of his friends nt a dinner in the Perth Amboy Naval Armory Febru- ary 4. Former Governor A. Harry Moore, of Jersey City, prominently mentioned a» the next Democratic candidate for governor, will be the! principal ftx ' torcyele Officer petition to Start of Anti- Diphtheria Drive Is Asked Here AH-Officers of, Board of Health Redamed at Orga- nization Meeting; Pete> son Re-appointed. All tlii'' officers of the 'D«ard of Health wore returned to'office, at the annual organization meeting Mondav night at *thi> Memoritjl, Municipal hulldim;.. The offleers renaraed are* i pjf n «\ lettfr, personally „ signed by Thomas A. Kdleon, expresBlnR his ap- preciation to the Township of Wood- brldgeior. its resolution favoring the KdlRpn Memorial" Boulevard, which was Introduced »by Commltteeman W. P. - Campbell, was received by the Township Committee-at, Its meeting Monday afternoon at the Memorial Municipal. Building, Other letters were received from a representative f Henry F'ord and from the Port ol Hew York Authority. Mr. Edison's tetter follows: B: J: Dujiigan, Township Clerk, 'Woodbridge, N. 3: •'My Dear Mr. Dunlgans Allow me to thank you for your etter of December 29th, with which ou enclosed copy of the. preamble and resolution adopted by the Town- ship Committee of the Township of Woodbridpe at their regular meeting he! d on Jiecember 2 2,19 3 O'i ^ note that In the above named preamble and resolution it Is pro- posed to construct a new highway, as therein described and to name this new highway the Edison Memorial Boulevard. "Will you please present my com- pliments to the Township Committee and Inform the member thereof that I regard It as a distinctive honor they have paid me in proposing to give, my name to this new highway. I highly appreciate their friendly attitude and good will that has been expressed to- ward me," The, letter from Prank Campsall, a representative of Henry Ford in Inf- erence to the proposed highway, ex- With the ar vanlak, Alec iak, of Hagrt teret police Celestlne Romond, of the Woodbridge police,'a series of burglaries in W««d- br.idge, Carteret, .Perth Amboy, Rah- wfty .and Newark were cleared up. After their arrest by Sergeants J. J. Dowllng and John Andres the men were turned over to the Woodbridge police to show where'they had com- mitted robberies In the tqwnship. One of these was the robbery of a, club- house belonging to an athletic asso- ciation in Sewaren where baseball bats and other sportB go6ds- were stolen, Another was the robbery of the Dew Drop Inn tm the highway. *When the Carteret' police and- Mo- torcycle Officer Romond went to Chervanlak's house' armed with a search warrant they found hundreds of articles, mostly bicycles, stolen in this territory. Among the articles re- covered wer the following stolen from .the Dew Drop Inn: Two dress- es valued at $17,; 1 suit case valued at $20; one pair of leggings valued at $3 and one revolver holster and. belt. principal p Freeholder chairman of the committee ing the dinner. Otlier officers of thi' | committee are Nathan Llpmnn, trens-1 urer and John .White, secretary. Woodbridge Township official*'im' 1 well BS l»rt(e niimbei* of. Senutor (JuCnn's frfenrfs m woodbfjditti, ».Se- "varen, Avenel and otiitr sections nl he township are planning to attend. DcMOLAY ORDER WILL PRESENT SHOW TONIGHT Musical Numbers, Old-Time Minstrel to Be Featured in Chapter's Presentation. Amerlcus Chapter, Order ot De Molay, will present Its annual mlji- strel Bhpw tonight at the Craftsmen's Club. The curtain will rise at 8:15 o'clock and a one-act comedy sketch, entitled "A Girl \o Order," will be the opening- feature. The cajst is be- ing coached by Kent Bease, of the high school faculty, and Is as fol- , lows: | Howard (Lady) Clayton, John HirKle Puck Evans Alfred Nussbaum Elsie Jordan Martin Newcoraqr. Jr Dud* SiHot...™'. _..: Walter L.ev1 Mr. Elliot - Charles Bohlke Biscuits Nelson Herbert Nelson Part two will consist of the min- T0WNB0ARD ACCEPTS OFFER OF PLAYFIELD Maple Realty Company Gives 200-Foot Plot in Avenel For Development as Play, ground. A 200-foot square plot in Avenel,] offered to the Township by the Maple Realty Company, of Avenel, for use as a children's playground was ac- tepted by the TownsTilp Committee at its meeting Monday afternoon In tlie Memorial Municipal Building. The property is three blocks south of Avenel street and is between Park and Madison avenues, It is in the center 1 of a growing residential dis- trict. Commltteeman Joseph L. Oill of the Improvement committee, who surveyed the property offered by tlie realty commitee, reported on the ad- vnntafcps of .the land for playground purposes and told the_ committee of the favorable attitude of residents of that •section to the proposed play- fleld. "I have- interviewed the heads of the civic organizations in that sec- tion of the township and have found them all in faVor of the Tbwnship Committee's accpting the company's Woodhridjre Township was asked to raise $2,000f"»8 ita 1 in the new national Red Cross drive for $10,00O,00QO for Klit relief in a telegram yesterday to the chapter here. Mr*. lAsher Kit-/ Randolph, the president, immediately forwarded fwo in .John Barton Fayne, nfEifipWThalPmari, at WMfettigtoTi, mid immediately started plans forthe drive to raise $l,S00 more here IQ complete the Township's auota. Contributions will be received by w. L. Harned at the First National Bank and TniBt Company. ' . Staetn \re<] AM Of Board Sells $140,000 Bonds in ¥iveM'mate$ The noun! nf Education dls- posed of $110,000 of schqol bonds in ivninl tlmo at a bile! inoetln- in District Clerk R C. Knslqrv's oflkv. Monday nisht. The sic!iiiil biisitu'Ks of the nieet- lii!; look little more' than ft* p e .minutdVi. Thr bu'ml htfllr is for the fliilinchiH i>T 4he-new tiddl- timi to Srliool No, 11, o(|tl^)-' nicnt tifld otln'r scliaol repairs. Tlio ifaiiL' was \iwarili'd to Itapp, 'H*kwnod & Co-.i at New York, on Us total bid oLfUO.- . 01!>.«0 ul IIVM per ocnt. »n l'.!!> bonds. Tin; nnly otlier bid sub- mitted was that of Morris Math- er & Co., alsti of New Yiirfi. on 140 IIOIIIIH at 11 vf pur cent with u bid of $140,000. LABORER7INEDT$5FOR STEALING BAG OF COAL Charles Do'llnlck. 2'i, a, laborer, of William street, Kurds, wus fined $5 and OO«LH Tnoadiiy iiicht by Acting Judge Nathan Duff for malicious mis- chief and trespasBint,- on Lehlgh Val- pressed the automobile manufactiir-| gt / e fVlrltV Haymond'DeWrest'aB ln- ers appreciation oj the action of the | terlpcutor and Charles,Bohlke fc Rich- Township Committee. STOLEN CARWRECKS GAS STATION PJJMPS Th« local police aro aoarching tbr the driver of a car that struck and knoc,kod over»two gas tanks In front of the CUiir Oaragp on tlahway ave- hufe at 1.30 o'tlock MorfBay after 1 noon. Tho. driver, who-was unhurt, •„-,.. -••- I, , sot out 'of the car and ran away. Mayor William A. ftjhui. perman-, T h e c a r i ^j,,^ w ' fts par fially^; wrecked at chairman fpj-. Ui_e ; ensulns year U^a tfl W ed Jnto the earaee, Commlteeman Jo.feplf h- 8111, clerk ( - At-3 o'clock, A,lfred Rodney. Jr.. of Tn the new national ca the Red Cross, following the heels of the annual the organliatoln, twenty' United SUtes will be call»d ttfcm to supply relief for the. tirfntyHMia drought-siricken commonwWittlu, > Mr. Payne's telegram,UfcfJBI* I U 4 - Cross unit here, addTeswdta. Mnu Lei and Reynolds, secretary, of hapter, follows: . "Greatly Increased dei(lnd da last ten days has mads' imjwi Immediate campaign for Bed teliet fund to meet emergency I tion through parst of r twetjt. states in draught- stricken a m ; Minimum ten million dollar* j to prevent untold suffering and;' tual. privation by thousands of f* lies atop pollution water suppljrr./ caused by dying cattle adde4 to 'iriw^u&l. u>r hardships In some aectiou l t M * t President Hoovor in proclamaOopW-iT::' morrow will urge Immediate and (en,?s erous reeponsa stop confident .your ' v people will not fail meet theirtyiar«; this humanitarian need but DeowijMp , of general conditionB ,deslre lmprMf ' you necessity tnoa tvigoroufi poM^U^ •• campaign stop success our efiortt will be regarded as test ot Red Cro» hy President and entire Batl0ttftn4 we must not fyil stop your chapter, ard Shohfl, Robert Siller, Fred Bates, Elnar Nelson and Albert Bow- ers, Jr., as end men. An added feature of the program will b& a. comedy musical sketch eiven by Robert P'arrlnRton " and Maurice McHose, assisted by Harold Bates at the t piano. Following the performance there will be dahclns with fTanggaard's Bluebird Orchestra furnlBhtng the music. Tickets may I be procured from any tieNfolay faem-,' her. Albert Bokers. is chalrma-n ofl nn-ansements. Bernard 'Bernstein ha» charge of publicity, and • Fred ^i In ch&fge of.-the'program. pg py offer and developing the land for the benefit of the children," Mr. dill said in presenting his report to the gov- erning body. After presentation of his brief re- port Mr. Gill moved that the town- ship accept the offer, "without cost to the township." After being sec- ondeil,' the ,motion was unanimously passed. TownBhlp Attorney Henry St. Clair Lavin was r«quested to draw up the necessary agreement. As far as can be learned no planB have been made by the improvement committee, of which Committeeman Jacob W. Grasam is chairman for the development of the park playground. Preparations for grading and equip- ping the long-sought playfield will un- ley Hallroad property. The com- plaint was made by Hallroad Officer Charles Krcisel who told Hie court that he caught DoUnlck<ciitlnK the air on a train of cars anil delaying them for over two hours. It has been the trl'ck of coal thieves Kreiael told the judge, to c,ut the air brakes, thus deJuyini; tlic train and giving them an opportunity to steal the coal'from the cars. doubtedly passed. be' held up until tjtle is BOY HELD FOR CHICKEN THEFTS Frank Leahy, 16, ot Sewaren, was held for the Grand Jury and two minor boys, one lf 13'and the other 14, ViTvcvors h a w e stabHf4^4w'4fc* euaulng^ear.. 161 Wooilhridgfl avenue Woodbridge unnorsnav ...TTj pet( , r p P (ers«n, Health Officer for' reported to Patrol Driver Andrew la terai of five years and Registrar of q| mO npen' tbat the car wllieh figured iVhal Statlstlos for five years. _ lin the .accident, |was stolen from his I i Andrew D. Desmond,' Health De- K nra^e sometrme Sunday, night or that there Is nq sidewalk there ..tost a trafllp'hazard. One child hcpn killed and several iicddwnts t< occurred at that spot. Sonie (ft conimltti'cmpii y/vre In favor of •Jnt? a sidewalk Immediately • at 1st from Middlesex avenue to Hilt- st avenue. Mayor Ryan advised ^m Unit a petition would-be need- to llmt I'ffi'ct. Others wi>te of the Union that tho hulldlnl; of the un- woulii eventually alter con- jtlons HO that further d'iaagreeniut th Mr. Hyde would im allmlauted. ovor Mr. Hyde's attitude sfild: "When the time nca we'll put the ald«walks down thn safety of Inelln children bether Mr. Hyde ltkeB It or not. _ for the children first." •Mayor Ryan suggested that Mr. fde be plviui a chance to aooept or (continued on page eight) Andrew D. Desmond,' Health De partmeftt Attorney for°4 period of one FVances Jordan, atenoRraphei-clerk for one year and Deputy Regis^ar of for one y Vital Statistics for one year. G Rdlh nd Helen sometfrne Sunday . night or Monday morning. He said he didn't miss the car until he went to get it out of the garage4hat afternoon, Anna Q Tludolph and O'Brien, Township Nurses. Louis Zehrer, O. S. Duntgan and William A. Rodrier, plumbing exam- iners. * Commltteomnn Olll, Edward Sat- tler and Commltteeman Anthony •Aqulla were appointed to approve all health department.bills. In presenting 1JIB yearly report, Health Officer P,eferson' asked the board Its plans regarding the institu- tion of toxin and antl-toxln treat- ments for the prevention ot /diph- theria. Only Bxeeptloji in dainty "I have made a survey of every munJuiBBllty in the couqty and I have (continued OD page eight) ' APATH ISRAELI LADIES I PUNJCARD PARH The Ladies' Auxiliary of Congrega4 tion Adath Israel, at its regular monthly business meetlig held JJon- day afternoon at the_ Nome of Mrs. were put on probation Judge Nathan Duff in by Acting police court quota figures 2,000 dollars Btpp re-' port action taken. John Barton Payne,' i Drive Follows Att»% Organization ot the national drlv« follows attacks upon the finances ot the Red CroBB in the Senat*. In tito Senate debate. Senator ElmM Tkola- as, of Oklahoma, assailed 4b« Rsd CrosB for "falling to reveal Uh full extent of Is resources available tor re- lief. Thomas iharged that Dr. Payne had given (S,000,000 as the available resources of the Red Cross lor drought relief, whereas, according to Thomas, the amount available Is real- ly 125,000,000. Payne In a public statement invited, In answer to the criticism, Dr. .._ ._, _. ... , _,._ the most searching Investigation Of Club last nlglit. Prizes were awarded [ the financial affairs of the Red GroM at any tlmel" John Caufleld; The natoinal administration oa Kinhurn: bridge, Wednesday passed the $45,000,009 Mrs. Prank O'Brte\r.'- t 'Mrs. Maurice drought relief bill, backed by tlie a$r Dunigan, Mrs. -VH'rid Coley,' Mrs', ministration. ' . • • , '; John . Cosgrovi',- Mrs:' Frank Mayo. The 110,000,000 ^o ba raised b* Plnochlq, Mrs. J. Uurrun JLevl; Mrs. tho Red Cross will be usod prlnolpafr James Harding;, Mrs. Patrick.' Mur- ly to provide food forthose in " phy; .Fan-tan, Mrs.'AiiKuA Bauman dieted stateB. . and Mrs. Edward Kinhorn. t ''Every effort will be made to,l«4|*-' ^Mfs, oiir quota here," Mrs. FlU Randojipb Catholic Daughters Have Successful Card Party A successful card party-was held by Court Mercedes, Catholic Daugh- ters of America, at tin:- Columbian as follows: Dood prize,' Mr.*, book, Mrs. John Bfuchre,.Mrs. 1 J. J: Caiilleld, Henry'Neder iJnd'Misu Allw Sanfahl. sajfl yesterday. s June Flaiu/wi, ^Ir di h d .Whist, Mi«s William Oolden, Miss RtheV Cam- Morris Choper, in William street, made pltuis for a public card party to be held Monday night, February 16, in the lecture room of^the synagogue In Sohobl street The, hostesses ap- pdlnted for the card -party ^ere MM. M. Klein, Mrs. Harry Sherman and Mrs. Simon Schoenbrun, Following the business session, carda were d Two Iselin Youths Held Fmr Grand Jury for Robbery , CheBter Rosa, 17, of Marconi avi- 'nue, Iselln and John Orlce, 16, a packer, of'Pershlng avenue, Tqelln, were held for the Orand Jury by Act- ing Judpe Nathan Duff in poll Ice court' Tuesday , night • on the charge of (breakingkind entering and grand lar- ceny, i ' The case clears 'up the looting of bungalolvs on Kennedy street, Iselin. owned Hy H. B. Taylor, Of'301 29th [ street, wnlon City, aiyd SVd John, of Lyndhurst. Motorcycle \Offlcer Jo- seph Lewis was assigned to the case. His suspicions were emt upon Ross who, opon questioning, finally admit- ted the theft and implicated Grlce. Both Were arrested by Lewis and .brought to.headquarters where they signed confessions. Tuesday night on the charge of steal- ing over a hundred chlckenB from vanous chickdn coops In Sewarn and other parts Ot^the Township. * Recently an epidemic of chicken thie'VeTy seemed* to break out In the Townehlp so Captajn JajnesWaUh g6t bysy On the casewiht th§ result that Leahy and th'e two youngsters- were brought into custody on Sun- day. The boys readily admitted tak- ing the chickens and Belling them for a few cents to a woman In Perth Am- boy. '. , * Willlam Oolden, Mis3 Shel C hig generosity pioft, Miss Margaret Kelly, Mrs. An- ship residents. na Heron, Mrs. Charledj Vwr, Mrs. ...... The success ot the- drive here depends upon the unfatt- gen^rostty of Woodbridge Town* Albert Thompson and TMlss Campion. Non-players were j AVENEL CRAFTS CUIR: Thomas (LTlly and Mis.jlames Hard-) EJECTS JJEW DIRECTOR The or,raT>*«t»4oij-4s-L-p thektro party'February IS. A grou,P will, niiik'c tlie trip by bus'to New r. uiuetlng of tha Third Grade Teachers Class Demonstration will, mak t p y York to tiltiitid a performance of the "New Yorkers" New Yorkers. ROHLFS NEW MANAGER OF STATE Twenty-five of third grade teachers In the Township schools at- tended a demonstration at t1\e -Colo- nla 'School Wednesday afternoon. th MISB tudlow demonstrated how the curriculum, can use ,„._, evening at the home Of and Mrs. Hlclnbothera on^ IVth' avenue, Avenel. Important bUBhieBa,' was brought up at this time l^clud- Ing a change In directorship owiiag to the Inability of the present director, * R. C. Benjamin, to attend meeting or rehearsals. Mr. Hiclnbothemt ($» V Ail'irt E. Rohlts has been named sistant director, automatically tojajf,-•" direi ting manager of the State Thea- Mr. Benla,mln's place and 'nomlW* tre'.,Woodbridge, succeeding Harry tlons Immediately followed fw'JMk».t sistant director,! P. Benson being Rohlfs Is well known, in the nominated. ... ' -•/ motion picture fraternity, • having .The society has already hi'i:)i ussociatied In au executive ca- three plays and under tta new pacity 'with Mqtro-Goldyn-Mayer for ship it Is expected that many the past fifteen.years. thu'l Ha promises the theatre lovers of he best and finest pic- in any manner turning the hi l the business session, carda were, .- . . played and refreehments were served.' hiingalowfs, whjph were recovered by " Jthe rnllte jrere:- CMpenter* 1 toolt men coniBBBiuuo. , in any manner turning the stud Among the articles taken froin the attention from their regular subject oiks Still Neglect Their Chijslma? H, Ceuntby Postmaster Potter Shews Jtlffi polite j e f e : ! valued at Oa«p«nters radio set va* Miss- Ludlow teaches tools-, and third, grades in the second the Colonlq. t n U K t n 9 rLURAL URUUr I $80, and a double barrelled shot gun. TO HOLD CAKE SALE The Floral committee of the Methodist church at its meeting held on Monday Lo] that folkB utill leave mulling until tho ~ their Christ- delivered until the day after U» hot miajltli& by a BUtvey'or the Christinas BB at the WoodbrlJtee P° Bt °'t' by Postmaster Stanley Potter. 67,000 pieces of holiday mall through the .post office W* ecember 17 to December 28. er's count covers that period an Increase over the busl- aber 1929. (ttty of mail handled dally camber 17, 2,696; Dec. 20, 9,318; Deo. 22, - »0,520; Dec. 24, 6,- lday. a - * total °( 67,646 was the uuiy i,nv ,,, P . _. sent remembranoes to Woodbridge residents were forgotten as the count shows that ttumbv ot cards were rushed out to forgotten friends' the day after Christmas. New Year's greeting curds—an- other modern way of squaring ax* counts with those you -forget Christmas—brought the number matted pieces to 2,088 on December 28, , Despite. the, large increase to the volume of mall only one extra clerk was hired to take care of the sur- plus. The four regular clerks handled the annual ruth with efficiency sod satlsfaottoQ, Mr. Potter said. .hurc w Dfcn, t at the home of Mrs. -—-»,. . VanderbHt place, made plans for a cake sale to be held at i o'clock, Saturday afternoon, Jan- uary 24, at the home of Mrs. Albert R. Bergen, 167 Main street,-Advance teUobouul t& Wa# «r4«ra naylM t«Unboiu4 lQ Wood? bridge 8-0112. During fhe social hour, the hostess served deltciouB re- freshments. ' Jowskl, B6, who ded Benfort avenue, Woodb/ldge^ifter short Hindis, were held * Tuesday morqlng ail 9 o'elock from his latej residence aod J.0 o'clock from St., Stephen's Church In Perth Amboy where a solemn requiem fflWi"was HI* 6 t i i (a r ~--*—'•- C M HARDIMAN'S with Christmas mornnlg until t t o S a f ftp day totora Ohrlitmu " tltl •TWf* .ill, your fun' repaired and re- d t *M 1°» «ummei PHARMACY! d. L. Hardlman, formerly^of geaman's Perth Amboy frescriptions Called Por and DfHv«r«d Cor, Rahwa/iiV«tt« and Ornn MrtM H. §, School.' The partlctrlar pkper used by- the children was one denned for Joseph Bakolowskl . PuneraJ services for Joseph Sako-lmaterlayyjjlli I, who died at his home onI proving tfce rt children of the lower grades. story,-"Traveles of Uncle Bob" aids SB LudloW said, Jn 1m- 'ange of the pupils' vo- cabularies and In creating an Interest in the customs and peoples of strange lands. , The demonstration, one of a series, tl Pr|nc» Cemetery, Perth Amboy. " l fh«' ""8«"HttTBi^ A R Y ceased Is surv^v^d by WB wife, Cath- • v S L , n ertne, and two daughters. , | HOLD A New Exclusive Leader Feature hires Read The Leaded I will be given during the coming year, • The benefit'perfonjjar.ee given pe»,i cember 19 for the aid of thaKjinm* Bloyd was a huge^success and the cl^ty wishes to thank all for 1 tt hearty co-operation. HI I: i Month's Furlough Brings Trouble In Form offineforYo was arranged by lial John H, |uove. JARD Pr|nc»- TO- PARTY The Rosary Society °f Our Lady of Peace church, FbrdB tJ Vlll hold a card party at the auditorium, d ^ church on Tuesday evening, January 20 Mrs A- J- Schmidt U-obairman, assisted by Mrs. B. Ponu. Witch Jerk. ' Have your furs repaired and re- On January 2Zrd the Leader Wi»i modelled at special low summer Publish the First of a Series ot\ n t n , Avoid the feu American Legion Columns Concerned With the Activities of Woodbridje Post. Thereafter the Columa Will Ap- pear on the Second and Fourth FH- days. Toke. Woodbridge Fur S h p , AnboV Avenue, Woodbrldg*. Tele- phone 8-B770. A month's furlough from his camp n Texas to visit hlB folks in Haga- nan Heights got Private Frank Wnu- 3ski,'2O, of Fort Riugolkd, Into lenty of "hpV water" and cost hh» 1 Ute y<B»8«r>»^l»«ri*•*«, If, ol Holly street, Hagaman Heights, a ne of» f25 each "which was Imposed pou them Saturday morning by udge B. W. Vogel on a tregnpjislng nd disorderly , conduct. complaint fhg him the liquor with which to "make whoopee" and declared that the younger bo* helped him drink it In cpurt- Saturday morning the Wnukoskls vigorously denied Willing the Itqwr t# the buwe cf- 1 '" '" no •evidence was forthco they had sold tlie liquor tried on the disorderly and ing charge. The elder brother smiled at everything tbat made by the P. ft R- Ballroad. • ll^m tor he afterwards admlttM tfv It seems that, the elder WnukoBkl he thought hla uniform-prot»«t«d tftot > , had nothing to do Friday evening »o from punishment. - he and his younger brother took a He was told to "wipe t^e smile off at roll down to the Port Reading ills faoe v and" not to feel that the unl* docks, tr>sspasstng on railroad prop- form entitled him to special prfvl- erty. To make matters worse they feges, tor &B Judge Vogel expreawd Cti Ati f lb B H "th a men around hej» met Captain Artlw, of tbfl P i r w H, "there are many men around I. . "Hams'* whq Invited them on the %\»t wor« that uajtorm under more barge i&tolv aUw ratlro** »rw«rty. W** droumstaaces and neve* asked Thefontoofethat-the, lloe knew s«ijnds of a proff| tftaUhnapUlA , „ ,ve »pur furs pa U# at si«»lal low *»old the tall N woodbrldia ~ Avenue, W l-OTTft. and re- MUnmer Lqyif

Transcript of bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph...

Page 1: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

and Warriier Today. Freehbwest Winds. THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP

DY-SECOND YEAR. Woodbridge, N. J., Friday, January 16, 1931

, The Woadnrldte .HlffcNews, edited by the itudenti. Will befound on Page 6. TJite .feature winappear In the Leader every schoolweek.

• * '

THREE CENTS PER COPY

bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief[YAN SAYS $7,000 ANNUALLY

WASTED IN LIGHT D1STRCTS;ASKS UNIFICATION FOR ECONOMY

iquila Starts Drive for Betterment of Bus Service BetweenIselin and Woodbridge. Conference Will Be Held Monday Between Public Service and Transport Body.

The dispute over the lighting districts' boundary lines in;e Township was renewed at the Township Committee meeting

»onday afternoon and again brought from Mayor William A.[yan the statement that a great deal of -unnecessary delay and

pense could be saved if all districts were put under one head.ie existing lines between District No. 3, of Avenel, and Districty. 5, of Iselin, were again discussed.

A letter was received by the Township Committee fromie commissioners of both districts, declaring that "at a meet-ig held on December 10 in the office of the Public Service inahway, in the presence of Mr. Jones, we have both agreed to:cept the boundary line laid down by Township Engineer Mer-II. Therefore there is no disagreement as far as the Commis-oners are concerned." ,.

Aciulla HiiKtfi'Ht* 1'iwtlMinoment I i~/wwi~i\ T. T~n J i j JAnthony Aqiilla newly . seated f,VUU COClOfltOlU Added

To Township's Population

ST. JAMES CHURCH GETS$1,646 IN COURT ACTION

, St. James1" Church was given a ter-llot by a Jury In Circuit Court, pre-ided ov*r by Judge1 Prank L. Clery

in New %runswick; Monday", lor | 1 , -N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no causeor action wtta returned In the coun-er sliit'of Leila against the ohurch.

On. December 29, 1929, Leilaagreed to lay a floor In the churchand make other Alterations at a costof f 1,950. tt was contended by thechurch that the contractor did notsupply the .materials agreed uporf andtherefore the church was forced tonlo considerable expense to complete

the work. Andrew D. Desmond, lo-cal attorney, represented the church.

limiiitlwinnii from Inelln,tin' ninttcr hp carried qj'er for I

tinthrr week ;\s he was sure that a Lvorahli' settli'tncnl would be made, j

KiiKlnppr CieorRe R. Mer-|•n sn tmc t rd that a meeting be i

ll"il wiln the lighting commission- jF and HIP Hoard of ARgesROrs, but;

in-man Jacob. ftrauRam. .watj•tin* siiL'pPHtlon because he j

Id iti:it the iiHsi'HKorn had no r ight |di'i'lil"1 tli>« matter. |

•"I'll.- mattrr should he taken cam'iir<>i>:ily ur not at all," declared!

miuiiti'i'in;in (iraiiHam. "There Is!nl\ inn- mrri 'H way and that In be-1

i- the iidmlnltttratlon committee of,Tnwnnhlii Committee and .the

i i i r should thru bo presented atncvt ni'-f'tlnR." |

'I hcHi've Mr. Oraimam mlnunder-i<id nn1." aohwVrd Mr. Merrill!, " I ;•rioted t!r\t the assessors" be pres-j

bcraiiH« tlii'y crfii point out which1

tlimi hnv<- liwn nssessed." I

I It was then that Mayor Ryan again j(•::<-sti<l the abolition of the Hjsht-!: districts, !"Tin' |ir(i|ier and l)Uiiln«Riilike VW '.'to put all tho districts under oneRd. We am junt throwing awaynut $7.noO," nald the mayor. \

! Aftfr a lenuthy discussion It was;pally df-rtdfd that thftUisbtlng com-

of both districts, theHard of .Wppsor* and th,<* ftdmlnt-ratlon conimittpo of the TownshipDnimlttrrc" should meet tonight to ,tilft the matter, jAt the sanw time thf> commlsslon-

of l.i'jhtlni: District No. 7 will b«[Iviltnl to atttivd »s they- have'filed!

' rev their district.!„..,.,. of 'l.lghtlDK Dln-j

fin No l also will l»c a$ked to at- \t<» adjust liny dlffi'renepfl over.

It'ir district lines.minltti'4'man Aqulla then asked

h.v sldmvalks have not 'been con-ion Oak Tree road, Isflln, |

Dm tin' Lincoln Highway, to HL11-.avMiiu1.' t t ,was explained that j

muttir hiis hrfn delayed until the ;•ulties siirrmmdlnn the undpr-

pv In ISCMH with the Pennsylvania;jtllroad huvf-In on adjusted. Objec-

to tin- HldewalkH hare beenevlously made By Alfred D. Hydo,

iiperty owner on Oak Tree road,lian hail a dispute, with' the

nshlp ruiiardlnis the correct widthItlio road'. .Thi> Board of Freehold-

rtie Township.claim that . theid Is no ft'pf wide, while Hyde<IH tbAt K , . . , , . , _ . _ .,_.fact that the rflad Is «nly'4O feet

;intl the . prbpbvd • Hldewalks,buld KO'throuch hla property.

\qu i l a CIIPH H * W I I H|Mr. Aquilii pointed out t ha t ' t h e

Woodbridge Townshlp'H pop-ulation Jumped 1,000 durtnR tho

^welf. ,•. This nnprfreilentcd In-crease however doesn'.t meananythlnc; to the bunlneBBtnan forthe 1,000 -newnwfdp.nta are wildcottontail rfthbltn. which have,baen freed In the vicinity ofWoodbrtdge, AV.enel, Sewarenand Port Readlnp; by Joseph E^Kert, MlddH'Hes County ijamewarddiv.

I^arge colonies of -the newjtimpinK iiopulation have takenup residence In the Cutter and!Mutton Hollow clay pits. Theirtracks c.rlaB-crossed the short-lived snowfall 6f iaat Monday.Scores bf.tlwm can ^be seenbounflliiK around ' ' getlltiK ar-quainted with the strange ter,rain.

Honhamtown Lake also hasbeen restocked with fish, a lar-geconsignment having been re-leased in the wfcters during thepast week, Included ftmong themembers of the ftnay tribe whowill be the target of anglers nextseason are 150 large mouthbass, 150,cropper basB and 400perch, The, fish v e r e takenfrom th« Delaware River and theRaHtan Caul at MUltown. Theywere placed in large tanks andtaken by truck to the lake.

ARREST OF TRIOENDS SERIES OF

THEFTS HEREHagaman Heights Youths Are

Charged With Robberies inCarteret, Woodbridge andAmboy.

EDISON THANKSCOMMITTEE FOR

ROAD ACTIONNoted Inventor Expresses Ap-

preciation of Proposed Ed-ison Memorial Boulevard.

Michael Cher-and John. Bat-,ta by the

TO BE FETED I ( l f A !AT DINNER FEBRUARY 4 . L U ' - J U '

$500 TO NATIONAL RED CROSSHEADQUARTERS; PLANS DRIVE

Mrs. Asher Fitzgerald, Head of Township Organisation,Makes Preparations to Raise $1,500 Balance of QuotaHere. $10,000,000 Needed for Food for Victims.

Slntp Senator Artlitjr A. QHinn, ofScwitren, will be feted upon hls'elei-itlon fo tire LefilB.lnture by more than .1,200 of his friends nt a dinner in thePerth Amboy Naval Armory Febru-ary 4. Former Governor A. HarryMoore, of Jersey City, prominentlymentioned a» the next Democraticcandidate for governor, will be the!principal ftx '

torcyele Officer

petition to

Start of Anti-Diphtheria Drive

Is Asked HereAH-Officers of, Board of

Health Redamed at Orga-nization Meeting; Pete>son Re-appointed.

All tlii'' officers of the 'D«ard ofHealth wore returned to'office, at theannual organization meeting Mondavnight at *thi> Memoritjl, Municipalhulldim;.. The offleers renaraed are*

i pjf n

«\ lettfr, personally „ signed byThomas A. Kdleon, expresBlnR his ap-preciation to the Township of Wood-brldgeior. its resolution favoring theKdlRpn Memorial" Boulevard, whichwas Introduced »by Commltteeman W.P. - Campbell, was received by theTownship Committee-at, Its meetingMonday afternoon at the MemorialMunicipal. Building, Other letterswere received from a representative

f Henry F'ord and from the Port olHew York Authority.

Mr. Edison's tetter follows:B: J : Dujiigan,Township Clerk,'Woodbridge, N. 3:•'My Dear Mr. Dunlgans

Allow me to thank you for youretter of December 29th, with whichou enclosed copy of the. preamble

and resolution adopted by the Town-ship Committee of the Township ofWoodbridpe at their regular meetinghe! d on Jiecember 2 2,19 3 O'i

^ note that In the above namedpreamble and resolution it Is pro-posed to construct a new highway, astherein described and to name thisnew highway the Edison MemorialBoulevard.

"Will you please present my com-pliments to the Township Committeeand Inform the member thereof thatI regard It as a distinctive honor theyhave paid me in proposing to give, myname to this new highway. I highlyappreciate their friendly attitude andgood will that has been expressed to-ward me,"

The, letter from Prank Campsall, arepresentative of Henry Ford in Inf-erence to the proposed highway, ex-

With the arvanlak, Aleciak, of Hagrtteret policeCelestlne Romond, of the Woodbridgepolice,'a series of burglaries in W««d-br.idge, Carteret, .Perth Amboy, Rah-wfty .and Newark were cleared up.

After their arrest by Sergeants J.J. Dowllng and John Andres the menwere turned over to the Woodbridgepolice to show where'they had com-mitted robberies In the tqwnship. Oneof these was the robbery of a, club-house belonging to an athletic asso-ciation in Sewaren where baseballbats and other sportB go6ds- werestolen, Another was the robbery ofthe Dew Drop Inn tm the highway.

*When the Carteret' police and- Mo-torcycle Officer Romond went toChervanlak's house' armed with asearch warrant they found hundredsof articles, mostly bicycles, stolen inthis territory. Among the articles re-covered wer the following stolenfrom .the Dew Drop Inn: Two dress-es valued a t $17,; 1 suit case valuedat $20; one pair of leggings valuedat $3 and one revolver holster and.belt.

principal pFreeholder

chairman of the committeeing the dinner. Otlier officers of thi' |committee are Nathan Llpmnn, trens-1urer and John .White, secretary. •

Woodbridge Township official*'im'1

well BS l»rt(e niimbei* of. Senutor(JuCnn's frfenrfs m woodbfjditti, ».Se-"varen, Avenel and otiitr sections nlhe township are planning to attend.

DcMOLAY ORDERW I L L PRESENTSHOW TONIGHTMusical Numbers, Old-Time

Minstrel to Be Featured inChapter's Presentation.

Amerlcus Chapter, Order ot DeMolay, will present Its annual mlji-strel Bhpw tonight at the Craftsmen'sClub. The curtain will rise at 8:15o'clock and a one-act comedy sketch,entitled "A Girl \o Order," will bethe opening- feature. The cajst is be-ing coached by Kent Bease, of thehigh school faculty, and Is as fol-

, lows:| Howard (Lady) Clayton, John HirKlePuck Evans Alfred NussbaumElsie Jordan Martin Newcoraqr. JrDud* SiHot...™'. _..: Walter L.ev1Mr. Elliot - Charles BohlkeBiscuits Nelson Herbert Nelson

Part two will consist of the min-

T0WNB0ARDACCEPTS OFFER

OF PLAYFIELDMaple Realty Company Gives

200-Foot Plot in AvenelFor Development as Play,ground.

A 200-foot square plot in Avenel,]offered to the Township by the MapleRealty Company, of Avenel, for useas a children's playground was ac-tepted by the TownsTilp Committeeat its meeting Monday afternoon Intlie Memorial Municipal Building.

The property is three blocks southof Avenel street and is between Parkand Madison avenues, It is in thecenter1 of a growing residential dis-trict.

Commltteeman Joseph L. Oill ofthe Improvement committee, whosurveyed the property offered by tlierealty commitee, reported on the ad-vnntafcps of .the land for playgroundpurposes and told the_ committee ofthe favorable attitude of residents ofthat •section to the proposed play-fleld.

"I have- interviewed the heads ofthe civic organizations in that sec-tion of the township and have foundthem all in faVor of the TbwnshipCommittee's accpting the company's

Woodhridjre Township was asked to raise $2,000f"»8 ita1 in the new national Red Cross drive for $10,00O,00QO forKlit relief in a telegram yesterday to the chapter here. Mr*.

lAsher Kit-/ Randolph, the president, immediately forwardedfwo in .John Barton Fayne, nfEifipWThalPmari, at WMfettigtoTi,mid immediately started plans forthe drive to raise $l,S00 morehere IQ complete the Township's auota. Contributions will bereceived by w. L. Harned at the First National Bank and TniBtCompany. • ' .

Staetn \re<] AMOf

Board Sells $140,000Bonds in ¥iveM'mate$

The noun! nf Education dls-posed of $110,000 of schqolbonds in ivninl tlmo at a bile!inoetln- in District Clerk R C.Knslqrv's oflkv. Monday nisht.The sic!iiiil biisitu'Ks of the nieet-lii!; look little more' than ft*pe

.minutdVi. Thr bu'ml htfllr is forthe fliilinchiH i>T 4he-new tiddl-timi to Srliool No, 11, o(|tl^)-'nicnt tifld otln'r scliaol repairs.

Tlio ifaiiL' was \iwarili'd toItapp, 'H*kwnod & Co-.i at NewYork, on Us total bid oLfUO.-

. 01!>.«0 ul IIVM per ocnt. »n l'.!!>bonds. Tin; nnly otlier bid sub-mitted was that of Morris Math-er & Co., alsti of New Yiirfi. on140 IIOIIIIH at 11 vf pur cent with ubid of $140,000.

LABORER7INEDT$5FORSTEALING BAG OF COALCharles Do'llnlck. 2'i, a, laborer, of

William street, Kurds, wus fined $5and OO«LH Tnoadiiy iiicht by ActingJudge Nathan Duff for malicious mis-chief and trespasBint,- on Lehlgh Val-

pressed the automobile manufactiir-|gt/efVlrltV Haymond'DeWrest'aB ln-ers appreciation oj the action of the | terlpcutor and Charles,Bohlkefc Rich-Township Committee.

STOLEN CAR WRECKSGAS STATION PJJMPS

Th« local police aro aoarching tbrthe driver of a car that struck andknoc,kod over»two gas tanks In frontof the CUiir Oaragp on tlahway ave-hufe at 1.30 o'tlock MorfBay after1

noon. Tho. driver, who-was unhurt,•„-,.. -••- I, , sot out 'of the car and ran away.

Mayor William A. ftjhui. perman-, T h e c a r i ^ j , , ^ w'fts parfially^; wreckedat chairman fpj-. Ui_e; ensulns year U^a tflWed Jnto the earaee,

Commlteeman Jo.feplf h- 8111, clerk (- At-3 o'clock, A,lfred Rodney. Jr.. of

Tn the new national cathe Red Cross, followingthe heels of the annualthe organliatoln, twenty'United SUtes will be call»d ttfcm tosupply relief for the. tirfntyHMiadrought-siricken commonwWittlu, >

Mr. Payne's telegram,UfcfJBI* IU4-Cross unit here, addTeswdta. MnuLei and Reynolds, secretary, ofhapter, follows: .

"Greatly Increased dei(lnd dalast ten days has mads' imjwiImmediate campaign for Bedteliet fund to meet emergency Ition through parst ofr twetjt.states in draught- stricken a m ;

Minimum ten million dollar* jto prevent untold suffering and;'tual. privation by thousands of f*lies atop pollution water suppljrr./caused by dying cattle adde4 to 'iriw^u&l.u>r hardships In some aectiou l t M * tPresident Hoovor in proclamaOopW-iT::'morrow will urge Immediate and (en,?serous reeponsa stop confident .your ' vpeople will not fail meet theirtyiar«;this humanitarian need but DeowijMp ,of general conditionB ,deslre lmprMf 'you necessity tnoa tvigoroufi poM^U^ ••campaign stop success our efiorttwill be regarded as test ot Red Cro»hy President and entire Batl0ttftn4we must not fyil stop your chapter,

ard Shohfl, Robert Siller, FredBates, Elnar Nelson and Albert Bow-ers, Jr., as end men.

An added feature of the programwill b& a. comedy musical sketcheiven by Robert P'arrlnRton " andMaurice McHose, assisted by HaroldBates at the tpiano. Following theperformance there will be dahclnswith fTanggaard's Bluebird OrchestrafurnlBhtng the music. Tickets may Ibe procured from any tieNfolay faem-,'her. Albert Bokers. is chalrma-n oflnn-ansements. Bernard 'Bernsteinha» charge of publicity, and • Fred

^ i In ch&fge of.-the'program.

pg pyoffer and developing the land for thebenefit of the children," Mr. dill saidin presenting his report to the gov-erning body.

After presentation of his brief re-port Mr. Gill moved that the town-ship accept the offer, "without costto the township." After being sec-ondeil,' the ,motion was unanimouslypassed. TownBhlp Attorney HenrySt. Clair Lavin was r«quested to drawup the necessary agreement.

As far as can be learned no planBhave been made by the improvementcommittee, of which CommitteemanJacob W. Grasam is chairman for thedevelopment of the park playground.Preparations for grading and equip-ping the long-sought playfield will un-

ley Hallroad property. The com-plaint was made by Hallroad OfficerCharles Krcisel who told Hie courtthat he caught DoUnlck<ciitlnK the airon a train of cars anil delaying themfor over two hours.

It has been the trl'ck of coal thievesKreiael told the judge, to c,ut the airbrakes, thus deJuyini; tlic train andgiving them an opportunity to stealthe coal'from the cars.

doubtedlypassed.

be' held up until tjtle is

BOY HELD FORCHICKEN THEFTS

Frank Leahy, 16, ot Sewaren, washeld for the Grand Jury and twominor boys, onelf13'and the other 14,

ViTvcvors haw estabHf4^4w'4fc* euaulng^ear.. 161 Wooilhridgfl avenue Woodbridgeunnorsnav . . . T T j p e t ( , r pP(ers«n, Health Officer for' reported to Patrol Driver Andrew

la terai of five years and Registrar of q|mOnpen' tbat the car wllieh figurediVhal Statlstlos for five years. _ lin the .accident, |was stolen from hisI i Andrew D. Desmond,' Health De- Knra^e sometrme Sunday, night or

that there Is nq sidewalk there..tost a trafllp'hazard. One child

hcpn killed and several iicddwntst< occurred at that spot. Sonie (ftconimltti'cmpii y/vre In favor of

•Jnt? a sidewalk Immediately • at1st from Middlesex avenue to Hilt-

st avenue. Mayor Ryan advised^m Unit a petition would-be need-to llmt I'ffi'ct. Others wi>te of the

Union that tho hulldlnl; of the un-woulii eventually alter con-

jtlons HO that further d'iaagreeniutth Mr. Hyde would im allmlauted.

ovor Mr. Hyde's attitudesfild: "When the time

nca we'll put the ald«walks downthn safety of Inelln children

bether Mr. Hyde ltkeB It or not._ for the children first."•Mayor Ryan suggested that Mr.fde be plviui a chance to aooept or

(continued on page eight)

Andrew D. Desmond,' Health Departmeftt Attorney for°4 period of one

FVances Jordan, atenoRraphei-clerkfor one year and Deputy Regis^ar offor one yVital Statistics for one year.

G R d l h nd Helen

sometfrne Sunday . night orMonday morning. He said he didn'tmiss the car until he went to get itout of the garage4hat afternoon,

Anna Q Tludolph andO'Brien, Township Nurses. •

Louis Zehrer, O. S. Duntgan andWilliam A. Rodrier, plumbing exam-iners. *

Commltteomnn Olll, Edward Sat-tler and Commltteeman Anthony•Aqulla were appointed to approve allhealth department.bills.

In presenting 1JIB yearly report,Health Officer P,eferson' asked theboard Its plans regarding the institu-tion of toxin and antl-toxln treat-ments for the prevention ot /diph-theria.

Only Bxeeptloji in dainty"I have made a survey of every

munJuiBBllty in the couqty and I have• (continued OD page eight) '

APATH ISRAELI LADIESI PUNJCARD P A R H

The Ladies' Auxiliary of Congrega4tion Adath Israel, at its regularmonthly business meetlig held JJon-day afternoon at the_ Nome of Mrs.

were put on probationJudge Nathan Duff in

by Actingpolice court

quota figures 2,000 dollars Btpp re-'port action taken.

John Barton Payne,' iDrive Follows Att»%

Organization ot the national drlv«follows attacks upon the finances o tthe Red CroBB in the Senat*. In titoSenate debate. Senator ElmM Tkola-as, of Oklahoma, assailed 4b« RsdCrosB for "falling to reveal Uh fullextent of Is resources available tor re-lief. Thomas iharged that Dr. Paynehad given (S,000,000 as the availableresources of the Red Cross lordrought relief, whereas, according toThomas, the amount available Is real-ly 125,000,000.Payne In a public statement invited,

In answer to the criticism, Dr..._ ._, _. ..., _,._ the most searching Investigation Of

Club last nlglit. Prizes were awarded [ the financial affairs of the Red GroMat any tlmel"

John Caufleld; The natoinal administration oaKinhurn: bridge, Wednesday passed the $45,000,009

Mrs. Prank O'Brte\r.'-t'Mrs. Maurice drought relief bill, backed by tlie a$rDunigan, Mrs. -VH'rid Coley,' Mrs', ministration. ' . • • , ' ;John . Cosgrovi',- Mrs:' Frank Mayo. The 110,000,000 o ba raised b*Plnochlq, Mrs. J. Uurrun JLevl; Mrs. tho Red Cross will be usod prlnolpafrJames Harding;, Mrs. Patrick.' Mur- ly to provide food forthose in "phy; .Fan-tan, Mrs.'AiiKuA Bauman dieted stateB. .and Mrs. Edward Kinhorn. t ''Every effort will be made to,l«4|*-'

^Mfs, oiir quota here," Mrs. FlU Randojipb

Catholic Daughters HaveSuccessful Card Party

A successful card party-was heldby Court Mercedes, Catholic Daugh-ters of America, at tin:- Columbian

as follows:Dood prize,' Mr.*,

book, Mrs. John

Bfuchre,.Mrs.1 J. J: Caiilleld,Henry'Neder iJnd'Misu Allw Sanfahl. sajfl yesterday.

s June Flaiu/wi, ^Ir d i h d.Whist, Mi«sWilliam Oolden, Miss RtheV Cam-

Morris Choper, in William street,made pltuis for a public card party tobe held Monday night, February 16,in the lecture room of^the synagogueIn Sohobl street The, hostesses ap-pdlnted for the card -party ^ere MM.M. Klein, Mrs. Harry Sherman andMrs. Simon Schoenbrun, Followingthe business session, carda were

d

Two Iselin Youths HeldFmr Grand Jury for Robbery

, CheBter Rosa, 17, of Marconi avi-'nue, Iselln and John Orlce, 16, apacker, of'Pershlng avenue, Tqelln,were held for the Orand Jury by Act-ing Judpe Nathan Duff in poll Ice court'Tuesday , night • on the charge of(breakingkind entering and grand lar-ceny, i '

The case clears 'up the looting ofbungalolvs on Kennedy street, Iselin.owned Hy H. B. Taylor, Of'301 29th [street, wnlon City, aiyd SVd John, ofLyndhurst. Motorcycle \Offlcer Jo-seph Lewis was assigned to the case.His suspicions were emt upon Rosswho, opon questioning, finally admit-ted the theft and implicated Grlce.Both Were arrested by Lewis and.brought to.headquarters where theysigned confessions.

Tuesday night on the charge of steal-ing over a hundred chlckenB fromvanous chickdn coops In Sewarn andother parts Ot the Township. *

Recently an epidemic of chickenthie'VeTy seemed* to break out In theTownehlp so Captajn JajnesWaUhg6t bysy On the casewiht th§ resultthat Leahy and th'e two youngsters-were brought • into custody on Sun-day. The boys readily admitted tak-ing the chickens and Belling them fora few cents to a woman In Perth Am-boy. '. , *

Willlam Oolden, Mis3 Shel C hig generositypioft, Miss Margaret Kelly, Mrs. An- ship residents.na Heron, Mrs. Charledj Vwr, Mrs.

...... The success ot the-drive here depends upon the unfatt-

gen^rostty of Woodbridge Town*

Albert Thompson and TMlssCampion. Non-players were

jAVENEL CRAFTS CUIR:

Thomas (LTlly and Mis.jlames Hard-) EJECTS JJEW DIRECTORThe or,raT>*«t»4oij-4s-L-p

thektro party'February IS. A grou,Pwill, niiik'c tlie trip by bus ' to New

r. uiuetlng of tha

Third Grade TeachersClass Demonstration

will, mak t p yYork to tiltiitid a performance of the"New Yorkers" •New Yorkers.

ROHLFS NEW MANAGEROF STATE

Twenty-five of third gradeteachers In the Township schools at-tended a demonstration at t1\e -Colo-nla 'School Wednesday afternoon.

thMISB tudlow demonstrated how thecurriculum, canuse

,„ ._ , evening at the home Ofand Mrs. Hlclnbothera on IVth '

avenue, Avenel. Important bUBhieBa,'was brought up at this time l^clud-Ing a change In directorship owiiag tothe Inability of the present director, *R. C. Benjamin, to attend meetingor rehearsals. Mr. Hiclnbothemt ($» V

Ail'irt E. Rohlts has been named sistant director, automatically tojajf,-•"direi ting manager of the State Thea- Mr. Benla,mln's place and 'nomlW*tre'.,Woodbridge, succeeding Harry tlons Immediately followed fw'JMk».t

sistant director,! P. Benson beingRohlfs Is well known, in the nominated. ... ' -•/

motion picture fraternity, • having .The society has alreadyhi'i:)i ussociatied In au executive ca- three plays and under tta newpacity 'with Mqtro-Goldyn-Mayer for ship it Is expected that manythe past fifteen.years.

thu'l Ha promises the theatre lovers ofhe best and finest pic-

in any manner turning thehi l

the business session, carda were, .- . .played and refreehments were served.' hiingalowfs, whjph were recovered by

" Jthe rnllte jrere:- CMpenter*1 toolt

men coniBBBiuuo. , in any manner turning the studAmong the articles taken froin the attention from their regular subject

oiks Still Neglect Their Chijslma?H, Ceuntby Postmaster Potter Shews

Jtlffi polite j e f e :! valued at

Oa«p«ntersradio set va*

Miss- Ludlow teachestools-, and third, grades in

the secondthe Colonlq.

t n U K t n 9 rLURAL URUUr I $80, and a double barrelled shot gun.

TO HOLD CAKE SALEThe Floral committee of the

Methodist church at its meeting heldon Monday

Lo]

that folkB utill leavemulling until tho ~

their Christ- delivered until the day after U» hotmiajltli&

by a BUtvey'or the ChristinasBB at the WoodbrlJtee P°B t °'t'

by Postmaster Stanley Potter.67,000 pieces of holiday mall

through the .post office W*ecember 17 to December 28.

er's count covers that periodan Increase over the busl-

aber 1929.(ttty of mail handled dally

camber 17, 2,696; Dec.20, 9,318; Deo. 22,

- »0,520; Dec. 24, 6,-

lday.

a - * total °( 67,646

was the

uuiy i , n v , , , P . _.sent remembranoes to Woodbridgeresidents were forgotten as the countshows that ttumbv ot cards wererushed out to forgotten friends' theday after Christmas.

New Year's greeting curds—an-other modern way of squaring ax*counts with those you -forgetChristmas—brought the numbermatted pieces to 2,088 on December28, •, Despite. the, large increase to thevolume of mall only one extra clerkwas hired to take care of the sur-plus. The four regular clerks handledthe annual ruth with efficiency sodsatlsfaottoQ, Mr. Potter said.

.hurcwDfcn,

t at the home of Mrs.- — - » , . . VanderbHt place,made plans for a cake sale to be heldat i o'clock, Saturday afternoon, Jan-uary 24, at the home of Mrs. AlbertR. Bergen, 167 Main street,-Advance

teUobouul t& W a #«r4«ra naylM t«Unboiu4 lQ Wood?bridge 8-0112. During fhe socialhour, the hostess served deltciouB re-freshments. '

Jowskl, B6, who dedBenfort avenue, Woodb/ldge^iftershort Hindis, were held * Tuesdaymorqlng ail 9 o'elock from his latejresidence aod J.0 o'clock from St.,Stephen's Church In Perth Amboywhere a solemn requiem fflWi"wasH I * 6 t i i (a r ~--*—'•-C

M

HARDIMAN'S

with Christmasmornnlg until t t o S a fftp day totora Ohrlitmu

" t l t l•TWf* . i l l ,

your fun' repaired and re-d t *M 1°» «ummei

P H A R M A C Y !d. L. Hardlman, formerly^of

geaman's Perth Amboy

frescriptionsCalled Por and DfHv«r«d

Cor, Rahwa/iiV«tt«and Ornn MrtM

H. §,

School.' The partlctrlar pkper used by-the children was one denned for

Joseph Bakolowskl .PuneraJ services for Joseph Sako-lmaterlayyjjlli

I, who died at his home on I proving tfce rt

children of the lower grades.story,-"Traveles of Uncle Bob" aids

SB LudloW said, Jn 1m-'ange of the pupils' vo-

cabularies and In creating an Interestin the customs and peoples of strangelands. • ,

The demonstration, one of a series,t l Pr|nc»

Cemetery, Perth Amboy. "lfh«' ""8«"HttTBi A R Yceased Is surv^v^d by WB wife, Cath- • v S L , nertne, and two daughters. , | H O L D

A New ExclusiveLeader Feature

hires

Read The Leaded

I will be given during the coming year, •The benefit'perfonjjar.ee given pe»,icember 19 for the aid of thaKjinm*Bloyd was a huge^success and thecl^ty wishes to thank all for1 tthearty co-operation.

HI

I:i

Month's Furlough Brings TroubleIn Form of fine for Yo

was arranged bylial John H, |uove.

JARD

Pr|nc»-

T O -PARTY

The Rosary Society ° f Our Ladyof Peace church, FbrdBtJ Vlll hold acard party at the auditorium, d ^church on Tuesday evening, January20 Mrs A- J- Schmidt U-obairman,assisted by Mrs. B. Ponu.

Witch Jerk.

' Have your furs repaired and re-On January 2Zrd the Leader Wi»i modelled at special low summer

Publish the First of a Series ot\ntn, Avoid the feuAmerican Legion Columns ConcernedWith the Activities of WoodbridjePost.

Thereafter the Columa Will Ap-pear on the Second and Fourth FH-days.

Toke. Woodbridge Fur S h p ,AnboV Avenue, Woodbrldg*. Tele-phone 8-B770.

A month's furlough from his campn Texas to visit hlB folks in Haga-nan Heights got Private Frank Wnu-3ski,'2O, of Fort Riugolkd, Intolenty of "hpV water" and cost hh»

1 Ute y<B»8«r>»^l»«ri*•*«, If, olHolly street, Hagaman Heights, a

ne of» f25 each "which was Imposedpou them Saturday morning byudge B. W. Vogel on a tregnpjislngnd disorderly , conduct. complaint

fhg him the liquor with which to"make whoopee" and declared thatthe younger bo* helped him drink i t

In cpurt- Saturday morning theWnukoskls vigorously denied Willingthe Itqwr t# the buwe cf-1 '" '"no •evidence was forthcothey had sold tlie liquortried on the disorderly anding charge. The elder brothersmiled at everything tbat

made by the P. ft R- Ballroad. • ll^m tor he afterwards admlttM t f vIt seems that, the elder WnukoBkl he thought hla uniform-prot»«t«d tftot >,

had nothing to do Friday evening »o from punishment. - • •he and his younger brother took a He was told to "wipe t^e smile offat roll down to the Port Reading ills faoev and" not to feel that the unl*docks, tr>sspasstng on railroad prop- form entitled him to special prfvl-erty. To make matters worse they feges, tor &B Judge Vogel expreawd

C t i A t i f lb B H "th a men around hej»met Captain Artlw, of tbfl P i rw H, "there are many men around I. ."Hams'* whq Invited them on the %\»t wor« that uajtorm under morebarge i&tolv t» aUw ratlro** »rw«rty. W** droumstaaces and neve* askedThefontoofethat-the,lloe knew s«ijnds of a

proff| tftaUhnapUlA , „,ve »pur furs paU # at si«»lal low

*»old the tall Nwoodbrldia ~Avenue, W

l-OTTft.

and re-MUnmer

Lqyif

Page 2: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

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o i u romBttt** «fcainE4s fed w t ^ e n ' «u«a . tSase b u l t e u -were S i m %F'is P«eW<(. C o l e . cftIl*ct«S. .rejoirt^ !- • ' . . ' • ' . " • .1 ! ' ;' J- ' ^ ^ ^ _ , v -.. : . . . ^ - . '"-• _ - - --.-- — - - v V - » . . - • : . , . . -. ^ » . i . « ^ i with th* Bari'^ii- C o n a c q . . -tfaairiutte c»retaiytttoM, i a n o t » f c * a p g d i a r i b i i i ^ sgr tra l baadr^a tyr« • I , . . _ ^ . . • • • . - -•.»—•. - - -— r - . - J—- :; ~~ • - r > . ' - - • • . I 1 - n T ' ••'••• •• ' ; ' ' ' ' •

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STTJS »Mg••Swrwrnr Amboy^i. OT 11 inn MriitJrT 1i»Jm£*<wH!t7-*rr\nnn tn nirfmn hcl?u — — ^ma^nuaOUf . _ . ; .. , •. J . .. v r t . 1 < / > / , , , ^ H . ' • .-=- «. • J'. ' "S i fmemtioM o a t «&»«!* by 1 Troo*.. M»tty Sown T r o w »d^tad to «r^«* tr»ft< o» Cirtswa* Tr«e , • ' ' ' *U irlUfCt, fX% ^T\

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' fctttfr—Art y«o » tri«=d of ^joTerhaaled. «sa»l»erene«*miTr»- Pan*a*. Icuisu; PMlidelphi*. ' T I M « tha P U © B to H A M V « r W—4. , *».yuiu§ | K B •. ' ;• 'bri ooa* i J»ti*< b r > « bon U««ttrtT<»r Tira p».: cw**?o, .01: Tok4or Ohk: At- I R n w TTnl i i I T . 11 1 • • "H " % O B B ^JhUf—l**i»a*o'. Im ttt brt^-f on ChrttW*» Eye irtUser 0»«»e I w itmtkc CSty, N. a,; PalstJif^jiiWL; | " U * ** **** |ln"«"U Cort—U tk« | h < 3 C i r % BJB««!.«:—Tfce Patbtodtr jthenueho or.ot!)er Boy Seontj d*- Os»»hi. X*b; Cl»«Uia»tl; OtK»; 1 i i - * U 0 V Y L ^ B A ^ B AI — . ^ !llTerfdtfc«ro to tee*'boy* uid MU Sfti^Aa^ num.. Sy»«»e. K. T-, k A I IPt? I 1 n n t r r OIIAM • ' • " . * % I , m _ ^ L • ,

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Page 3: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

•V ' • \ THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, JAN. .14 1931 Page Three

HILD SHOULD[BE TAUGHT THEMEANINGOFWLayman Prone to Believe

That Psychologists Con-done Giving Youngsters"Free Rein."By GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.

Head Division Parental Bd«c*Uon,Cleveland College, Western

Reserve University.IN AN artlcld to appear In Forum,

February Issue, I say In part:"Ask the man of the street what a

child psychologist Is and he will tellypu that ar child psychologist Is, an'expert who believes'In letting chil-dren do as they please. .Such is theialse conception created, It seems, hithe public mind by a certain Bmgroup of writers who are, not'them-sel\es psychologists. . . . . >

"The difference between n childdestruction of the neighbor's flow-ers or.Bhrubs at tour, and his holdingup a gas station at tlie age of twenty,Is only a matter ot degree. WhileMr. Wlckerahani is looking'for somebasic causes of increasing crime lethim obnerve the pafelng of reason-able restraints of little children inthe home of the Ibtelllgensia.

"(iod pity the child who before tlieage ot three ha4/W4lte|rnHd^J,liemeaning ot no.' ma'VWTFIIrf/Ftesafe?1 h« will Ije dangerous to prop-erty and the rights of others will beJeopard I zed by him. He will havespent three years of elementarytrailing In the alphabet of. crime.Furthermore, he won't be happy; norwill those who care for him. TheyWill have to exercise an undueamount of eftort to-protect him, and10 protect other things and personsfrom IIIH destruction and annoy-,ance."

» * • ' 'Each month 1 write an article for

the Hlglr School Teacher. "ProblemsHigh School l'uplls Have With Teach-er*" U iliatUBsed In the current ls-Bue. To yuote a few paragraphs:

"We in rely are aware that our pu-pils havt: a great array of probleniBwith their teachers. All one uoeds todo to un ivv at this conclusion is- toalt and listen to a group ot highschool youngsters In a bus or trolleycur or in a home.

"What are the things .they talkabout? Not about the scholarship,not tcclinlipirH of teaching, not aboutthe lU-niH un which the supervisor,princliiul or ik'imriment head gradesthe tt'iu'lirr and recommends her for)ruaptiointiiicnt and Increase of salary.As udolcMX'tilH nee them such tniit-turs aiu o£ riiJalivsly Sm*!' "import;luncc. Speclilc human frailties ofthe teacher are the topics of their |conversation, or their ridicule and Iother abstnt treatment of the teach-er\

', * '••Her conceivand vanity and boast-

ings, her lack of humility and o( ulearning attitude,'her favoritism anduufairiu'Bi. hvr futile efforts at de-lectivv work, and the ease, withwhich win- In herself deceived, her:lack it human ' undemanding, hu-'•uan nympath), human interest, hot,seeming platture a; »*algnlng what'

'seems unn*ceBnary and Ifregulartasks, her attempts to lord it overthem, to. make them'feel Inferior, toridicule them and humiliate them be-fore their comradea, her Inconsldera-1Uou of their feelings, of the little 1

' waiters which mean al\ the world, totheia, and Intolerance and contemptfor those who to her pupils are most]

' near, and dear. ' • 1"Nevertheless, he is not always a!

destructive crltto; he nometimfeHJspeaks approvingly. When one teach- |er Ur held up to scorn by several of jhis crowd he occasionally reminds!them of another teacher who does |not have 'such faultsV" I

\ Ignorant " jflibey (to foreman): I'm tired ofj

carrying this hod. 1 want to push atwheelbarrow Ilk JHynn does. \ \

Foreman: You push a wheelbar-row! What do you know aboutmachinery?—Tit-BJU.

End|ess Variety in New Silhouette VIRGINIA LEESCORES GIRLGOLPJMGGERS

Young Man, Imposed On, IsEncouraged' to Take Ac-tion,

Ily VIRGINIA LEG"DEAR MISS LEE: I nn

single, aged 2&, and hare a steady(tin. When we go to dances weusually take two OTgirl friends. In my car,course,, she expects me toof the expense.I don't kick somuch about that,but when we getall . I* changed,to tVie dancl hallfor they don'texpect,' me to bearound • until It'stime to gd homo.If I, should eyen

tit one dancethey may grant It,but not >becauaethey like to.

"I told them allthe best thing forthem to do was to

Left, green"flat crepe dress with bead' trimming; center,, navy flat crepe with white crepe de chine veatee;right, two-toned Jersey frock suitable for the college girl.

»y LUCY CLAIR1 is of soft green flat crepe, featuring dress skirts have a way ot hanging.Fashion Writw for-Central Press the cowl neckline, br collar, w i l l ! rather flat and- straight, but-Carry

' bead trimming. The sleeves are also' concealed fullness In flat pleats andTh'e day is long gone by when trimmed with beads and feature, a'circular treatments like,the one Just

you could turn the corner of your flare cuff. The skirt circular, and described. CapeletB are being re-home town and meet your latest pur-Is hung from a yoke with diagonal placed by berthas, similar to thatchase of a new frock coming towardcloslrig at the front. With It are worn I featured in this frock. .you on ybur rival. Individuality lndark brown kid shoes and a necklace | The frock at the right Is in two-costume Is no difficulty today. Thereof brown beads. One "Of the latest toned Mersey, and Is a lovely designseems to bean endless variety in thefasnlon notes is. the matching of the' for the college' girl. Here the skirthandling of silhouettes emanatlngjowelry eolor to the shoes or otherfrom Paris, featuring tlje lnfluenceaccent-color in the costume.of a large number of costume periods.The normally belted waistline with . Itloused Bodiceslightly bloused bodice dominates the Again we find the slightly blousedmajority of styles foe daytime wear,bodice In the frock sketched at the

fulness Is concealed in pleats. Thelighter tone jersey, as, -for Instance,beige with brown, forms the lowerpart Qf the bodice, while the .upperpart of the darker shade'fs manlpu-

! lated to give a bolero effect. Brovnbut there.are all kinds of differencescenter. This Is developed In flat I shoes and a brown hat would co-ordl-In the handling of skirts, treaimentwepe, bright navy In color, with a' nate smartly with this frock In eitherof sleeves and trimmings. '• vestee ot tucked crepe de chine in I brtlwn or green jersey. Blue shoes

The sketch shows some of these de-whlte, and Is worn with dark blue ' would be the thing with the blue jer-fallB, The silhouette, with Its beltedkld shoes and matching beret. Ful- '^ey frock, and black if the frock werewaist and slightly bloused bodice,' Isnesa..is introduced Into the skirt by | mufle up in a contrast of black^ andpractically the same. -The first modelunusuU circular Insets. The new ' white.

FRIENDS GIVE BIRTHDAYPARTY TO MISS BURLOCK

Mrs. Kntherlne Burlock, of Newj Dover road, Iselln, received an agree-able surprise Sunday afternoon whenupon a prearranged plan many ot herold frlondB and relatives gathered towish her well and do honor to her onher Hhiy-nlnth bttthday anniversary.Many lovely gifts were presented toher and a delicious *upp«r was en-Joyed.

The table was beautifully dflcorat-ed and a Urge pink and white.birth-day cake formed the centerpiece forthe occasion. A program of muilcwas enjoyed throjifhout the evening,'

three of her! The gtiests were as teHows; . Vlto' of | Plckerall of New York City, Mr. and

all Mrs.. Joseph' Brunt of Railway, Mr.and- Mrs. Jacob Kolb of Colonla, Mr.and Mrs. James Adams, Mr, and Mrs.Peter Ward, Miss Gladys Ward, MissROB? Ward, Peter Ward, Jr., f a l t e rWard and Alfred Ward, all of RahVwny, Mr. and Mrs, William Brashing,William Brashlag, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.JuM'ph Rapacioll, Margaret Rapadotl,Mildred Rapacldtl and Mr. and Mrs.<'hi\rloH Jones, all of Iselln, Mrs,

DeStephano, Miss Rose Det>, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Tar-

inil nnd Eugene Tarrllll, Jr., air ofNew. Dover,' p

and,bear

ALPHA PHI SORORITYSURPRISES ADVISOR.

The Sluma Alpha Phi Sorority, Phiapter fcvChapter. surprse party Mon-fc surprse party Mon-

day nght, followng ts regular meet-ing te Its advsor, Mrs. Grace BrownIn honor of her birthday anniversary.Mrs. Brown wn« presented with a bas-ket of flowers. Refreshments wureserved, Then* was a large birthdaycake with candles.

At the. business session, precedingthe party, final preparations weremade tor the pancake supper to bewrrad from fl to 8 o'clock Thursdaynight, In the new bUMWdt dining-room at the'cnusregatlonU Church,Tickets are being sold at a nominalprice and may be prewired at thedt)or. Th« foreign project, "TheGirls' School at Majmayama In Ja-pan," wa* furthered With (he ap-pointment of the Misses Bin ma MannK«i atd Grace To4n M U O ln M oUOrleK.Alt Invitation was recsived by thechapter from the I-o-to chapter ofNewafk, to attend a bridge-tea onJanuary 24. , '

An Interestnlg Missionary rtudy ofIndia In charge of MUs Alice Pendeffollowed the buglneas session. *

Iodine has been found In coal'Qerman scientists. . ,

go to the datices viltofmi'i,KBalone and not try'

and make a sucker out of a man.I cannot understand younj; wom-

en like that, who have no more sense6! fair play afld' Justice than that; I >would hate to think that I would jask a woman to take me to a dance jand then desert her (or another oneI liked better. " I

"What do you think about tliis |matter, about girls getting a fellow Ithey call a friend of theirs to takfvthem to a dance Just to see other fel-lows? If that was the understand-ing before they left that would be allright, but they are ashamed to ad-mit that part of it.

"I don't want to wrong them bythinking them too cheap, but still Icannot see how they hope to haveany boy friends and act that way.

"Thanking you for .your kindnessn answering this and wishing youlota of Joy and happiness for the

Sc/d on Easy Terms

new-year,

Household Hints WITH WOMENOF TODAYBy MRS. MARY MORTON

Lc-MBNU

MENU FOR ONE,DAYbreakfast

Uatiueal MilkCrisp Toast and Milk to Drink

(foe children)Griddle Cakes aud* Coffee

(for adults)Dinner

Lamb Stew with Carrots, Onions,Potatoes

• Biscuit or Bread •Stewed Prunes '

SupperCream of Tomato Soup1

Baked Potatoesl'panut Butter Biscuit

This Is an economical menu sug-heated by Dr. Lillian M. Gllbreth,

j chairman of the woman's • divisionof President Hoover's emergency

I committee for ^employment. "Our1 food btandards," Dr. Gilbreth says,I "must not be lowered or adults willI suffer and children nifl}' be handi-capped for life." This menu ls'bifl

'anted and the Ingredients nourish-ling and inexpensive. Lamb is diges jj tible, cheap In most parta of . theI country, and delicious. The expense ,! of the menu could be cut slightly by 1lfuvlni; out the [inraley, which might |bo unobtainable anyho'w, also the

pepper.

By LILIAN CAMPBELL

ReturnsJ jyirs,'Robert P.,Lamont, wife oftaesecretary of commerce, fs one of theinteresting "ladles of the cabinet" ofPresident Hoover.

Before her marriage to Mrl Lamonl

By MMK. LISAUBTH

Today's KectpesLamb Stew—Two pounds lean raw

lamb, two tablespoons butter or otheriix\., one-half cup sliced onion, three

1 cups tficed carrots, one green pepper,I chopped; one quart water, flour, sailand pepper. Breast, shoulder, neck,

.Quick- He had Just been.buiineaa deal and.angry. "I look upirascal," he

. ... "Yqif *re prlvlle|!•other man, "to look uCbamcter you ~may—Pele Meto. Parti.

"I love my love with an N because flank a n d trimmings are all'good forb e ^he lamb stew. Wipe.,the meat with a

damp cloth, cut Into small pieces androll in flour. Melt the butter in askillet, add the onion; cook ilntll it

shea gone nautical^appropriate ' reference

woman If we were

ANXIOIJSJ:

thisylng the

old game of charades—which, by theplay

(e was veryyou, sir, as a

said theme In any

o assume."

1 Mrt. Crumbley (who keeps board-. e r i ) 1 think you had better board-elsewhere • • •

Oooilum—Y«i, I often had.Mrs. Crumbley—Often had what!(HJotluro—Had better board else-

The Pathfinder k(HJotluro

where—The Pathfinder

J way, should be about du e for aIn i a i come-back •vyiih the old-time styles

— ' in clotI\eB and the game of back-gammon.

At any rate, this suit of beach pa-jamas worn by Prances Joyce has ashipshape appearance. • It Is fash-ioned ot wlil^e wool with Jaunty bluestripes, and ^rlt It is worn a saucyblue beret. ,

Just Oan't SleepFirst Tramp: Bill, you ain't yer-

self, mate, Ye're restless.Second Tramp: I know, Ted, it's

Insomnia. I keeps wakln1 up everyP i Sh

In pfew days.—Passing Show.

DRY GOODS

NOTIONS1 •„•*•••» rtH*WKWtflB»KC»iNI

. . . //L.^t

\FANCY

GOODS

• • ' • • •

mmt

F0R

TH%:

1

FURNISHINGS

FOB

MEN

ANP

CHILDREN

turfs yellow, and add >the meatWhen the meat and inion have

Mrs. Robert P. Lamont

In IS94, Mrfi. Lamont was HelenGertrude Trotter, of Chicago. Th«Lamonts have three children, Robert,Patterson, Gertrude and Dorothj(•Mrs. Chauncey Belknap). Tpelihome Is at Lake Forest, 111.

Mrs. bamont returned rather re-cently from a ' two-month vlsila b r o a d . ' • • ; ' • » •

Thank you for the good wishes.Anxious, and I quite agree with youbout the , girls. They lack good

manners, and I am afraid we willha-ve to class them aB gold diggers.At any rate they have no sense offair play. If you are not a friendof theirs and one they enjoy danclnftwttn, they have no-rtght to -expectyou to take them to the dances, in

our car, pay their way and see themlome.

I don't blame you for feeling thatthey are making a sucker out ofyou. And I think the .girl, friend•hould take your part against them

and refuse to aBk you to take themwith you.

» * •G.: I am so sorry, my dear, that,

the letters were held up during theholiday rtsh and yours did not reachme In time for me to answer you.

I hope you wore the flowered chif-fon to the dance, aB, while solid col-ored frocks have been worn moredurinp the winter, the floweredprints have also been worn, and I amsure you saw a number of others atthe party. Hope you had a goodt i m e , . . , # " >•-•

• • *LONELY AND SAD:, qheer lip

and expect the best toihappen. Itis surprising how often it does whenyou're looking for it. .You can alwaysfind trouble when ypu look for it,can't you? Why not happiness? He-member that a smiling face alwaysmakes friends; a gloomy face dis-courages them.

* * *• UNHAPPY: T think your boy

friend lust loves to kid himself withthe belief that he makes quite a hit•with the gals. But it means no morethan that or he wouldn't be seeingyou' "every night and' every night,"as you say. Why not let him havehis fun without getting all hot andbothered about it?

Dedicates New Headquarters. The N&liQpa.! Woman's party dedi-cated -their new headquarters InWhen the meat arid «nion ha q

browned delicately, transfer them lo Washington, D. C., on Jan. 4. It laa kettle, .and add the water, after .named1 Alva Belmont Hduee, after Itsfirst pouring It Into the skillet so as j donor, Mrs. 0. H. P. Belmont, .presto get the full benefit pf, the browned Ident af the party since ila organlzafat. Cover and simmer for one hour, Ition. A marble bust of Mrs. BelmontThen add the carrots, green pepp«r | sr-aces the entrance hall; and buntsand seasonings, and cook 20 minutes,of Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia tylotllonger. If the atew Is not thick , and Elizabeth Cady Stanton are Inenough, add two tablespoons of cold [the library- 'Susan B. Anthony'^water, and cook for several minutes desk, Elizabeth Cady Stanton's chair,

' i s t t l S,longerfl ' stirring constantly. Servepiping hot with browned potatoescook*d separately and garnish withparBley.

Cream of Tomato Soup—One largecan of tomatoes, one small onion,chopped; one teaspoon sugar, eightcloves, two teaspoons melted butteror other fat, two tablespoons flourone .pint milk, salt, pepper, choppedparsley. Cook the tomatoes, onion

and many valuable antiques give thyheadquarters an appropriate atmo4phere. Memjbers of the NationalWoman's party from alt over thecountry attended the dedication ceremonies.

The building is a Georgian brickmansion, and has been the home ofmany Maryland notables.

N«te:l Speakers to Address Oonrtb

| Senator David A. Reed' of Pennsyl-sugar and. cloves, ah^ut ten minutes. | , J a n e A d d c h ,•Press through a line sieve to remove , K e , , N Y o r k e d u ,„the seeds- /rePar.e a sauce of the' the conference on themelted fat, flour and milk; cook and « C a u B e ^ 4 Cure of War" at thestir, well until thickened, i Pour the | , n 8 e 3 8 , j a n . u a r y ^ , Ad-hot tomato jalee into the orejm n i i r a l W l l i , a m , v . Pratt, cHlet of navaln u w . season with salt' and pepper ^ p e r a t l o n 8 a n d a n a v a l a d v U o r a tana seive ui uiwa wim a >|IIIUWIJ( ^ g London naval conference;-andof parsley over the top. R e a r A d m i r a j M a r l ( h Bristol; presi-

dent of'the nevy general board, arealso scheduled to 'deliver addresses

. Three-quarters o4 the animal king-tlom li composed of Insect'lite, ac-cording to Franlj Eugene Lutz of theAmerican Museum of Natural History. " • • - . , _ . 1'

Salesman—Here's a radio gUafanleed to bring in anything any'tlmiof the night.' Mrs. Alsoran—I'll take It if it wllbring In my husband before ml(tnlight —The Patflnder,

,*>•

Practical Experience •"I believe," said the cheery philos-

opher, "that-for every single thin*you giVe away two come back tyou."

"That's myWhiff lebauro.

experience," agreed"-Itst March I E«ve

away my daughter and she and hehusband came back in July."—Pathfinder. <

She—You measly little shrimp,hate you!

It—But, darling, yesterday yousaid you lov^d .every hair on myhead.

She—YeB, but not every hair onyour shoulder.—The Pathfinder.

peanut Butter Biscuit— Four tablespoons peanut butter, two tablespoons fat, three-fourtha teaspoonsalt,.four teaspoonB.baking powder,two cups flour, *mtlk; Sift the dryngre<U«ntB and rub the fat and ,Ril "Butter* * i w . th'ff tmt i j j

Greene^—Surely you remember me,I; 0. U, for *10. Ms

me for not•eene, but I'm

Pathfinder.c o i b r bllnd.—The

at the conference, as aremore prominent speakers.

STYLE WHTMSIES

Elderly Gentleman: Can youm a n y - a n y of the old-f^hloned danceB?

Sweet Young Thing: I tfflnk I remember the Charleston! "—'-"•Show.

stirring frontthe center, ndd slowly enough milkto make a soft dough; On a lightlyfloured board, pat out the dough to alayer ohout one-hall Inch- thick andcut In small rounds, Bake In a Quickover from 12 to 16 mlmites or untillight brown. Serve at once.

6 6 6Is a doctor's PwsoripUon tor

COLDS «id HEAPACHESIt Is tbanu*sps*4rresnsdr known

»Uol« T.blsU

is to be an outcast from human ao-Heartg are atyfigh. Filigree heartsvototy. and alfld be hated by every-

are .appe^lng oh engaganjent rings, 1 one?" ., ' .also on hat and belt.buckles and the! "I won't give.you'aoythlng. 1»«»ne,w chain-bracelet costume Jewelry, an Income tax collector!"

Here'$ Salad You've B m Looking ForVTOMATO JBSLIY -

(Mrs. Mary Morton1* Dolly Tested

One oan tomato soup, one-half cup meat stock, one ttfelespoonjejatln,three tablespoons cold water, ene tsbjeipoon lemon Juw«, ois *" "~chopped «rsen pepper, W*-half oup salted almondi, J

tine In 0914 water, dlaiolve la hpt ttqek (or water),ptspsr. Pour into w«t mould*' When .Jelly b»«la|almond*. . - , •

. Soak pla-soup and gresn

Ht 4»p 1ft the

' 1 »

ft c

easiest way to have clean clothes and.,linens is to use the Thor washer. Electricity doesall the hard work. Hot soapy water isswirling through each article, gentlyami'removing the dirt. You canwash,blue in the: Thorand the soft rubberr o l l e r s of t h'Wringer arc 'easv on buttonsand fasteners.

$105.75 on terms

$ ,v do K< n and

ei&hteen months to

pay the balance.

PUBUCMSEHVICE—-jJtiJ1 1857

\

* 4 IMS ironer heats as quickly as a single elec-^;ic liflnct iron and does.the work Qf.ten iroris.

You can be seated comfortablywhile you work; You have onlyto guide the' pieCesV The ironef "is small and light a.nd makes goodironing easy. ' • ( .

$79.50 cash, and $8425 on terms.'5 down and eighteen montks

J

PVBLICQipSEHylCE 1>•M"

IMI

in $Tune in Station WAAMAd» BttiMSwinn, Director oi our Homi Economic!D«p»rtratnt, brojdcmt ov«r WAAM Tuadiy IndFriday mofningt it eleven ind Tueidaj afternoons at •lira. Tune in ind hear her helpful mggotioni on

menu planning and running a home.

Gas Ranges-, SPECIAL 10 DAY SALE ^

$69.8$1980 Modem ESTATE Gas Range, fully enamolttd,

in a variety pf colors, equipped with ThemEatote ov«ncontrol, utility dra.wer, pilot light, largt.oven " *broiler, left or right hand oven. »

Tho iae«luRange for the Modern Kitafce*T I M E P A Y M E N T S A R R A N G E D

Telephone 3510 P«th Amfciy '

The Perth Amboy Gas light Co.I l l 8M1TH 8TBBBT PBBTH iMBOT. N. I.

. • • * * « . •

Page 4: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

P*gc Four

H W00DBR1DGE LEADERPUm.lSHED EVERY FRIDAY BY

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, IncorporatedAt 104 Main St \v.«nibrld«e. N J K me red .it the Post Office at

Weod1>r..Kp. N. J . ax sV'ii.l Claw Mall MatterHOUF.KT 'I'. WAL«I, 1-MiH.r and Manager

• KUO.M! JCOSUROV.E. Aiivorllfin? Manager'

Phone Woodbridge8-1400(it no«« and editorial matter-In the_#e col-,.

umns t- jiniiiitK a i>;'.;*i<i»-d credit is given to The "Wood-bri(il> i,«?.fipr! Cofr.«!oril*'iire from rn*Jferi,;e»pre#«lnjopinion* on topics ihf interest are solicited, but no aoony-

• •ouljetierj.jrlll be published. . ' ^ ^ - _

THE WOODBR1DCE

P.D.Q,BROADCASTING

Woodbrid«e, N. J., Friday, January 16, 1931

* :In all the legion of laws on the statute books of thii statettare is a distinct lack of laws to, protectthe people at largp (ntheir ideal fogs with the large corpbratiqris engaged in We vari-ous utility lines. But 'thert; r$ aji abundance of law to protec

' the corporations. 'And in this situation Hes a great field for re-form. -, ; '• • ' . : . ' . • _. ; :- : • • L'- -•• •- . -.' .

The trouble, of xojirse, arises from the fact that,the cor•; porations take-care of their interest*; and see to it that laws fav

oring them are placed upon the books white the people in thmass are careless of their rights «ri<Mnterests and, worst of alare not recognized! r . " '

Someone has written that history is red with the blood oithe unorganized. He also might have written that history isblack with the financial crimes that have been committed

t "Talce 1R€ 5355?-otiraThey are a law-mrto themselves-and; go

S T A T I O NVDU.YOUK CAR

T WDTHf.

i;ni-,d afu-rr.o":!. ladle? nndu-.i l>rout,iii »-..tii vo-.i." The »trainsi" "r.ee. l . i l.ih*- to-Make You-Hai>-1>>•" mark ih- t^Jnnihs Ot anotl.ori the fiiniiiuf Leader programB. Aepresentatlve of the Leader will nowake OVCT the "mike"—tfcrtef. paur>?>.

r,ood. afternoon everybody, 1 williow ci*e tou bH» of interesting go«-jip which has been gathered here atirtthere throughout the. T'dwnship—A '

ANOTHER QUICK CHANGE ARTIST

been fobbed of, * «et ot false tee.th. t • .- H M O H ^ Accident* • :Whan- thti Ha»«raati' Heljfht* gang jj, B e e m 8 im p o r (ant .to pajl to thewas taken Into custody by the Oar-! a t t e a t l o n $( e w ;<.rMty motorists the-

teretnto c y y !Monday, the false ««*">•'

d N j ot crimlwere among the, loot reoovered—Na-|ng, COmp|»fnt« A *ecldeot cases *tthan Duff acted a#,reoorded -in the.- ^ r t o f a bargmin in which.the:per-ahsebre of gen-Vogel who U.conflned l,Mft w pon*u>UItrtor H i * accidentto tils home ,w,;th the trrlpp*. T T 0 , agrees to pay Mr1 damages Inflicted.youosJtern;- ohe^S a«d one -9*-were j , ^fter, an; accident bteuw arrange^brought before him 1 lor- breaking• mflI l»g frequently are made io settle,fT&s* bofties tot the roa«. " "Do you!eondlttoned on prt>mi«es dot to enterkHOw what we will do with yotf If j a tom^laint tor violation of thVmo-we catch you ajarint," asked -Dun...!tor vehicle or tramc law. As the."We'll take the glass, grind It up Mid l B w . , j | o w r o n | r thirty 'days 1ft whichmatte you eat it with bread and wa— t f t bring a complaint, it not inifre^te'r". Oooooh! Nate!'.'— ; quently develops that before a money

vndy Desmond sans the "Dreary i g e t U e m e n t j , made, the lim« has e*-SaadsHills;\for us t'other P. M. and pjre<r an<j tti» innocent party to theoh. what V a brogue;.—Capt. Jaiues aeCident has no redress except to

against Uie „and theirSne^ers.

donated the name These cirll suits entail the outlayMichael to * l m . ' "Oh, well,"' said the of considerable expense for legal fees

u^-Uii^aBihaniteL'V^-..,-,- . giaat amnnnt of the gffllgAnd si . . . . . . . . , .. , _ , . - ,-„-_,.„-- —

,. . . . L „ , reminds us that the other day we worry; Often, too. It is useless toplanning new raids on the family purse without fear of punish-! ?ek(ld h.im-if H<°ui*«"w andLgot .brin*.such suits, for th* defendantr , , , , . . VT L _ - , J . . i 3 a dirty look to return. .We went to provjes to hare.no assets. It is nec-ment or curb of any kind. New scnemesare worked out to add the chief and asked him if we "put etsary for the comnlaiaant to ascet*.to the already high charge,? they make for a vitat necessity. And our foot to it" again pnd w%re told tain, whether the defendant is ablethey take the position that they are never wrong. (prices for Ms. waitiinp. As that per-him. . T ' • -

• The instances are familiar, hew ones are added every'son who aiwajis_gets u? the wrong n was to corer cases pf tbi» kindeveryA few instances recently reported are typical. In one

j number

rg .

Excuse Jt pleaae."— that the of'a in-

-of these the family water bill had ranged from $4 to $6 per • ed out of his cigar at Township_meet-

A&S«. In ATrent'on,

er is fin-ly

And when Pollock -foami erut—well tioth cars and tater. at the Ifffofffitiithat's another atow.—In. case you hearing held beforeihe police- judge.don't kfow there ar-e several me- he I* able, to give the benefit of hismorablrfdates in this month, to wit: observations.- If the judge on hear-

1914. Parcel Post system In-IBg 'the case uccides that either

quarter. Then, one month, the charge shot up to about $50.The use of water in the family in question had not increased, j of the crajt picked tt up and^«t««V • «eetd«t>t oecrirt a i>pll« 6i

The water company was told of the unreasonable increaseby the head of the household but there was TIO distidsitioir tocorrect the very evident errer.. An employe explained Howthe meter might function so as to he inaccurate and register amuch larger amount of water than Was actually used. It a p - | » ^ t » g - " ^ ^ g t S T j - . Party to the accident has been'reck-peared to be a thing that happened occasionally but this did 11. 1S63. Emancipation Proclamation; less.a summons Is issued fora formaln . o U o , t t , a . | t l l . i j . . ' far n s thp consumer was concerned fJah- 17' i : 0 * ' Benjamin. • Frailklln hearing, at srWch .the defendant, ifnot alter the situation so lar as tne consumer was concerned. , b o f n . ^ J p . ISOT. Ronm--E.xee.-the evidence wimnt?. is adjudcedHe had to pay the excessive bill or take the chance of havingt-mmr;-Jinr *i. i i i4 . siunewali Jack- guiit> vt rt>rWimtrmftTruY-T>rTan^• , ' i i a ' • . ! son born; Jan. 29, H43, William Me- ure to obey traffic •ii;nlr.K nr of n>nntS Supply cut on. ^ iKinleyborn— - • *oth»r violation vrfctctif-may fayt'h**"

IQ another instance a huge increase in the charge Jed to | The "umbrella man" is in town the contributes MUU« to .the a oi-an examination of the meter which was found to be broken•and the consumer was charged, he said, fdr the cogt of repair..!

away.-t\vtiat <>ra-

In still an6ther instance a meter after registering a normal; jj">d

ampunt for several quarter* suddenly cut down the amountthe bill. In this case the bill was revised upwards until it was !^re in

;;• approximately the average for previous quarters.- This would W X ?he t !mehave been fair enough if the plan worked both way's. But " | "did not; it only worked in such a way as to favor the company ;fo,md out t00 iRte that gheas against the consumer. . . j switched the envelopes?— .

•"- -. In all cases there does not appear to be any method ofredress except a court action that would merely add to theexpense of.the consumer. There sh6uld be some tribunal wheresuch Cases coiild;be appealed and adjusted fairly without ex-pense to the already burdened consumer.

»-«alfe-ttb»^ir»n trfaured. xjii»

ror the amaent

a 4*any

fix

a charee of violation of the motor

MRS. COSGROVE HOSTESS Thieve* Bieak Gas PumpTO UKAL BRIDGE CLUB: At Valenfine Clay Bank

, - j Thieves were disappointed in theirMrs, John Coserove, of Grove ave-' attempt to break Into a shtd covering

~p'ue wer ta ined her bridge club Mon-is irast>rtne-i>u«» at th* +HaU - Clay<Uy ntgttt. High score? were made'Bank, sometime over the \week-end,by Mrs. M. P. Dunlgan and Mrs, Ar-1 according to a report matfe to Ser-thur Ernst. The coftsolation priie! seant Harvey Romond, by L. Potter,was awarded to Mrs. Frank O'Brien. I foreman tor M. D. Valentine Co.EelriBahmenU were served. Sergeant Ben Parsons went to the

Other guests were: Mrs. J. Bar-1 scene and found that the only daro-ron Levi. Mrs. M. P. Schubert. Mrs. I age was a broken pipe about a foot

Mayo .and Mrs. Thomas Cur- ] land a hall long. The thieves eytdent-lie next meeting, will be held ly tried to pump some gasoline up

for their car but broke the pipe in

I i\PVWLUIIVUISCHOOI HFAD

had damages. _ The department has abso-lutely no 'jurisdiction In-questions in-volving the recovery of claims and acivil .action is the only recourse if afriendly settlement cannot be ar-ranged. The point I should like tostress, however, is that a complain-ant.should not delay making a charge

. , . ,. , , . _ . apd trafBo laws before the loc« mag-school at the meetin? of the Pimday l s t r j l t e having juri^dtctfon w h * e the

violation ocenre1.school board held Tuesday nisht atMr. Locker's home in Chujch street.Th h ffi l d If he does not make such a com-

Franktie. The next meeting,at the home,of Mrs. J Barron Levl,llonday night, February 12.

for their cai the attempt.

Come and Corivince Yourself!

$ ' ' •

-I

Regular Fresh25c

Prim* Rib Roast—Blade Cut, 32c,*—!—p~-~" - '

Skinned Back-Hams29c

• ,

Prim* Chuck Roast29c

Loins ol Jersey PorkRib End, 25c

AJSCHILUNQMEAT MARJCET

8 4 MAIN STWOQQBRJ DOE 81721,

The other officers elected were Mrs. C ^ T h the n ^ . d U ,A. H. Bergen assistant superinten- f o r t h e a«idQnt flatly refuse* to set-dent; A. R. Bergen, secretary and t l e , h e i n n o « o t mrtv hastreasurer; Robert Hqlcroft. assUtant-' reVre« B « " b ^ i f rt tetrt

Miss. Edpa Gelgel. pianist: a^txjaj lygpayJhejpenaHy for hisreckless driving in the pbllcecoufirPlans for

Ing In February.

to be heldw h e r e r e c k les8 driving is Involved,complaint should be made In the

police court for the reason that

THE

One Minute Pulpit Siar GazingXnd t h e p e x t day he sliewi-d liiin-

?trif unto ihrin as til*-)1 t'rltv •. andvould havt- ffi them at out n-aiu'.»a>in;;1 Sir?, ye are brethren, whyJo ye wrong one to another? j

But he that -did did• neit-hltour ju thrust him a'way, saying. Who'

made tliee a ruler and a judut ovVr !•

STAR LOREWITHIX- AREA OF FIRST S.I.X

HOIRS AJ-T1CR ASCENSIONBy Arthur DeV. Cariienter |

. The first six hours of right as-1censlon of the celestial sphere have jfive 9t,ars of distinction: Betelgeuse, |Rtgel, . Capeila^ Aldebaran, Polaris.The constellation Cassiopeia extends.from '0 meridian to second ho-ur me- !ridian, and Is at 60 degrees declina- ition northffl.'PeFseus is between the !

third and fourth /ly>ur R. .\. (Right1

Ascension), and between, the thir-tieth* and sixtieth degrees declinatlon north; Taurus e.vtendsnearly three hours R A'A-the thirdto the sixth- hour meridians, andfrom ti\e equ'ator to SO degrees de;cllnatioa north: Auriga.U.chiefly be.

Confessions heard on Saturday after-noons and «venlngs 3 to * and 7 t» >o'clock. Eves of First Fridaya and illHuly Dayn of Obligation as on Saturdays.

Tarisa SodrtlesRosary Society; Communion First Sun-

day of fnrpnth. ' ' ' 'Holy Nume: Communion 9econd Su»-

ifciy ipf m o n t h . "j ScpdalltW of Blewed Virgin Mary: Cmv! munlon "nijrii Sunday of month. •

Girls of the" Parish :• Co°mMunlon Fourth1 .^uiiilav of month.

H'.ESBYTERIAN

13

Woettef were appointed . to ." takecharge of arrangements. ' Followingthe business suasion a social time wasenjoyed and refreshments .were

Helen Potter, a r e o r t o f c o n T i c y o n . . f o r r ^ ^ s

W forwarded To the Department

— PERSONALS

Mr. and Mrs. ,N*. L. Price, of Cort-land, N, V.. were the week-nd guestsof Mr. and Mrs. Whitney C. Leeton,o f G r e e n y r w t : • • • • • • • • .

Miss Horn Degler is idlin Amboy avenue.

Mrs William H. Prall is ill ai herhorae,"n Green street. ' ,

Mr. and Mrs. William Dreyer, ofDongan Hills, were the' guests of- Mrs.Thott)as Peterson of Valentine place.Sunday. *

iwwn the fifth and sixth hour me-

JOHN' UAKKYMOI KOy7r IJouttauaiice of Jiuiulf f^vtr con-', CONGREGATIONA1.

li-a<tc«l in Slt'\lc«, iU-lajs his 'film, "Svengali."

•By (Vntrat Pr*>ssBOLLYWOOD. Jan.. 16.—If youid fan letters, you would know

Be?. Kraut Abbott, palter1:40 A. M.—Sunday SchooLH:0O A. M.—Morning Worship.3:00 P. M.—Junior and Intcnnedlait

I'I ristinn Endeavor.> 45 P. M.—Senior Christian EndMior.t;:45 P. M.—Young People's Church.7 45 P. M,—Friendly Hour. Sermon t>j

the pastor.Wednesday at 8:00 P. M.-rRegular mid-

v.rek services. Devotional 8 * l

METHODIST EPISCOPAL .* . . , .

BrT. H. R. BrettcV pastor> 9:45 A. M.-Sunday School.1 11:00 A. M.~Morntng Worship. 8«rtnoBi topic: "God, Our Living Father."

7 4a P. M.—Evening SenrlM.' StrmoQ frjthe pastor. ,

Monday evening: The -Bpwb'rtb Laagut| will meet ' • ' \ '

Be*. WaJv. D. Blromg,9:45 A. M.—Sunday SchooL» 1 ^ O A M « l Worship. Btraon7-IB p. M—Christian

• 7f00 F. »r:=-djrfstlanby the pa*tor.— - - - - - — — ^ —- — — • »r^^ -«. 4 » * ^ A l a i i y/i v ( '• t > t t » • • V4 Eft Um^J • •

rldians R. A,, and between thirtieth : what it means for the knowledge of > "G. B.'T ciub m*«t» the nr«t Moadar <*and flfty-flCth parallels of declination .'a male star's marriage to become ^t month a 1:00 P. 1Lnorth. Consult January star map. j public. Yet for some reason the bbys |

do marry. • \ »

ST. JAMES'SCHOOL HEADSTRESSES N E E D . OFPARENTS' COOPERATION

The Parent-Teachers' Association

of Motor Vehicles by ttfe convictingmagistrate imposes upon ihet Com-missioner of Motor Vehicles the dutyef requiring filing of a certificate ofInsurance by the person convicted ofreckless driving.t Even if the person who has canaM . . .the accident is not insured at the, of St. James school held \\s tegulartime, the filing of the Insurance.cer- ' m , e e t i n ? Tuj&day night at heJBcfiool.tiflcate' wilj be a measure oftectlon for the future, for In* , ,event of a second ftcddent his vlftim [Childrenwill have the benefit of the Insurance Ing, the Importance of regular at-

• - • • - • tendance. \ punctuality and homestudy. The secretary's report wasgiven tby Mrs. H. St! Clair Layln;th« treaaureV's report by Miss- Elea-

cer j y g JBcfiool.pro-; The aetlrie prithclpal .gave an addressthe ion "The Cooperation of Parents and

Childr yrith th Tnd

ith the Teacher." stress-

taken but as a result of the first.

TheD. A. R. Meet* Today

e Janet Gage Chapter ot the D.d t thi flA.. R. will hold a card party this aft-

ernoon at Karolyn's Kitchen in PerthAmboy,o'clock.

Cards will start at 2-16Mrs. Frank R. Valentine Is

chairman. No tickets will be sold at' the,door.

MOIIE FOR A DOLLAR

NEW NAVICOALLonger Lasting Anthracite Fuel

FURNACE AND RANGE SIZE

$10.75 Ton

•^*£m$%mm

Sprbg Lamb, 31c

Fresh Shoulderi Style, 19c - $ 1 2 1 0

OVfcR16%

FREE SERVICE

, ' NEW SALES. AND SERVICE OFF.CE2*4 HOBART ST.. PERTH AMBOY—PhoM P. A. J781Before 9;(W A. M. Aftw 8:00 P.M. s»t P.M.

nor Moll, and the membership chair'man. Mrs. F. S. Mayo, reported threenew members., . . ,

The resignation of Mrs. AnnaWalsh as chairman of civics was ae-,cepted with regrets, A demonstra-tion supper Will be served on Mon-day night, January 19 at 7:30o'clock in (he school auditorium.Mrs. F. S,-M tyo was appointed chair-man and her assistants will be MrsJ. F. Ryan. \Mn. Michael De Joy'Mrs. Henry St. Clair Lavtn and Mrs.Thomas Oerlty,.

Refreshments were served' by thehospitality,cobimtttee The next meet-Ing wljl be Held February 10, Pre-ceding the business session the mem-ber* met in the ijarJous classrooms

/ n d inspected the work of the schoolchildren for1 the past raonh.

Royal)Some writers are not so keen over

the kind of arrangement FrederickLonsdale, English dramatist" de-manded successfully," in writingRonald Colmac's "thn-ll to P»y."l.onsdale is paid all a royalty basis—so much on the gross Income, asetage dramatists are paid. It'k'a cam-

^ ^ * J U K l i A J ••UIPPIJPT ^ ^ * J^p^^p^rVvD^ _

Wedneadty at 8 : » P. H.—Choir practice.

TRINITY EPISCOPAL . . . . . . f

8 0 0K«. J. U, Mjrcn. p*Ur

A. | U.—Celebration ot "Hoi*

11:00 A. H.-Firat and Thlr4 8uBd«T of«aoh month, celebration of Holy Bucharlr.

. and wt rnion'; ivcond and fouru Jhndaypitling prajrer and sermon; fifth Sunday,

ble.on

-But Lonsdale will win-largelyp i l to Pay." ' '

What the Marquis In Doing IGloria Sw^nsqn'B former husband,

the Marquis Hpncide la Falalse. iadlrectlne the French version<of--"The1

Queen's Husband," which used to bea stage play b« Robert Sherwood,

afunday afternoon ~—Auxiiury Study Claas. (

First Mondar night, at t;00 o'doek. rtr

>Ian> Hearta'U Itreak, Maurice Chtvaller's Ringing • tourOf .the United States WltR a band is'called off. He's doing (too well inEngland I

F i m and 8*cood ibatdar *igkf-u«<Vnr of thf S«. MargmreVs tinft.

Thursday night-Choir pracUe* at «<»'o dock.

Second WedMadaj-Ken's Club at t *nrnt Wadnesday—St. Kllaab«th Unit

Pariah HOWH,Friday night—7 :U o'clock, .Boy Scout*

me«t i t th« Parish Houat,

8T. ANDREWS

Church CalendarOT.JAMBS

' B«T. j . J. O'Famll. .¥PWHI at 7:80. 9:00 «nd 10-JO.o'clock.Sunday School after 9:00 orctalt llaaa.Baptisms at S:00 P. M.gvenlng DerotloniH-7.J0 o'clock.

^Week-day oervlces-rlpCasaes 7-10.Holv Day S«rvlc«jt-daMes 5.30 uii'TM ,

o dock.First Friday.-Mass 7:30 o'clock.

1:00 A. M.-lionUM

FIRST CHURCH or CHRIBT

Q» Flnt

••.. S P E C I A L OFFERFor a Short Time Only—O\B OF THK XKWKST MODKI.

t e r m» ar« th« m«Mit Utrattlve we have er«rn*n; li ] t i l oirepe with 5 burner "wktoe top.. ActDon t l*t this opportunity pass By. ' ij

Come in u»day and make your selection.

The Perth Amboy Gas Light Go.122 SMITH STREET-PERTH AMiOY, N. J,

HMNW V510 Pertii '

pTbursdsy lUadlng Rooo-rliOO to SI

LrtftVJltv.BK'i*-,--'!

<J«ily afiflofl^'eiki*."'. «. C. i

n.i- .-.

Page 5: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

THE WOODBRIDGE LEADER, FRIDAY, JAN. 16, 1931 ft* lift

Woodbridge Defeats Carteret In Close Game, 28 - 24BARONITESTO

MEET SAINTSTHIS EVENING

Carteret High Faces EasyOpponent inSchool Five.

m

Vocational, Revenge for the,lr deteat on.the•gridiron will be sought by St. Mary's*tonight when the Barton quintet willtravel to Perth Amboy In the first oftwo basketball gams In the series.The same will be the second thisweek for Woodbridge and the thirdfor the Saints.

The Tffwnnhlp boys opened the sea'son with a poor .dtart but got baokInto harness and won from Leonardoand Cftrterot Jn a row. The Santi,on the other hand, opened with a losswon two, lost two and won two againmaking their record read.four winsand three losses.

The Saints will go Into the frayin I mm their stnr,' Al Chtzmadla, whohtw bppn out of the picture on ac-count of a leg Injury. In the'niean-11 mo the Benkert machine has'no1

been idJe **'Hetn:e" has been workItiK lila qTnnleT'wi

BOWLINGA snappy Kiime wa» bowled he-

ween the Parish Hpuse and theKnights of Columbus at the Crafta-men's Club Wednesday night whenlie former defeated the latter two

games out of three In a close match.The Gaaeys tried their best but theParishioners were Just a* little toogood for them.

The coorei:

9. OlaenW. 8kay _...8. peterRon •R. LorchC. Jaegjr ~

J. Neder „.....'1. Keating _H. fleder ...9. Sullivan ..M. Schubert

'HI^-4- 181.

192SOU

„ 195

946K. of 0.'

_., 173— 178,„..., 192..— 170

180

184 '173149

hi168223190206

811 938

17217S13*170196

167150162174168

893 861 821

The Avenel Fire Department liter-ally swamped the Rotarfans in allthree rgameB Tuesday night at theCraftsmen Club's alleys. Despite thefact that they were defeated, "Augle"Orelner of the civic club was highscorer, tallying twice bver the two

John Petrps

Ing away the victor. The Red andIllaek has surprised the followers ofUnlearn with their .aplendjd come-bsfflt, and from all Indications thave flnally hit the stride which ought ^Cannan.'to carry them through the rest of the | j . LarRonseason successfully.. • . M.Larson

mill,.* niai R7 ^^The dope:

Avenel Fire Co,201182189

..._.. 192

Childrra l ist Plaster toFashion Arctic Hotne

Hnpelnwn School » W » • !The children of onr 1-C claws have'

depleted on the sand table on ourflrnt floor, the life of-the Esklrae.Ht>re on«> may see the land of Ice andsnow • lo miniature. The sleds,whales; people and dogs have beehniodt'lt'd from phwttctne, the igloo offlour and artificial snow and thenorthern light* of' varied colored pa-per, Al! good ohlldren will take thetr'p to Eskimo land sdme day thisweek. l( you i a n t to come, you may

' do HO. MUi Cotfn-'U Hie teacher ofthis class.

A demonstration of a readtnc les-t<on was plven by M1B« Tliorne to all

.tho imcond j?rade tBachpfs and prin-climls oT "Wrortbrfnirp T«wi»»h»p ««January 13. ThV high spot of thelp»iton- was tlm demonstration1 of ob-talntnn wood expression In a second

adf rendjng dnsa.Mjgs Pol«n'» flfth eraders won the

hannfer for best • a,u«'ndance duringTterember. MIM Sullivan's class hasmade' *bw fln«> tinker toy*.

•^PVP^Berade honor pupils for'our f!ilja.wo periods were: Ida U7.Hu\, Helen: KluJ. Jennie Masuccl,Tom Saxon and John Koima.

A Punch "and Judy show will beclvon here on January 19 In me aii-ornoon. The show will »><> KWW/by

' the Berkeley Thi'ater Company. Ad-mission :« ton cents.

IGOODNEWS

WarrMerrill

186159

182158160168198

17Q1GG

Barronites, OutOf Rut, Defeat

Leonardo FiveSnapping out of the inertness and

sluggishness which marked their firstthree games and defeats, the Wood-bridge High School basketball teamwoke.up Friday night and stepped In-to the win columji arfd defeated te-1

qnrtrdo High courtsters, 25 to IS, Ip.the* first home battle of the season.The tilt was played at the gymnas-ium before a record crowd of morethan 400 spectators. • v

The gUtme was a decided changeover Its previous encounters andmore befitting the school that boastsa championship grid team. The boysplayed ball from the minute the op-ening whistle blew until'-the last gunwas fired, and it was more than evi"dent that the Benkert lads meantbusiness.

Fast PaMlnft FeaturedTho first quarter featured taut

passing, with Woodbridge detng moBtof the tallying. . Outstanding In thefirst hair of the game was the perfectteam-work and passing. The leadchanged several times and when thegtin wasrfred at t i e haK, the Wood-

SORDS POINTSTo Attempt Big league Comeback

aapflr

totHl

Orelner 207 232

16SHO178168188

~m172168

.1*7159

552 557- 616

The wily Craftsmen pulled theLttm's tall and made a killing In allthree games Wednesday night whenthey cavorted on their own mapleBlleyg In a Civic League match. The

>reH, however, were a little belowthn usual tnwk Of the Masons:

Th* story:Ornf»sm«i

1'omeroy 171P. SWe'nzor 180

Slmnndpn ., .j...... 179LPVI .._•.„....."_ 178

•KayFor ..LJ-..^ 1 7 1

14713418419117J

1S7193

198

879IJoiw

Delff- .' .;. i«4Hnnsen ._.:'._...'. 163

823 875

S. WyldG. Kayser ..,'....E. Hardiman

K.n157131

1211221fi7isa113

145174126159117

R04 658 721

Queen'sMeat Market

Miles, f ...Miner, fMailer. «

FORDS HOCKEY TEAMBOWS TO RAHWAY

Weinhetmer,The FVirds Hockey team Buffered Bo«tick,first defeat of the season Sunday Selgle, f

when they bowed before the Rahwa Lawler, foutfit to the clohe score of 4-3. Close j Burman, cto 500 fans turned out to wjtnese the. Schultz, cL-anip and arrangements are being! '.made for a-return match In the near}

gle point1, the score being 12 to 13.The third quarter WEB the downfall

of the shore lads. Although therewas close guarding on their part, allthey could manage was two foulshots, while the Barronites securedtwo double pointers.

During the final period the fanswho crowded Into the gymnasiumwere'treated to basketball that isbasketball. There was no lagging on)ehalf of the Benkert machine and

hen the game was over they hadline more points to their credit whileheir opponents were held scorelessn the finale.

Sherman Star* Again"Vic'1 Sherman was the ace of the

,ame. He tallied six times from the'enter of the field and twice from the

foul line, making a total of 14 points.Campbell, Montague and Jandrese-vit* also pjayed well for the winnersMiller, Miles and MoUer, the three"M's" were the mainstays of the vla-Itors.

The Bcores;WomlbridKe (25)

G.Mantague, f - - 1Jandresevlts, f -Campbell, c - -Sherman, K -Parsons, g •Wilson, f -..,.. -Nelson, f „• -- : —Lee, fHousman, s - -

McCARTHYMEN SUFFER THIRDSTRAIGHT LOSS AS BENKERTFIV RALLIES IN FOURTH PERIOD

Blue and White, Trailing 16-8, at Half, Stageto Tie Score, 20-20, at Start of FinalFuriously Fought—Campbell, With Tenfor Woowbridgi.

The Carteret High School basketball team went down todefeat for the third straight time on Tuesday afternoon whenWoodbridge High came into town and \ralked awa/with a 28-24 victory. The game marked the first, home contest forjthoBlue and White .this season. It also was.Carterefs fourth set-buck in five games. -The contest was witnessedtyseveral hun-dred students, and was the first of a horrie-and-horne series withWoodbridge.

TIDE TABLE

It wji8 n furiously :(he- Bcore indUvealed nufllclent reserve power wnteh/enabled It to come tnrough with a

In the

Eacl,the u. s. c o u t and o«od«tt«

TimeSiiturilny 6:38J 17 704Jar.imry

i i i i i lny

y•».|«y

°

r.ioe t;

F.1002000000

umry 2Ttuunilnyliiluiiiry 2FrldnyJanuary

TWO SCHOOLS TIEDIN SAVINGS SYSTEM

By JACK SORDS .Central Prew Sports Oartoonlst-Wrfter •

With a record of 22 victories for St. Paul last year as proof that bisailing arm is all that_it used to be, Wiley Moore will attempt a big leagueoomobaek-twUli the Rgfl'^fec next spring, And Boston-fiBlteves that theveteran pitcher is the one who can help tKSm"cffin¥"but of the cellarposition.

Moore possesses a good curve in addition to the jmzillng sinker thatmade him a first year sensation with the Yankees a few years ago. Whenthis combination started to work so well for Wiley last summer,, a halfdozen bit; league clubs scampered For MB services. But St."Paul wae-fling for a good position in the American Association and would not parwith the veteran, which turned out to be a great break for the lied Sox,for in, the draft Moore was the one that was selected and because of theirlowly position in the pennant race, Boston was not given the preference.

They got a good pitcher at a bargain counter price. In the middle oflast season more than one big league club offered' money and players forMoore and the Cubs were willing to part with $25,000 to land him.

yuluiiry 20't-dncsilayiilumry 21t l

22

6:387:047;20.7rll8:01M l8:890:10'9U69l41$M •

..10.4410:S711:01

HL Time

" S31:061:011:60

IS

4.7S.I

4.1S.S

Ht.

-O.4-0.1•0.1

1:S1l i t*8:11Il4f•4»

4:M -0.1

11 3 25Leonardo (15)

G.

: I

"g"l _4»

future.Jim Romer. well known tor . his

" activities in Fords was the

ANNOUrleES

m«n « ! : t ] » J e f o r the Township \ > . .Wren, Wrubn Stepthe Ifout otwo "out of the three gdaKst Tn"

FREE, PromptDelivery Service

Telephone Your OrderIge 8-0776

\

Fresh Cut Loini of?atk

22c lb

into th net Armstrong, of Rahwar.kp^t th Fords sextet at its, wits endat center with his great speed on the

' The Fords team would like to ar-range ganfes wjth teams representingPerth Amboy, Matawan. New Bruns-wick and Keasbey. Game* may heananged by eating .Perth' Amboy,4008 or Uy writing to John Rolbus,Fords avenue, Fords. / " . .

"What! A little shrimp like you awild animal trainer?". <

"Nfy'small size Is the secret of my8iiccewi. The lions are waiting Jotme to grow a little larger.motlst.

10000

6Referee. Read* Fordham;

Lockle, (W), Hardy (L),;Clark (JW).WeJnheimer

T.442

• 320000

3 15timers

scorers

St. JiimcB" Srliool and Port Read-inu Sflmul llpil For first plnce thtB\veok in-Ilii! solionl savings system,accoriUtiK to a rtnmrt Jssued by Jo-

("liicc', assistant cashier of theVitrl National Hunk and TruBt Com-r.a'liv. lluLli schcinls have a percent-ako of !f5 lo Uu'ii' credit1. Other pGf-

s aro ns follows:Ist'lin.No. .15. 7li;'Avenel, B7; Ise-

lln No. fi."56; Si'Wiirt-11, 14; NUIUIHM- 1. IIS.

The tiitiil di'pofilts received fromthe'• spreral schnols nrt (is follow»:Ntnnbcr l l , $i:if>:«3; Tflelln NO. 15 ,$124.17; Tort Heading, $122.96; St.Jiiiura1, $114.SO: Avenel, $99.55;Numlu'r 1. $«4.73; liwlin No. 6, $65 -.21 ; Sfwaren, $S!).fiG—a ottal of$788.7-1.. • •

No Need TUjHtin Showing the positions of the moon |

i |[<>|ii)i'ts Sliiip Entrwl -Mrs, Rcinian. niner ot Hie, pastry

. Servant: There's a man to see you,Master: Tell him to take, a chair.Servant: He. has, air. He'a taken

them all, and they're moving out thepiano now. He'8 from the furnitureshop.—Answers.

bo»» 4ad tnelrt in the

White by 10-4, thereby rblliafa 16-8, or two-KMine lead at the

^nd of the half. v ";

And just wljen i t ,»roearMti«t ( i-0.11 one-sided victory t/f WoodBrldgB wa>-o-S {imminent, Carteret applied the21 brakes -and staged * lltle seorlni0.1 ty all by itseU. Aad when tUe

I quarter was orer, It wasI that Cnrtorethatf evened tBe

20-20, besldea outscorlng IU OS#«>-ents three'to-one or 1 M ill ttaia tes-Bion. nils W M Indeed a fine mtijand deserves much credit, ; * • '

Dut unfortunately Oarteret *Wtin-'able to extend its rally Into tyw.fftdrthand dual yerlod. i t m» « T 1 « J * attlils point that Carteret-fself considerably wiU 'quarter rally, while W0OJ»W**» Onthe other hand,1 w|l| iwrttfc UsBtrenKth for one flnat r411jr»that la exactly what tookWoodbridge rallied inminutes of piny Xp bring ft!home

The playing thrMmhoirt the^atlre. final Hesslon was fart and ittfta!*<

55; Number j T ) l e i e a j exchanged hand*!times during the first five milpiny without either teata idecided advant«ceV Btrtthree minutes left to playscore deadlocked at 24-71, Moand Jandreslrits each came throughwith ii toul shot and a moment l f ^ rMontague sewed things up for Wood?bridge with an under-the-net dueefc;

Despite this deteat tha local playera showed a vast Improvement intheir play over previous game*. ^

ported to ] Btlll were many

_ as

ed for Messina Cathedral, England.' Ural her simp w .u s " ' " " " " ' ^ r i v 0 ^ I M?clmtagA cock orf top of the dock will crow|time S u ^ y « H e « o » « ^ y « 4 j ^ o r t n g

at aunrin and suniet and a lion will " l n ^ \ J ^ £ j i ^L mfrchandlBe a, leading role In his teata'i Wcto»y.wag its- head imd ,tail and roar at ftv<*•,ioiiw»-*ortu.^L...Dis.„.., fe-^ fi|gh poigt^nssusr « l tn ten,

For dfirteret, Malasiewaki coppedhonors with six.

noon.

gan*Woodbridge Reserves had a walk-waTaway trimming the Leonardorubs, 22 to 6. The first half ended10 tJ 0 in favor of Woodbridge. Jost,Mayer and,_Blair worked hard or the

winners.for the losers.

Davtes and Krug did bent

NaturallyMagistrate: Do you understand the

f M h ?M g

nature of an oath, Mrs. m yMrs. Murphy: Well, my husband

Is a golfer and my son drives a sec-ond-hand . car.—Answers.

~ Mainwith

What's Your

Ullrich Heller, of Upper•The Hu-i street, spent fhe week-end

1 friends in Long Island.

W. H. S. BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

•You will find fye choice here so great and so .varied, that asking your pleasurereally means just that. . ' ; '

We have the particular car you are lo.oking for and at a price you are willing topay, so why not come over now while youhave tfie oppoitunity-^i'icK out your uuand get it before prices advance. , J | ,

turn of the year, used1 cars are more in demand and therefore, bring-You will pay 20% more for a car m March than you are asked to pa;y

The score:Oarteret High

poll, fCoughlln, fMalaszewskl, eStutzke, g JLKleban, gSzelas, e ^

O.2

-8311

F.010"01

T.45.•

>• I' •1

Woodbrtdge11 « . H

O.Hoffman, tParsons, f -Jandreslvita. 'tCampbell, cSherman, gMontague, g

p.0'0000

better prices,tpday. 1 '

HERE'S SOME NICE BARGAINSScore by periods:

Carteret —4 4 12Woodbridge » 10 4,

ReEerw. R<Un»w, 8, B. H.er, Keratt. Timer, Zusman.

Chuck to Roaat

22c lbn r Cured Bacon

Whole or Half Strip

22c II)

DATE ' OPPONENTDecember 1 6 — _ _ NeptuneDecember 22 i~.—— LindenJanuary 6 '_January 9 ....January 13January 16 _. St. Mary"s (P.A.)January 23 ....* Seton BallJanuary .27 J — , FwoholdJanuary 30 - I : OpenFebruary 3 —• MetuehenFebruary- 6 Leonardo

l P r t h Amboy

Keyport,, Leonardo

Carteret

Febrdary 1February 10 ...»February 17 -Febrtary 21 —February 2.4 —•February 27- —March 2March 3

..Perth Amboy.'8t, MajTi

__3etonHall '.. Perth Ambojf

. PriniMm. Long Branch

• Metuehen

WHEREPLATED

AwayAwayAwayAt HomeAway

At Boai«:

Awwrf

At Horn*

At Homo

itHonjo

SCORE

w.ri.s. OP

l£(30 FORD DELUXE COUPE—look* like new1928 CHEVROLET COUPE AND COACH1930 FORD STANDARD COUPE—3 month* old1929 PONTIAC SEDAN AND CABRIOLET1928 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR SEDAN,1928 NASH STANDARD SEDAN1930 FORD SPORT ROADSTER—Well fender type

Total'

Sujiar Cuf«l Smofi5Cali Ham*

Roasting Pork

15c lbRowtiug Veal

15c10 MAIN STREET

W O O D B R I D G E

ANNUAL DANCE*..->'

GIVEN BY

<»*»HitAT

AVE. FIKEHOUSE; ISESLJN, N. J.

SAT. EVE., JAN.8 P.

MUSIC BY GE5OBGE HICKB1TS ORCHESTRA

Admiaaion 50 Cents Door

1928 OAKLAND COACH1927 BUIfiK SEDAN—Master Six1929 FORD TOWN SEDAN—Kewanee Green—(BeauUful)1929 ESSEX COUPE AND SEDANU929 ESSEX COACH AND SEDAN ,- .'1929 FORD TUDORS, COUPES AND SPORT COUPES1928 NASH SPECIAL COUPE • i ' '1928 CHEVROLET LANDAU SEDAN

We h m many others priced from $60.00 up. W« do not J W ^ ^•carries the one week pr6tectipn el»vu. If y^u are not satisfied you may

he c»r you buy-within one week after purchase date withouUoss.

T.e01

»

1_ __ „ t,-::1 , 18

8—28

Ford, Dodge, Chevrolet and Reo Trucksand Ujht Deliveries %

LIBERAL TE^MS

>1TAL GROUP ISTHANKED FOR GIFT

XHE1STMAS BASKETSThe Woodbrldge-Sewaren Chapter

of the Rahway Hospital Auxiliaryheld their regular monthly meeypnii,*'Monday afternoon at the hsjouie ofMrs. F. O. Tisdall, in Runaway ave-nue. A report of __^_work was given. ContrnpiuttonB werereceived from the f o l l o w i n g mem-bers; Mrs. B. W. HeaglaWid, Mrs. HayMiiore, Mise Daisy RuBhf. Mrs. A.IF.Randolph, Mrs. & H. Bloynton, Mrs.M. I, Demarest, "Mrs. jJoseph Mark,Mrs. A. W. Scheldt, Mrs*. W. A. Os-borne, Mlae Laura Cutt*r, Mrs, w.C. Danner, Mrs. Georg* Brewster.MISB Josephine Sohi*ftJ'r. Mrs. C.Johnson, Mrs. Q. A. fMcLouKhlln,Mw. J. P. Anne»B,Mrg.fi- T. Spencer,MIBS Krause, Mrs. Cbd|dington, Mrs.Arthur Brown, Miss Aifna Hart, MrsHenry. Stv Clalr U v ^ i l a n d a bashe1

of fruit from Andrew? Kath and $Sfrom Mr*. G. A. MelJI"-uBiilln toslat In the work,

The following lft^er\was read:

\tjto* c*>me

THE TRADE

DBAL

.."Anotherand we oncejthe '• otherbridge-Sewqlary for tilketa, TWyl

USED CAR MARTThe Used Car Center for Central New Jersey

228 to 234 Fayetie St., at the Central Railroad, Perth Amboy^N. J. -

to .BarvBB, In fact,practical and en]oyiThe canoed gpods•bo sujcient tor more?lea«e extendito theauxiliary the sincere,entirevery .happiest ',\h

"Withyourself, I am,

"Yonn v«ry iti"ANNA t .

"fiuperlntendsnt ofPita?."

ou an-'Woodanxil

land

: • • . « ! •

2703 Op« Until 9.00 P.M.

mm

Mtn MartbA lA»ey, of ithe weekr«ad gueet <

and daughtet, of Woodbrspent the wfek-en< with j.{Jari Bl»enm»?n of PrlM

Page 6: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

Page SixTHE WOODBRIDGE U U K * . FRIDAY, JAN. 1 * l « l

WOODBRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL NEWSPnM;*fced E^r; Friday By ir-i A.« Part rf

THK WOODBRIDGE LEADER

An AU'Sfudert PapwrWoodbridc* High Sehoel, Woodbridfe, H. '

•01* I

Miter ta efci«f-Mewt Editor _

No

STUDENT BOARDWho*

PIIP.lSf.tVfN MAMYsniDHiTSAND I frfam Hude, Early Woodbndge Settler,REGULAR SEATS

FOR ASSEMBLY

:Bffi?:KotmrtFerrv

A«b*M #V.Jiw*Ht SWky

Donald Morwaowm

H> i i jwew* I . It.*in«onv.-*--' :«'Ji* COBE*-::*'! with "JCood-

;bn<te'>'H-eh.5ch.oo'. I hart often!:t»n4sr*-i ih*.j>reb>';n of ei<jb work.) Daf ic. v»r" local tns'p-ortatloa.1 tern h * prot'knotty ?ji>~

Uafmg m Student Hall toBrinf Ptndtknent m Font(M ThoKS for.PrincipalFerry.

' • " *

teacVr*. There *»* a greaterof teacher* absent than

Most of th tn said the> had^ Tho** under the weaih-

MI« insiee, MIM Turkold Color.;*:

* • > «

who first « t -e. and

theWoodes of the

to a rumble seat

t U t

•ortatio* IT»-remahe* a

6nly

11

ait*

tuek work twld wmtotonBy a«rt-«*».th«lr rM* M*tV «" tfctt OtWho^earrieulu* *lght ta a*talte«to bravMe one-or two dab periods aI p i a i i f ; : - • • : • • . ^ r - - v , . :•• ••

.WATER, WrttR! 't"at«r. wa(»r eTferjrwhere, and not a dl*op to driitk-.''

b almtrtt the condition in which Woodbfidge High School>TCrt«.> Of the seven haUwajrvater.fbuntaiM, only foar areworking, and thdie rather badly. Antiquated^a-iser'irt* prob-

'.believe tttat *ueh a plan produc**bwt M*u)u %h«tbt artlrltrln e*cfi

t!*d in what j? r.-JWthe territory' 5'i:rounitMlf. which now COL.

W# eant be too ; u t o r l c a l back^und of thi* s.row-i. mu&lclpaUty.— The Editor. (•

of her AEP Ml a»lwp In Jesusc 30, K32 "Hude's deaths occurred on Juno

i ; 1746 ln hl» 85th rear—havingi «« for many v*ar» been a eommuDlcaiJttown " > ' m 8 n y j l r f H ! b > . l e r U u l Church. Two

# canttor'ire • » » ( " •

and one daughter »lir»'ved the

iVWHwiM 1 obituary notice ofr Hude is from in* »•*» York M«r-

Ut> be-Fridar

seats In a»ettbly

had

o us.U ible

m out •( the auditorium with tb«> maybe notilty that befoaet their station la. ]•icToot^-" • ?'•-- "M

niiht nie d fb*Hf>d. eMh tttidentrhowlat hinnrtlclub. A papn who?* tr«ate*« Infsr-

I S i* W atUftd Ufctpp«M Itw ta Scit*«* Ufct

Seteaw Club. wb4te aa MthuHamti*

*oma

Hr.

foundloafttf.or jn disorder , la ".the I- J fcail.mosl wrfte a thette for;

»rtr. The UU« of th|» w*ek"t •to "Tb* Adraatast* of a j

National, AfcttteobtM'.Sho'r/' * 'T V t*a «•«• a **&•• . hat tt». «tn-

hw been dU-eoi-

TRY0UTSFORSENIORS'PLAY

in Woodbtidze, nemo*e« thither.l 1 ho«« for 'UK l « t -

the-people.' At thVtline of,, m> was'ofl* of Hh Ma]e»>

tie__„ ,..._rfbjrtlje way th$ fountain in tjbe froiit hattsoph* water *on people's clothes white they were tasting > | fh« . . . -drink. The back l i a l K o u n t a i r ^ ^one by one. At those in the basement you have to wade through ( M d report*, all worked ov^trj** > »tudeikt ha* an at>pointnte« with a

a pool of water and then tr>- to coax atain. On the first floor one is entirely 68T 6t order aid the other\Ut£«igives lair service.* On thi? upper floor, however, there is

At alLvIbxeft^thfiEJ*OTtaiiJs a*re. "out of order," so the; m6 lri

st re*

their "dry desert" downstairs to an oasis where "blessed "water" « v l « ^ r r ; S r ? htr T^fdti £•'**«>< »'•*«: The -me re-

and Mte? Walsh are about to.launch j hfim mt4f nMmw orluMh bai*placed i

a mile noht of the ehurth.••Tpnmy," Thre^Act Com-

edy, lo Be GWeh Febnury13, H . Mr*. PetitCoach Cwf. '

Of areat regm. He * " » " « » » ««««-and lovlnf busba»d and Indu!-tescher. he mast he oat of the

t n t l O & L J i l ^ J p t e * aiterappointment hat eodfd.

fact that the •udltbrttiinn A t ( id l : The

^_ ^ Here's hoping that somebody get* Icbd-hearted and ^r*ta"htr%"rof£tlort^to it that we get a better water system in Woodbndge ~ -— - - - -.-*. «„,»*«« « « • P»P*f.

School,

THE GIRt* LOCKER ROOMH ever a visitor were to step into the jgjrls' locker

hih

ther also, prove the. forerunners of jlike or^anintion: thrttuchoat all of)our departments. Doot yoif tbink it!

i would enliven our scbooi to have such 1 _ « . » _ . — » - . . . . M m%«nnmtm n « !*»««* ei b ^COMMERCIALCLUBS.French d^b. a Literary cJub. o: a

- A e would immediately notice the papers which are usually; ^ Ge* E ! ^every whew except in the paper basket, where the-|*hoald be. C A p i l A l l A n r CShe WWBM be impressed by the sight and probably think t h a t u v F r i l l / I f l V l V J u i jWoodbfidge High School possessed a w r f UBtidy set of girla. T A If F V O T F (XNindeed. Of course, they a*e reatty sot untidy—no. cot that. 1 A I V & ¥ U 1 L U l lThey are just exceedingly careless. *" Instead of throwing papers

• into the basket, the girls drop them on the floor, without think-ing. But, is this right * No., certainly not! "Sot linking" # , ,never excused anyone/yet atid It wont this time either. They Increasing Cost of Seniors

Think of the janitors who must clean Annual Excursion to Wash-

cot been selectedbat the try*out will- be held th

future and results wilt ap-» WPer.

... . . d ofdefivtment. will coach U> pl*jri$ a newcomer to'the tit>ut hu made mativ frlendt

Ws srat ability by theBIU?

| ' Tbi tombstone of himseirand lit*i wife jire j*e|- xo be seen In the Pr sb»-:

' ry here. The wtf*>.. ,„». following &»crtpttoB:H*re Lyes ye Body V»f Mr«. Mar-Hude. Wife of Adam Hule **--

MISS JOSEPHINE SENGMARRIES C.C.COLEMANMr aid Mf*- Joseph Seng, of Idax-

welt 4l inuf . Kords. announee thfmarriage of their daughter, Joaeph-im. to -Claude C Coleman. of PerthApiboy. formerly of Nebrajka, on

• taken charge of.

CAPITOL TRIP

PLAN"SEFUlACnviTIES4«USIC MAKERSTO PERFORMFOR STUDENTS

For Ye Spase of t « year* dearly be- Saturday." January 10. . . •' loved to Life and lameftted .iir death. The ceremony wa* solemnlaed,. by

nsr.ee. meekues aq4 iaftblhtr. **.?&* church *)th , Misa; •Uujorieafter she had served her KeneratWn ,j|at*r ** m**d ot honor and Edward•x ve love'and fe»r-Qf Cod in.ye Tl^oodjesky »ctliit!' a» best

!- r CofiiatrdaT "

d?r Mi**IE s^^Tr-

1

TO CREATE GARBAGE COLLECTION

of N*wSduimpe

Conplalftas Ls,

and form

should and must thinkup the mess. Their job isn't to' go around cleaning up rubbishsfter people who are old enough to know better, but to cleanup only the necessary dirt incurred in running a school. And

labor isn't n«cwaaryi~~---.•-.Gills, think-! Have a little pride in yourselves and the

ington, D. C , MayHalt

Call wit:": ^r:.-:i-T xo provide the sr;-i*i!<5 <t*-riairr.ient "but fef sn ..ed^faricEa-. «r.-,O5* While part-c-ft>i* T'<i:-"S

_ ' A-t present!ft« the ;tay. Vr.e rest ofMr. F-rrv wiled ihe class,wilVbe Uk'.B£ down ir, short

'Different" Entertainment toBe Offered Student BodyBy Radio Artists NextMonday.

ic»c(i»<i Kebriary 9. I92S. Febni»r>' ! •;«SS D««mb«r '3.. 1««. January 24..IK?, March 7. 1VZ and February 24

E* a OrduoeJ ty the TcrrRifcip Cimini!-!»« •••'. the TowTiship of W*odbridf«, tn

5. AT, ordmaJM*.•HUlWr, *

M j.-ir pre-

fromi the

Mary>.„_, ._. . ^Vv-'^jVi*"condition*'rtey w i l 1 ? r t m u ? ! l ^ f

nextttae you're tempted to drop paper on the floor, put it in l ^ ^ ^ ' ^ ^ ^ i ^ ^ f ^ ^ rflrst ^ J tm

batket. The few steps won't hurt you and will Kelp every-aBt,B£fia,« to waihinstoE. speak-! cbaWite. wa* ei*c*«' ' i . . . ing of the yearly increase in the cost* Claire Netson. secpetary. and Manors

*' . . •" *' . '• !- ,-of these trips, Mr. Ptre$ defintteiy ^rC*fte. trNimror, Oo tht PTt«raninc-ed that after the . present committee are RiitV MacO6w»n'.:; class ^rad.-ates no Senior Catherine •McOrdl* sod Laura Ash-will be allowed tQ finance I^e , i»y.

excursion with school money. Thefor this, he explained. w*a

e High ?ehooi on Monday.January ]•», a t » : * 5 o'clock, in theHiih school a'jditorium.

The

IS. 1»4. amended Februafy S. 1P23. " '""" ~13. :«6, Januarj- S4.ind Februiry *" "*~bv adding ti.which subdivision cr«»ted G»rbaff Dtjtric'.Xa, 5: aj »m«ndt<l so that said subflirisionslliti Hereafter iBddit t>wl4ro»nig ttrrl•.or,' in addition .to. that set out. In said

Defendant*. , f i Ka tor-sale of saort-__._ jiremisej dated December 2, 1M0.By Mrtut of the above lUUd writ to

me dirtcttd and delivered, I wllj expoM tus*jt st uubla vcudue oo .WEDNESDAY, THE 2STH DAT OF

~ *• "O I"*UJOU of Mid dayUu City ot S~ew

,aii.o :dacEJiiW the. Sheriff's .Erunrmck, N. J.

AE1 the followthg tract or parqcl o* laud' " de-

t l»Couaty

of Middlesex and State of New Jersey.

_^££P?ff> 'P..?.L>JL

P<i l. ; ' iL t!'? lM * ° u *lde

uf Flvusttnt KV |1U6 dMUUif tvb trondredand twenty-five (225) feet easterly from

, o. vi 'h* itttersectlon.of the easterly line of Oen-at the mterstctipn of Public tr»J av«nue and th« s»uttierly U M of

and Woodbridrt-Carteret Pleasant avenue; th*nce (1) easterly along

. ^ ^ J b ^ S ? , ^ AH the following tract or pirqel ofuan- 54^ 1927. » " * • < • Vf-l and pr«mi»e» hereinafter particuUrly

y !«. 1930. 1» hereby wn*nd»a »cr1b«d. wtasU, lyini and b«tn« Into «CUM> ,8. suMtrision E. Township of WoodbrTdge, in UM Coijion crtitea G»rb&f» Dijtric? { jjjddl d SUM f Ne Jeraev

otte.

THE DIAL SAYS

enty-nve (75) feet to a point: theac« (2)

^^rttr "OafSophomores presented aW% Mucb Ado,

idAtMt Mwtktas.' which all reminds ns>> * l the gnat taM being made about;

ta« weather." \' tke Dtal of 1*KW—iBHI Of tlW» U«h

1, Our waterless

'• • • v -a- . , w iv * « « -..* .*lth *uch .anfetrv that there ii-j™*,,,.?*In the third period clab, the offlcea ao doubt of Its suon.? appeal to all ISwt to i »

_. „, __r, «ho Were , elected are: W»"'£ne wSso are looking for entertainment thence. »'MII. . A T . . K H O A -ffcat the incre»se I s t h e cos to f the Pasrynaslcl. president. 0 ^ a r r ^ . j a ^ « iitt|« dlifwrtnt'. and that • con- ' ' '

Oar 193ft Football S^juad.. - . t l 1 p 4 t ) e ? Q J 1 | ? y e m r i g r o ^ t ^ the' lerton. secreUry. and LDUan K»«fl. form* to the highest Ideals of theOar J a » OrcJmtrm. I graduatln* clasa, meant an increase in treasurer. Inna FeranaiJdfea. r7riU'-: entertaiwaentAar Sopb. rtporters Ray Jfcck-: the project* tor raisin* money. The ces D'Angelo. and. Irene Tobia* are;

and Vdolph , Boenm. How two principal continued by saying that on the arogTam eominue*.an be m dnmb «ad liTe. . the school was already taxed to the, 'In th? seventy period dub the foi-«onion «xnect to «ceive a'timit and could not stand any more, lowip? officers were elected:, josejn

MT hu its seven; u^uLnSt of SSr- ta^tr »t- ,^*n.*t^*TT W*^.to\M^ .V**W. *W*».Eh Mhool. Our sev- ^ 1 • U ^ e ^ wiU be to aid them only remaining possibility of the raohd. secretary, and Mary Margin,: ' " ? S : ^ wJS!i!ZM. Mn.» r-r««bt .Sophom»e-cla« of Seuing to tw*n«r. The; program cow

Washington lay in the sole; financing Is made up of Vary Besjcic,

so v»i;iea in iw ro»K^-up oj jcew Jersey: thence.nortlwrly altrng tue .tbence (3) westerly "and parallel" withevery ta«te U mre to be satisfied Central Railroad oJ Sew Jersey to ejnter p| e M W , t avenue stventy-flve (75) feet to

" """ "' ~—" " —. i - . . « j - ". k point; thence M) northerly and at rijhto Pleasant' a*tn.U* ont hundfeOt to the .point or place of BE-

, thence

rf wo&

i xo « »ot» «"d

trip."

These artUU offer a itrlctly pro-fessioaal program •preduced by a

New York su?e director. In ,. K „ ,.procram are Included vocal solos Read, to the place of bepnnln*; »iso

and d«e,*;. ia«n,»eatal tote and & ^ n n ^ ^ t h j ^ ^ c t ^ n oj Pu^hca onfract play bridge-Cfcrtertt Road; thenct southerly

e«t- Being thf same premises conveyed tohundred John Zav&tzkl and Julia Satsuki, hi*i Public - - •

ment8th, ISMty Clerk s Office In book

D«cree amounttnj; to16.030. , '

Together with all and

i!SSta«

Sharpe and.taa

Tvonne .5$ to Washington at presentstill were «,<>

trip.(how it ever to

and beautifully stase* combination aionl'the PiibUc'Serrtc*'Raliw»y"To' ti* rifhtV'prtvllerV's. heredTtMnroSTiii ip-n^iriberi'with'special lishtln» effects c*nt*r l i n ' °f Central ..Avenue: thence pumnancts•*•- — -••-• —

Th* compaay U headed-by MUs' » ^ r i y ^ « ^ «nt« . l i a e of Central wiwappertiK-i a Lundber?. reader and accom- Avenue, tkehc« northerly along

apprc^dniate.ly

ttatptlar th«rats and ap-

reunto .twlonginj or tn anyilnt. ., OASNOIj,

' 3 1 . -

Sopbosuires and Freshmen ScanCurrent Ofterin2sofW.H.S. library

MpnUay the vote was taken.v«ed to o and stoy voted

.j,he.opposite. • Mr. Ferry reiosed toaccept t!-.L$\ unsatisfactory vote andcalled for a new vote:-to be taken onthe following day. Th'e'finAl votewa$ T3 lo 45 M> tfie class's decisionis still uncertain. . •

RAMOW E5TRICATDTG OfMJHAHFACULTY R U Y TO BE

GTVEN FOR UBRARY

C U S S FORMSPTERARY CLUB

NewBy Mrs. WeHock, filTHold Election of Officers

Solicitor.'1-2-1

ADVKRT1SEMKXT—zo'Mjprano

l,v tae center unt M lomyn Place:B oii ^ ii i j • n theac* »"est*rly along th« center line ofB B!!.«s. violinist and me.i-\ Tonl>-n Plaa to thi center line, of Like; and a saiaphonlst. \View Avenue: then* nonberly alonj th# , „ . . . „ . „ . , _ • . „ —

! : • \«e»ier line of Eafce. View Awno* to the S j ! £ ' F F S - . S A L B - I n Chancery of S«wpenter line of Wiiodbnda^Cyteret Road: rXHSX!:. ~}V?? *oodb.rt^«« Luaaberge Lumber

of K»w J««ey,MISS DUNIGAN VIQIMHAND

wain line ot nflWDnoicviriEm ntaa. nrtmk..Vtfceac* northeasterly alocg th« center lire r"2Efi£ i "ot Woodbridt^Cuteret Road to the point i."R,*SJfJ' Jor place ot befinninc: «l«o " t!S»!M « ^ V «

B^innlox at a point in the center line i^*L^i' H. Lt "LtT' ? * ^fit Woodbrtdfe-Caiteret Road wber. ih« ^VO^l lUt*<* tJO*c»«b«r 10.same is intersected by the nnt»r line, IJ!

^ a^^h^rtre; -d

irta* .,f i

i»ortfaf*d1H0.writ to m

Thi* ««rr Uke* place in a i^rof o£f"rBU new. several small In

b. this book. Obadi&h Burgess, a--ii! eideriy nan wax mow. interest-

ing to me. Hii unttehac aad UT-Tae

When asked by our re-gorier. Mi« Dunlean confessed that.-he had a broken

SMA toTTourseU U voa read

of therf Woodbridg*once more ready to,

aany wnu© wm- i"? «> t*lk • ' » f*^ »»«* "*•• Tery «mbart on the great se* oi ammenr, t I 1 5 u a u ^ . .^ l lw. lw.™™ . „ .„ . - . , rm... .the We«l in the amusini thrpufht thte wfc*e book.' theatrical prodtjetioas. "Mis" Kellyt Club. Tbe idea. cone«ived by Mrs, hut is highly probable. His eiplana-tes place in "a^Obadiah-wai very well liked brerery-' or V Orleans." t,W y"eaTs"s*l«Ut!5 Werlock. grew but of her oirn sug-v'-'on follows: -The Basketball, Foot- ^ .a* TOU wttl and one witb. whom he became aistocial-; will be the fifth annual production action ihat the das* make use of \ball(and Baseball managers and Miss C*rt«r« RowiTo'tSi

thiied ThroWfe trickery by Balaam given, by the faculty, Even one who-Ove "nominaUnf u 4 secondary 'Punfean w«re reaching for a stanjp '-'! Grteei, his monitj- w»* invested la lui eeen the pa*t showings of the staff, j speeches that the puplta had had for' »t "* tame time." .

fqan TJM. •'wortiileaa tftf'tii ftttfr hi rttiwy*, fcno*1"* »h*t I* in ftore fo^ them. Xo , ^ | r »p«ip,m»m th.t riiv The elaM' Everyone is hoping for »

10M-N meet* the eeater line <A DirtsiooStreet: q w r n northerly U«ig tte rnr-

* U n * o l Blat*s^ 1064-A, 10M-C l d

its

tb*of

JEg!

THB CSISIS

, . , „ . . „ , . - . . , • • • • , » " * ' I ,that hU Inherited money wquld' be'date Saa been' set\ts yet. bnt be sul-e^ed upon her tuggewion* and the'«>rery of M las Dunlgafl,low, he be**me Tery much excited to watch the papers for further no-!tiBb w*s t*e outcome. ' . - 1 '4—•-

land worried. Bat Noah Keweomb tieei of development on the Ugh, Friday mornir,?. the club'will hold ' DID VOC HEAR THIS?came to Obadiah aa the "Good Sa- school su«e. Xiu Grace Huber will

b yi 1.

• " Towukttp Ckrk.Dated January U. WLTo be i d w u i U , Januanr 16th. 1931 andinii^r T&rA IW *

d.ard. 1«L

the hero,

her toOt «arnher toshameof eelsideher

ilk first oftciil maetliig for the elee-' '» e*onoml$s claii, Mr. W«rlockdan of o&eeri'." Mr». Werloet, »P- m a d e the statement, "In trresute of , _ - . . ,pointed three committees for the ; California the girls sptjnri ***** th . . . ' -«-w»*i-

of three oflcen,' preti- •l-.Sw.OOp for coan\etl^i during 'one SHKRirrs. s u x - t nand treasurer. \Tn« year. Gee! I never spend anything

name* of those, up for nomination f°r cosmetics!" \were handed to Mrs. Wertock by the I Harr>- DeRissey. the c!a«s wit

Sections Wpea'up, "Vcju win now-

LIBRART BOOKSJ ^ ! cannot thank Soah e»o«h JorhU J^AtH 8TH URADE PUrlL

War The *ulnij Jn paru h«»PM>« W» Swiarthatab Mr. Bur-|nair t>tae«' u Vickiburt, «** te OBC* mon "*• l » m e *TU^ a B d . The eighth grade library of Wood- i committee* on "^edneaday.

aaarWa«lil»?tOB although St. ewenatatag felld* Obadiaa. • ^bridge High School bu c*mplettd its i I*" • « «« " " ^ »P«<:h£s for* thette^Klfnt'of ibis story. « • • ««*•«*. 'W- , tat month of elriulation. "fte fine, election of offlc*« were^deaignated.

isrt*Miun* itorr™ Ui» a uile more considerau than1 The dub plain to hold nwepngt .uietwui^»tory_ ^ ^ AIWJfG mnOtOSm , Uumeorthe high achool library. Thejonet * »eelt or everr'two w«el» dor- »T«tors, the determining of the tme

1 Boy Scwu of De» Motnea. Iowa, eighth grade librartamt hare ten alt i ia« \ w****1 nour»- . Oneiact playa, pound spe*d of alrtjaft abd the find-art aiding, a campaign to acquaint to eharge only two eeiys per day-over! "ory- telUng. conte*U • and' other *ns of the coaiw of least crosrwtad

EUot re«ident# M the state with iU *aved oae week, Ho,w«rer Vl«s Cade haa i tcUriiie* h»Te been planned. "srTerai~W"-enw*tict. are-reKorUid solred jbyniece of Mn. road i)-rtem. The 8 c w U . a r e rtdding thought of a wrdbderful ieh«me for;**»hUioM meia1>6i».lia*e ewn e«fwd-Ui*inT*mii**.*t A-i-^—.a—^.—1_..

4tethtniatnia *»»-

«>«*.'said line ofiKaliwa"

th«IWI (J)

2

SCQIT

. BeCwea» Citiae**Lxm Aasodatrca. aJtr»»y. CimplalMnt .««y »C alav. Ddaadinu.o« '-BK)rtf»«*d preiaUea

BT inrtoe of th* ataw* dirttud

tinor plir*

: Uistmiuwttk th* Am

T B«* IMS

ri!. . . to BM directed tad d«U<*rtdr I win t»

Two ve-rinr.problem. that confront P - ^ - ^ J " « ^ f e « ^ « T o rrSBRCAItT, A. D. 1S1.

it *r o dock tn the aftere«n of a«M dayth* SbtrM-* Oftct-X thf Oty, o( New

inter«t aB*r-B^lThe^tJn« ofHer life «*n be a 'which, do n t

all

. Ue"r t*aut>n ranity, [amp* jriif be btind cocccittdnei* brUg bonfire wbich U

and s i - a e Her lack gram,faith IB rrUsion brought

ict back *i'.:: (ear when awas :.rsr Her lack

ntrol. #il!-i«owirr. and

w g g caat^Mted map. racing money for new books. She » to

« l prwent charging erery wodew eauiht chew- <HV*U t^^i4af^i

pUyi and put them' B S *-

» P*ifl4, jf. «t Pci|*del- tartfcld11*^*^* HV iUaawre at fh« f ni- TwrnaWp of

m particuUrly d*,an# heir* to t

tw Jersty. aorwnd« .TO, CatlBMn. Orti*»r.

know, aa ( T aad t » Rahwir

unouaiint to

in th.s a t *

th*•P-

or In

OANNQN,Solidtor.

la aof the pH>- ed tor

chewing

—LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT—

« t y ee*u for runs " E**"*1 Scout Barclay WJftn, olThe following ttttiitics of Troop No it, Birmln|ra!m. Al*.. a

OAI, !Hi«h School New*Boy Scouu of tke Borough of the 'Hn. Crampton. * »«; \MU*

Brtmx. N. Y,. recesUy otaerred their,III; Mls» G*i$*r, 11«; Vi»ion of others uairt us beli«T» *»n,i|Ia apple diy faf conlribatUij| oie 18: Miw M'ick, U4; Mr

des«rTed. But. oa "apple e«eU, tm *!). ttMiMwdaW-Ht :tl»: Mi* _~ . •" to~~ to *mn ar* *ely'

throUtioo have beta .turned into |>e ^anior 'wrier for the Birmiatkam *nji-*n*aj M:*t* Tm»*fnfir.H i h School X«w»: NewsA^e Herald wa* recently •**- rj"*W:-jfc • i » - •jtf-Jaifitrf *

hand; her

kawTate atwy for theOut it M4 more mwalag.

Hy » » 4 _ i y *Vtwtl caayactatt

^tjarkMk. ' '

*J

the•trwt a»d tb» vatteriyk««Bat: -theoot ronnbtf rt)

linefcjf ar.'dNews-Aa* Herald, T U recently

tev^rtl hundred of ft*^kiper'i earners w it» post ©si

hcj *r4 awarded •

Boy veeinipujde*eripiio

nlo« MieMtt especially for out ««M«rlyaoutltrrly

corner of Elm-stNM

towa' lish«»i fey Sewi

Okktucard* Vki*t the r««M»aU ta budl#

to 1M g l r a ta.ekartty.la «a* day t {# jko«tataaai*H

!v •Mm aa4 rta

that both aa

can ia«arrt«d to a

''for t»er. DUTKIB[T| t l t i WHtr lack of consideration U shows In a h,oui*-to-hons*

la maul ways, la tb* &rct pla*t, «h« Scr.uu ot H»n(crd. Ooaa..ahould n« hate killed her isnocent deUveryd lt,»06 la*Qwts4katarn*- ~-a*-4*iuui*i ~iw~ - - • • - - - -ftgnt lo lire a» aaybody did.Betty, ran awajr from home (tada * * * tl» erim*. she did' not Mop . - . . . _ _ _ .a«4 IWak of tkt disgrace *he would Handler 11« botsw)—It"! all right, Colbert ofJMW o p " h«r family. Eierythias Sam Ju« aay to yowNif, *Tm gOMU 111., was« M to better Mwelf, u matter whit vfn7' aai ynuU h « ! t h i » * ' Uttl* girlmtmia t*,. to**, which H ehara««Mv @k*fftleal Boie-^JfiSty M good, drirer. thttalk <rf maw g w m t b l a century. i^*": I *aow watt a l b r I am.— tu wty:.

Page 7: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

THE W0OMR1DGE LEADER, FRIDAY/JArf. \% IMl

Jeter's AdventuredMn, Florence Smith Vincent

UCrambt at Red Ant FeatfCommander looked at the stick.

It looked Harmless endugh. Yet, M|be boy had said, it did ttlve ft sharp

oint, that It might turn upon her tfnythins went wrong. Commander

[glanced at the.boy out ol the Cor«t i e r of her oy«., She didn't moretthan halt believe he was telling the(truth but—well—maybe he ww. '

'1 guejg I'll no | bother wltfc the

WHAT A fiAsr me /ffosttms wiu• HAVf mwi -eaievweurn*

stick, after all!" said ,Commander."Come to think of it, I might tall intoa heavy doze ,and someone mightcreep up nn mo and steal' It out ofmy claws." Commander tald nomore attentlfm to the boy, 3d.Peterand Lively sturted oft to see whatthey could see, and the first thing,that the boy noticed was a.group otants laying a new floor. Add everyant was black, A little (wtec onmoro Wack Ants were brushingdown the wallH with tiny feathoTdusters made of .milkweed Bilk, Andbeyond them' a group ot fiur»e« were

Ijt tend lnp Redskin babies. -Lively ledPeter to the rlilldrcn'B corner, and'be'ndhiK bvur., softly stroked one ofthe larvae.

- "Cute little thing." she murmuer.Just then Peter noticed a Black Ant(IramUni; In <i blR fat Bplder

"What a feast the Redskins -willhave now!" observed Lively,

"Will they (five you a bit?" askedI'edr Mvptyixtiook bar head.

"Oh, no, why should they? Weare only jiluves—all the Rood thingsbelong to our raptors. Of, course, ifthere happen to be morselB left overafter all the Redskins have dined, wecan have them and tfelromo. Butmost of tiu> lime (hero just ftten'tuny -leavings." <

Next: "A Now Captive of tU*l-Iklns."

-- Dinner Stories «WHOA!

An Encllsliman on ft visit to thewest decided to so horseback riding.The hostler who was to attend him

asked: "Do you prefer an Englishsaddle or a western?"

"What's the difference?"'be asked,"The western tmddle has a horn,"

replied the attendant. f

"1 don't think I'll need the horn,"•aid the Englishman. "I don't Intendto ride In heavy traffic.'^

Sl(rn» of RecoveryTv,n old maids were In an insane

asylum for years, always knittingand knitting

"fi.>c," Belied Mnyme oneJday, ''1wl*li some tall, handsome man wouldwind his iirniB around meand BQueezome until I RadP." ' \

"Now,you're talking sfcnRe." fromHattle. "You'll be out of hare In a

, few dnyi" \

The Perfect Wctoft ~Two tourlHta m«t on the street too,

narrow for them to pass. One being_very hot tempered shouted to. thentiier, ''I never—baclt—a>-- |pr_.damn fool" The other driver calm»

• ly 'threw-«ifi-'-car_Jtttj). ijreve'tpfi "andbacked out, saylnfe, "0. K.. i|»rd. 1always do." •

1 XftiiRhty! JVAUKhty!"1 bet my hend thiit I am rlRW.""1 bet my pocketbook that-I

rlBht.""Tint your porketbook Is empty.'"Yea, eqi|ul stakeB, olfl fellow."

am

EtfPING

Stove League GosJsip.

STOVE .LEAGUK clrclea aT««tuaipud, fliey have a verjj Juloymorsel to arguo over but no (acts touse In argument. The morsel Is thft

'"• . • * ' '.. The new model bwieball, you know*

U juat Uk« tbe lively ipbm wbktahas dono duty for the past decade,eaye that tt hat an extra thick hideand lu MMOM hwtoad of lytag flat ap

wiU stand out like aIdrapea neckUoe. Tnew tettaMa BNlexpected to slow the baljl In flight and

' >«>«bletfcapltdw>r to ge*« betteri. In other word*, the batMr hai

conspired agalmt.• t • :•

u>«ball men believe tse new ballcu,t Blugglng by about 10 per

And quite likely tt will. Thefc(.

o t argument, however, Uf ther thu wil] be a boon or a""wang to baeeball. 'WHJ tbe

Brtll they yowl for tbe "good oldM!i.pf; free hitting and feotta of

MUGGS McGINNlS Hard" Work!! By WAUY BISHOP

HEARD ABOUT

ETTAKETT They Sure Would! B, P ADI ROBDOJInote,

TO'SHCWWt Stuff

HIGH PRESSURE PETE Patent Applied For

H'LO WIF6V—

IT.'.'L T I - •'- ' ' I .. •

ByLES FORGRAVBThe Silent Witness

I HAD MVHAtOOS OtJ I BUDDY TOV

.••4 > • . l

- MOTHER, YOU'VE HEARD?

I TOLA ViXJ 0WIPTV

VyA.SN'T SUILTy/ V 6 S - -

HE'S RI6HT HERE.,'I'LL

PUT. HJM.pNTHEPHOME

; 0OMT DARE TAKE

VOU HOME WITH ME WHILE,

MOWER STILL THINKS

VAMRHVMEROBBERSCAPTURED-VU

OH 5WIFTV"

THANK 6OODME55/

I'M 6OIWS TO

PHQME

THIS MIMDTE.'

Central Vrw Auooiatlon, Inc.

am?

watt tor thlKinef-until

thM.tm figb«v« to be well underway bjforeo w d wa«Uoii to ttoe new IMH

todtoMd Tnat Ii,«b» « • » ban ttvea up to «xpeotoaoo.

Aiarwltta JkBab« Eutb, Haok WWon or wtu. otoer iwat •ultaikwt a nw>ord in nornwi Bttt )*w 4Wlt« tb*

•Mr MUI

Slits' DiaryBy ROSS FABQVHAR

FVlday—ma to H,g*tUng reddy tora dinner party at are houw tor to-tnorro nlte and the atd the wai a «o-i t l V a l b l d AtEHpmyto

her to kill them. H w U to tondtrharUd. ' "

8»t»r4»r-TUl I tuk J I M to

legions buixar tonlte and they wasturn glrli there a selling klwea for adiem a peace to all men under eigh-teen yrs, of age and I wanted to helptbe legion airs a little and I wai agoing to bur » cupple klwei just tohelp tbe Legion aim a little. ButJane ted I was foollih to do that with

by ihe

Sunday—on are way home frunSuaday akooj Jake Md me tuk a cup-5u i U ith um ajMir BiUl at oilwith »um

a pat oil

Mr. Slinks Derby and I ^hit tt 1 time tho. I lent

it. Jake1 threw

__ Bnboffa frunt window and whenI got home ma give me a slapping,even, when I Xplalaedl dlddent i vtend to hit the window. Jake got illektn to. * ,

Muttday—well tbe man* ipringmy ObrtimuB rlittuk It to tbecharged me ft II ait Um whut'tbe watoh and 1so I got out of, ( i f

cti. I nave had a very •ourfullOhrttmui »o fur. • >a

Teawlay—Ole Jim Drooh tryed toeomlt lulslde today bequ every bud-dy e»ll» him Laiyao h« went down totbf.R. r. trajk to tlwow- Ma Mlf InCettttt ot tbe. II OtteiL tofja, ,i|it beytu 3 mtautee late- Wiflf fwflriome

l k VK \ :

wai a going to, oU MrA Wnneral tomorro and Aftt Ib d d 4

i in jr

Page 8: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

Pag< EightTHE WOODBRIDGE LEA&ifc, FWDAY, JAN

Start oi Anti-Diphtheria Drive

Is Asked Here(continued from peg-* one)

Wuad that we art the only townshipof any sizie that is Dot providing tbeif-treat menu I know that wyjietlmeago we bad a cor.fmnc* with theBoard of Edueaticrn but 'the boardtook! not seem to come to terms »;ihua and that is as far as It went." MrPeterson said.

la diaewktUg the matter Com mi t-

OWE HUNDRED Yl-ARS! SALAMAGUNDI SOCIETYH E A R S MUSICAJLE ATBRECKENRIDGE Fit) ME

CLASSIFIED

•If tbe flUa and antl W i n willthe U w m t v o or three ehJIfrn it iswell wofjfrtl le 5p«Ddln4a few hun-dred dollar! and tl th« Board of Edu-caUon does ao^ care to go. half waywith us I sdegett that w,e (To It any-way." • '. \ . • ,'

Mr. Grauaatt, Health dfflcer Peter-'eon aa4 Dr. 1.1, Collins were appoint:ed as a eomtaUtet of three to waiton the Board of Education and tomak» a turvtr of aonditiona in othermuilelpaJlUe* anil report back at thenext regular meeting.

Mayor E y » then brought up tbematter of 4\K|0r bills Incurred by thecentral coaWhtttee for unfimBjipynieiKndtet. Tke Mayor declared" lhat hebeHmd that 4oetor bills for the poor

•ot eump out of the unem-tOBdaa "It wiU ._«ut. the

tor prorfalons and tbe fundsMogh now."

"The Ulla should be taken care ofby the. Orentwr ot the Poor and theHealth offleer as hecetofore," said the

M'

.;'-'••• r,rac# Hubtr, Sarah Flt*-•iid hti Martha Morrow were the1

• , . . . . Tjc-sday night at a meet*- i ssisnjijrundl Liieruy aad j

.Mm.! Society held at the homttot. j K Erwkehrid^e. In -GNaft-<••.. in- following vrogram wi i*

ia we* JUkwiy.

norout*PROPOSALS will b* reoorMd by

t d otHtteatlaii of Woodbrldftim at * o'clock, P. M.. la UM High

on B « r « Xttawe. Woodbridf..

•LOCK — „ = . -M f ionaa V. 3L Titdsfl «7.n

KJulia Turek

7 Otto Kleta

J. W.

MMO

1(3.73 170.31

mm.- -ggUN

U0.7»

Oft-U&f* WfcHt (Old wrist wttck

reward.and the H*tn #- -rr-—- ;-,._ _*,

Vocal toiocAnna StraUoB'

'Boats, ofpraes • •we*

acct'cj.anfed Mf». Raa-la

j Violin solos: "Sourenlr," by WIU-liani Ha<fK-ht; "Serenade," oy Bntteo

M|s» Elple Wood, of Bahwar,by Mrs.' £. O. Brown

at the piasp. .. ' 'jf : ' • VHm_Paper: "Die RUMIM*•;.Theatre.',' JSSr~J^

Miss Grace Hober. " . . , '.to SeaeMVooaJ pfiios: "The , Tears Aft*r-y—• " ''.

Pjrine," Mrs fl. Beacfi; "Nytnjphs' ,and £hej>h'er<ls." B< Piirceli; MjM1*: • ,.Anna JohntOD, accompanied., by Mrs. H you

Practical NewsPart N. J.

Utute, iHarrington

Mt.M

11.71

RMitr

tnncn

» w » , When pijas m,"*6^",?^.-^.iL*OT-p»a&M8tfcti^*B^ ,« « f ^ ^ T t T « h l i ^ « * « ! for the use ' W * * ^ T 73.38

iier e* the <*Boafdof Mucstton. *ood- . Joe ewsld

Gilbert H. Heettrn.;. fr, confessed1S.000.OOU lo<j',ir of a Hollywoodbulldlnt' and loan association, issnapped hearing tt-nt'-iice of 10 to100 years in SatfQijtntin prison.;

fruit" donoTpVodHte aiVou are entitledtq.

_ L _ • L* . . . • ^ ^ i J * —. — — • • . • * • ! • • t i n m a n

Plav: "Boor.Mise, Grace *Hut*rRandolph.

Violin solof: "Marie .,.. . ..,

Krinea; Miss Wood", accompanied byMrs. Brown.

yocal solo: "I Was Down t,o- the,Sea Again," John Dfnsmdfe: A. F.Randolph, accompanied by Mrs. Ran-dolph.

Dellcfqti! refreshments w»re serr-

kO4)

wtlTb. ft 11

Tbe BEST toy flairn e Bcird of JM

right to r»)«t »njr and an,S.a»d BOAR^gr^D

fly I t H.

RYAN ASKS IINIFIfATinNKIAPI ASM UnifltAUUfl

Oratuam then declared that reject the j>rppositlor>. Mr, Grausamthe bealtli department doctor, pr.'annwtrfd ii by saying: "He's had aOcdUat, a u been offering ht« gepiceB • chance-, but he refused it. He Wantsfree to tbe J?e«r and has lust'been the Township to buy a 10-foot widthcharging for medicines. Mr. Crrausam [ of lan.l io put a tildewalk on It."

A mofe for bejter-bus transporta-tion in Uklin wa» «tari«4r by th« ag-gresgive Comn)ltte«man Aquila -whodeclared that .the Public Serrlce-run*the buses "now and then—mostlrthen," He deciar«4 that tinder pres-ent conditions the people in IselinAnd it lmpoHHlble to keep in contactwith Woodbridge proper on account

i of the indifferent transportation fa-cilities , -

! Mayor Ryan explained that thej Public Service has not been able tokeep up the service fcccauEe the lice

i «d. The -next ^j«l ing will be_ atheatre party. The Fiiesls , Wgfe

_ _ . . _ . . _ _ . _ Misses Lou Wordell. Marie Dunitan.OF LIGHT DISTRICTS'G e n e T i e T* Kr»m« r- RuthSnyder aad

(continued'from-Page 1) I L. C. Holden.-< . '

said that be believed that every- doc-tor ahonl4 «Str thiir •enrioM- free tothe poor, aw | that doctor bills forthe uaempfojrid were unnecessary.

The board Qten went on record Infavor of aotltyUg Harry Jackson,registrar of the unemployed, and thecentral committee that if there is anyneed for medieinaj relief,.notificationbe sent to the health officer.

finOMnwy of Jfear's Wor|cThe summary of the health offlcer'n

report for 1930 was u folldws:Couuigioua SisfiaseB repurled by

doctors: Scarlet fever, 22; diph-theria, 40; tntJBTCulosls, 22'; meaeels,19; chlckenpoi,.3; whooping cough,6.

Inspections: School, 48; dairy,62; general nuisances abated( 202;plumbing Inspections, 301; sewer In-spections, 341; homes quarantined,82; cow» tested, 214,; cows re-acted,3; water teat*, 18; numbetjjl lota'beads examined, 5; milk tests, 23. '

Nur»e»' report for 1930: Homevisits, 5,5(4; clinic attendance, 1,-6(8;- new caiw, 640; \claEsroom in-

More Intellie«it"My brother is-venr inte!llE«nt. Ho

has married a teacher."' "Mv brother is more intellizer.t.He isn't.married at all."—Van Httn.'Stockholm.-

tained.

half ptot of water addone ounce bay mm, asmaflbo* of Barbo Cnmpnmiitand one-foorth otmea ofglycerine. Any druggistcan put this np or you canmix it at home at irrjlittle cost. Apply to thehair twice a week untiltbe desired shade is ob-

It wiD gradual^ darkenh^r ani n^a It Ktt

O

BK«BN.watrWMdbrtdn.

LEGAL ADVEBTISEMEXT •

i ** •SRBJ5ft2S£^p9vyi5IE &?.

tt

&LSI Cort . . . . . . . ••^•: • •.: ' V , JM". *

•*"."74fe2 m' - ^ ^••'•»"•• . . . ••"• , G o n » . • . . . . - • • • • • ' i j j q i j j mf

tflM (70 Hattbevr Chrllwff«r'

15.78

aa.37

nV*i1.9 &, B. rfJileT*•m:3» ..V. Miller ..-. ••,.• j - g j ' " BLOCK (M,

^ " 7»4>m Mleha»l. OWM .80S- Clf«e« BeaincfM .

• • (14-A O " » i j 0 C * r

* * H0441161.43 M M H

J8».7» Carp.

».4» ^ ^

68.01 1OO8-1W7 U«ilal»enberf 39.8J

ZM.S3 9S0-K1 Hannah Anderson 600.03(7.1S «66-Dominl<* Benlncas* 1 S «

J7.W

tn.1T

1770.96

KOI

Bl.ltan

mir41aMillh

a not rtfckr

spections, 2,*41; defects detected,347; defects corrected, 463.

Licenses Issued: Milk, 33; plumb-ers', 32; wayside eating, 22; barber,12; plumbing permits, 67; sewer per-mits, 301.

Vital Statistics: Births, 447.deaths, 200; marriages, 146.

Total receipts from health officefor 1930,11,858.00.

Vital statistics compiled by . the

doesn't pay. Township checkersshowed that the receipts were 35cenia orie aay affrf 6S cpits another,according to a'recent count.'

"A big corporation like the PublicService," answered .Mr. Aquila,"oupht to1 be made to take the le;in .With the fat. They have lines that dopay. I suggest that they operate the

TfisteaiT "o! running a few'bujes eachtveping every half hour."

CommUteeman Grausam expressedhts belief that It would be difficult toforce Public 8ervice to operate at aloss' any more than any other busi-ness firm. He declared that the com-pany tried It for a year and a halfand always "came out on the losingend."- Mr. Aquila th«n suggestedthat .If they were dissatisfied thevcould turn In their franchise and per-mits. It was finally agreed that Mr.Grausam as Chairman of the trans-portation committee should call

25 MEN RETAINED INSHELL P U N T POSITIONSTwtnty-flve men, laced with the

prospectkrf losing their positionswi l i ihe completion of a trew lubri-cation unit at the Sewaien plant oftbe Shell Eastern Products, Corpora-tion, have been retained for the op-•ratjmi'Of the new unit,'It w.as an-nonoised this week; by "Frank W.O'Brtan, superitittndent of the plant.

The a r * lubrication unit is ea-ga«ed in <he (abricat)on of high gradeoils lor distribution throughout theworld. Aviation gasoline and lubri'-c&nU a+e batag snipped from theplant to stem the'new British airline sen-ice betwjsen London and Car-lo, Egypt. LargA shipments are alsobeing made from the refinery ho-re tothe Gold and Ivory Coasts of Africa.

health officer since 1926 are as fol-| meeting Monday "night at the Memor- {I lal Municipal Building and have arepresentative of the Public Servicepresent to discuss the possibility ofimproved service. !

An ordinance was introduced an.dpassed on first reading tp add PortReadnig to the garbage collection dis-trict. Atotner ordinance was passedPirfrrBt Teadftre. proTiding tor 4b«<construction of a sanitary Beqer inCraskle street. i. In a communication, Miss Jane'Packard, executive secretary of theMiddlesex Counjty. Tuberculosis jlieagu«, thanked the Township Com- jmlttc-e for. Its appropriation of ,'$400 :towards its work. . • i

lowi:Year1926 i1917192819291930

Totals"

, Births Deaths438427470446

. 4(7

" 21MNumber of

18C209208

, . 2 0 4* 200

eases offrom 1926 to 1928:Year •192C1917' •19J81S291930

Total

Cases9

73484040

210

Marriages143154154185146 -

' T«2"diphtheria

DeathsQ

'"2 -'31 •

2

8 ; \ C. D. A. Plans Card PartyCfAirt Mercedes, Catholic Daugh-

ters ,\of America, will hbld a publiccard\fia'rty oi Monday, evening, Jan*uary \26 at the Colombian Club on,Ma(n ^treet. Mrs. Arthur Ernst Is

hairtnkn of the affair.

UNGAN'lSLunch Room

77 MAIX STREET

Served Between11:30 and 1:21:30, '

Hot* Lunches forSchool Children

BROAD ST., ELIZABETH—Direction Warner Bros.

Entire Week Starting Sun., Jan. 18First Malti-Million-DoUar Talking Picture.

Season's Outstanding Spectacle

ADVANCE IN PRICES

FREE AUTO PARKING SPACE

ALBERT E. ROHLFS, Directing Manager

The" Best Western Electric SoundNEW SCREEN—NEW MANAGEMENT

Patronize Your Home Town—Will Show Best Feature

Pictures and Short Subject*'Available.

' PROGRAM WEEK OF JANUARY 18

SUNDAY ONLY, JAN. 18 ' .2 FEATURES—?

"WHAT A MAN"WITH

REGINALD DENNYA JubUlant Joy Ride

"One Night at Susie's"With BiUie Dove

Fairbanks, Jr.MONDAY, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19-.20

' HERE THEY ARE!

' AMOS 'N' . ANDY :ON THE SCREEN

in Their First All-Talking Picture

'CHECK AND DOUBLE \ CHECK'WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, JANUARY 21-22

"DOORWAY TO HELL"WITH

LEWJSAYRESThis ii khe picture the feangsters defied Warner Bros.

f : to make. •

FRL, SAT., JAN, 23-24 . , 2 FEATURES—2

"THE CAT CREEPS" "The DudeWrtngler"WITH

HELEN TWELVETREfcSJE.W HERSHOtT

RAYMOND "itiCKETT

WITHCLYDE «K)K

" LI>'A BASQUETTE. WESTERN COMEDY

&8R mFffltf&biiASSLSSMENT THEREOF. y( 1 6 - l * B ' l+^nfiCM. «Be It Ordilnea by th» Tovnshjp 9m- ^ n g. LanderiftM .,-..

ir.ittw of ti« Towiuhlp of Woodbr|ilf»i Jg Aitx Lanienain . . .i^ th* fcuntjr-rf ltia<Jh«c*: w - . B M J £ * *

1. A « » e r as hereinafter described, to 24190 woodBfidja Enter

provemeri. under w L b y TiTttt* of U»— l U C Ipr<-n£i:aii of &n act entitled. "AH Art Con- i-g John M. H*nd .c*rr.ir.e MunidpalitlM". approved^arch 9.16 Benjamin LanderZ. 1HT. the aroendnienlj thereof ands nan . . . . . , . . . . . • • • • •tuppiements thereto and other law! ap-, 17-lJ Benjamin Land«r-plicatTle thpreto. to provide for the aani-L man itan' disposal of seweran in Craake Strtel, i l-g Benjanflft Lander- .a.« hereinafter providei • [ . m m I'^u i 'J i^ ^ «

2 The coit of' Htd improvement "Shall f • • "• BtOCK-'M»'>N -be assessed upon the lands In the Tidnltjr 1 M S Benjamin Lander-th*r»of benentrf. or lucre«*H in value' mur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Q.W

*••••

thereby t<. ttw eitent'xrf the beneQt or in-rease.3. The sum of One thousand, eight nun-

aoilari. or so much thereofh b itdas m&j- be nffcef5».r}- Is bs^eby appropriated

to i i « t the, cost of carrying on saidimpiuvement. . - . .

16-23 Benjamin Lander-man 10.M

BEOCK MJ-O87-88 Dona Kafy 258.1B104-107 Flora De Haren 1,741.88

BLOCK MS-P .

in an amount not to exceed the sujn ap-1propriated. pursuant to the controlling, . BLOCK S6S-PPprori'tor.s of. Oiapter 25J of the Laws of [9-14 B«nJ. Landerman . . U.461916, is iusended, which notes or bonds 15-18 Benj. Landerman., • " •shall sear Ir.terfst at a rate'not'-to (?• 1 ~* ~ireed'-six r*r tent jwr annnni. All other,matters ir. -respect to said notes or bondsshaH be lietermined bjrthe Ghalrman "the' Toiftj'«hip Coninintee. the aownsni;Clerk and Totrnshlp Treasurer, who arehereby authorlied to execute and issuesaid temporary notes or bonds.

5. The sewer to be constructed here-untier is as follows:

An 8 Inch vitrified sewer Beginning ata manhole if. Rahway Avenue approxi-mately at the point of Intersection of thecenter line of Rahway Avenue and thecenter line of Craske Street: thence fromsaid manhole, running westerly along thecenter line of Craske Street, approximately660 feet to a proposed manhole.

6. All the work of said Improvement 1*to be done In accordance with tbe planssnd profile of Craake Street. Woodbridge,Sewer Improvement, as hereinbefore de-scribed, made by George R. Merrill,Township Engineer, and the specificationstherefor. wTiicn are now 00 fua with, theTownship" Cljrk.

7. Said Improvement shall be made andcompleted under the lupefrltdoa and di-rection of the Township Committee andaccording to the provisions of an act en-titled. "An Act Concerning Municipali-tiei". ,

i. This ordinance shall take effect im*I mediately upon Its adoption and adver-Usini ii» required by law.f ' 8, J- DUNIGAN,\i , ,' . . Xttwiishin. .Clfitk*

Dated January 13, 1931. ' < -To be advertised, January 16th, 1931 and

January 23rd, 193L ,», ,

ml74 Ptani fg^17H92 Fannie Parker. 1,586.48193 c-o C. and S. Com-

BLOCK 66S-B330-231 J. W. Wilbur

Company 121.82V - O m p " l y BLOCK S6J-8

M9-270 John Frrkka . . . KB.8783?85 J W Wi

283-285 J. W. Wilbur

Company

330-CB J.Company. . . . . . :

787-798 Domenick Guas-tella

7M-796 Domenick Guas-tella

7S7-8TM J. W. Wilbur

—LEGAL ADVEHTISEMBXT—

B K I X Q I E SALE• NOTICE OF TAX SAT-H

TOWNSHIP OF WO&DBRIPGE,,.SECTION X ,

NOTICE I» HEREBY GIVEN" that theindersigned. Collector of Ta i t s of thtT h i f \Vr.udI>ridge. in th<( County-of

ill h l d bli l t* theTynahip uf \ V u d r i d g . in t ( yMiddlesex., will hold a public sale »t* theTax Offlte, Memp'rlil Mu-nlicipal Building.Main Stre*t. Woodbridge, New Jer«*y. ohthe 20th day of January, 1931, at twoo'clock in the afternoon, Eastern StandardTime, to satisfy municipal Hehs nuw in ar-rears. ' • j • ,

Tta oatctli la U . atild ire, lialedbeing described by lot and block numberu shown on the Township 1 Assessment

g y t eu shown on the Township 1 AssessmentMSp. and In accordanee ,witK*he last'taxduplicate giving'the »wiwr|s name astHown on the last tax duplicate, togetherwith the tota) amount due thereon as com

to July 1, 1930; I

19-2fr Wm. F. Pro-chaskJe • • • • •

BLOCK 663

60.14

180«BLOCK HS-T "

W. Wilbur

806-806 Marie Ca«T«rlt»K U . . , . .^ •••

807-810 J., W. WilburC

63.16

17.06

160.87

28.08

BLOCK MJ-TTlOB-11'Mary M. Huber 1.113.87Jl-22 Grace C. Mulvery 1.330.91

BLOCy 57122 Unknown /. 150.4124 Unknown 9S.S8S6 Unknown 136.7}9 A A . t l i k l f f l - o w i i ' * • • T » » » - 7 6 , 0 3

BLOCK 57351 Walter A. J e n s e n . . . . 670.61,58 Andrew Paulson . . . . . 516,82

BLOCK 4M-B11-14 White" and H e s s . . 18.38

BLOCK S14-Cf-13 Donovan Supply '

Co, 96.7722-23 Clarence T. Mar-

shall . . . , . ' . . , " 3JS.7026-27 Jphn Sorensen . . . S22.7028-39 Frederick J. Dahl-

p ,SI-S3 Dinovan Supply '

Co.,,Inc. . . : , , . . • 7S9,J640-41 Bertha Closkey . . . 106.20

1 BLOCK I7S-A2-8.Frink and Ferdinand

Sohunbaok •.. 114.2813 Frank and Ferdinand

Schunback . . . . . . . . ; . . 40.19- j , BLOCK 57I-B

0 M » « , rj\-—1M

" * " ' BLOCK mS0.»4 1UJ-11J7 Walter B. _ , _6.34 We*dM • «£•«

1UM139 Rose Benowlts I » ».,1156-1166 HsrryEste* •;

i*pmyw»it<

36.44 m

DV7*Q«if A i IE

• , , , . , ' BLOCK 7M^ ' ^ a n Ole Bdwarda . . . . . . « • «

385 F. H. S H j U M ^ . . ^ -

- - , 1 * * 370-J78B. M. fiannon... 5J5.»

& & BLOCK «»-A

lfW.SS m M a r l | n otsen 16.71BLOCK 711-B

•Emll Bohnsack . 368.44Peter Fillmah, • 1U.02

BLOCK 714

. * ' . 388-239 Maude A. Free- .

22.681 "W BLOCK J «38 k y, of +0 Joseph

• • TuHk . . .T;; . . . ' . 734-1341-42 Joseph Turek . . . 106,45

BLOCK 747< George Stlllwell 7«5.63

i BLOCK 760. . . «• U'-A Harriet If. WhitU-«»•*. tor 780.M, M _ i BLOCK 151"*-77 1 j o , , | Hanson .. K71M0

u l n BLOCK'76*-B6 4 - 0 9 8 k House Bridget Cas-

sldy 780.146 Bst. of A. D. Brown . (Hot

• BLOCK 75t, „ , , 6-8 Julias H. Kean . . . . 44-«7^••"ifr-U Julian H. Kean . . . 44.56

_ . — 13-36 Julian H. Kean . . 107.77r 7 ' I i i» -4« Julian H. Kean .. S6».»mMt ' . BLOCK H» 'V-0 0 U Q. ibMaucr Corn-

ier IU fw ImOt167.56 I •—» BLOCK 7J»>A„ « U-13 Julian H. Keane , 2».tt* w i BLOCK TTt-B„ 7 a : 636 Unkonwn 77.83" • ' " ! T BLOCK 77*

18-19 ingelo D'Andrea » »40-41 Leopold Frey . . . . J9:U

BLOCK 77»rA Li u ? 9 12"13 Margaret Sexton , 47.(1JgSS Sl-32 Sidney W. .Gran-!92-!5 halph' ».M

(3-64 Blevln Stoessel ... 47.S3• J BLOCK 77J

1 Louis Garals 60.54

. , n, 4g Alfred Eitner 19.68K - I W 65 Wllllaro Schweft '.. 38.30

63 Max Te«oex 6.48Mttflfi . BLOCK 771

% 334 84 IVA J U M B T. Hanley 31.68* « J ' S 4 1 ~ u John C»«r , 47 64

3 3 4 8 4 „ BLOCK IM ,i *IA 19 1 0 - l 1 * * ' • Cunningham 63.84

**••** 41-42 Max Ooodman 12.114I 7 6 7 J S . * H 4 Geo. H. Boehiw" KM

71-73 JoseBhlhe^H.Hayes ..A..

BTLJIn.o«

48.0«

U0.M

a.(r

D.U

« « » - « A. A.

10-11 John J. McKinleyl 104,(2•LOCK 5TIC(•LOCK 57fC

I+-15 White and Hens. I ir.1523-2S -Louis Meauroa . . J 110.71

BLOCK «71 W. V.'Carpenter 499.45

ji/:u vu *iuiy 1, ,t?oui 1 L m-' *• i' BLOCK 578-C *Said 1 eapecti \ e TWCTM-of- fc°*~*tti "be V* Joh» MtConaarkAA 1 »jk nubA i l u .t- : n. \ •T^WY^

.10

tt

,lgjg-

J.P.GERITY&CO;geat

PrlT&te Bales, Apprklsail, Ex-Mert , Testimony, MorticeXauw,. Bu*in«w . BrBk*BdaDtmlejai MM«t«mentProperty » flpocUlt?

of

Bond* A Mortf «g4»

ltuaranee• Repreaenttng

tile, Fire, Burglar?, Awldemtand Health,, teams, Boilers,DruccHU'j employM', L*ad-lo'rde1, and Contractor*' liabil-ity, Marine, Toarlat, Salesmenaad Transit Iniuranee, Auto-mobile PVre and Liability Com-D*Jli«s and I*Jp» Ctui 0 H

MnQ ' tO tBUKft ltd, JUttOtUtty—MVtFJk'ty"ihargeable against the tame on ttii Bratlay ot July, 1930, as computed In said listlogether with intenett on • said, amountirom said first day of July to the date of

:Ble, and the costs of sale. In a'eupple-J Dental column Is shewn" the eatimatedI payment required to avoid' Said parcels will be sold in fee to suchI persons as will purchase the same, subject.0 redemption at the lowest r«te of inter-«st, nut not .exceeding eight per cent, permnum.

Said sales will, be Bubject only to mu-oleipal liens accruing after July 1, 1930.including- assessments coftfiriped after

.that date ar.d 193d taxes, and tq the right: at interested parties to red««ra .within thtrime>flxed by laV: ]) C. 4 LARSON

, Colleetur., \ Computed

L.I Ow-er . >\ x M f i *I B L O C K s t t - A

417 John W. L: Amos.. 156.60 163.60418 George Teeger . . . . . 156.59 163,59

GEORGE R. MERRILL

Dorsey MotorsI N C O B P O ELATED

OIBTK1BUTOI

Maple & Fayttte Sb. PBONflMM

_, *»ts1« — „„K I T « | J Hugo A,pr»pp 1. ; . is. 14

111* Carmmaelo Fanelll 114*„ , . . - , BLOCK m - HS2-8J Julia G. Manton.. 16.00

H.(0

' Hit17.(4

1J7.7I13JJI

168 Jlary' Farley '.'.'['.]

J28 MlchaerHahnJ°CIt.t l t

BLOCK WJ g ? Ojibrtel Dandiuek.»«AB Gabriel DanAuck897-D F. and A. toung401B Ada Dunscolnt101C Rev, Victor De- '

Kublnge . . . .401D Margery Marshall

499 Peter Walters • : . . . .' ' 1 BLOCK I n

S87C Winiam Rardjitk3MB Matthew (firickir 'II.343S4E Mary Regan . . _ . 23.J7

14J.O7

*

S1.86(8.(210. S7,1S.08 '

' 18.44

18.8030.1],

17.58

O.4766.50

77:87

Ktlf7.Bl13.0417.58

39LB4

S4-JS Anne Cunningham' 4T*J« ,Nel1l» Bmtner sj'gj

M-S6 Artn* Van Der ZeeLiW ,.,... .1. . ; 31 I*

W-70 Thoma* Tabmaln S&6S, „ BLOCK TIB

IL?^.^*1 • 10.7»•P-i* Thnmas M Tub.

Wain5»-S» Chas 8.

19J8

3(M-305 Chri«iaChriitofferson

1S9-190 Charles

J25 Frederick1

( 2 . 6 3 , U Patrick Fri^l

50 Peter Po!gf rI j O C*W

%5lN i b f c 251

155 3(5 l«2 4.

41 Cordelia, j"w^4niff taj.n

KI? "John t aum^rJ^mmMay B- kttfantm S6S.W

X

S»mu»l o M7.H

SJ A n « - •tOCK I I I

71.(8CIVIL ENGINEER

SURVEYOR•

iK Sfl John Thom

2* .Ceaar *

$0 Edith B. Fsrlev.r!!SPECS TAXI 78 Cheater A,mond a ,.T.

B- W. Drummoml",

PHONEW o o d b r i d f •

*w.u*M.;jJffiSbl

Page 9: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

O-MICSnCTION

The Woodbridge Leader C O M I CSECTIOII

by ,CRAWFORD

Mortimer

I HATFt TC B£ HAJ?5^ 1 /

WITH-1 My PAL - BUT I

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Page 10: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

YOU BEEN* INWITH OSCAR-

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Page 11: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

f TfcE HE6,/ TViAT s i t e

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Page 12: bodbridge Asked For $2,000 For Drought Relief...in New %runswick; Monday", lor |1,-N6 against Joseph . Leila of East-Rutherford. 'A verdict of no cause or action wtta returned In the

-v

^/faULPUNG

SOvou SHOULDSET IN© N tE AT7HE DOOR!

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TMS IDEA OF D'STURSlNtS M E INMIDDLE OP

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